The Nehor wrote:One gold star for the wolf lady for rejecting the gospel of....hey, wait a minute.
I rejected a man-made religion, kindergarten level spirituality, a gospel of fear. It's been its own reward, thank you.
The Nehor wrote:One gold star for the wolf lady for rejecting the gospel of....hey, wait a minute.
Dr. Shades wrote:So there you have it, straight from the horse's mouth. That's the effect that the Internet is having on missionary work, at least in the United States.
I rejected a man-made religion, kindergarten level spirituality, a gospel of fear. It's been its own reward, thank you.
Lucretia MacEvil wrote:The Nehor wrote:One gold star for the wolf lady for rejecting the gospel of....hey, wait a minute.
I rejected a man-made religion, kindergarten level spirituality, a gospel of fear. It's been its own reward, thank you.
woops, duplicate -- my computer is driving me nuts.
AlmaBound wrote: Did you read the entire book straight through and then pray or did you only read certain portions?
What does it mean for the book to be "true" to you?
I ask because it may mean something different for you than it does for me, and I am curious as to your answers to those questions.
Lucretia MacEvil wrote:The Nehor wrote:One gold star for the wolf lady for rejecting the gospel of....hey, wait a minute.
I rejected a man-made religion, kindergarten level spirituality, a gospel of fear. It's been its own reward, thank you.
cj1388 wrote:I rejected a man-made religion, kindergarten level spirituality, a gospel of fear. It's been its own reward, thank you.
Well said. Though I am not sure about the man made part. I would defiantly agree that Mormonism fosters a kindergarten level of spirituality (though I think it was far from that in its original intent). The gospel of fear is what Mormonism has become. If you don't do certain things than the Lord will surely allow bad things to happen to you. Not only allow, but also cause these bad things to happen to you.
On another note, I do find it kind of ironic that certain posters here find joy/humor in talking about millions of people being destroyed by fire (men, women and children, who are over 8 of course). And if their physical destruction was just not quite good enough, they will spend at least 1000 years in hell. That attitude doesn't sound very Christian to me. But unfortunately that seems to be the mindset of any fundamentalist - whether they are Mormon or not.
I personally think the internet will be the down fall of any organization that tries to suppress information. Does the LDS church do this? You read the Sunday School manual and judge for yourself. I am not faulting the church for trying be self preserving. It probably has many reasons for not portraying a more balanced view of its own history. Anyone who loves truth will seek truth out. Though I believe truth can and does exist in the LDS church, I also believe that God is greater than that. He reaches his children in a thousand different ways. I think that truth can bring certain people into the church, but can also lead them out of it. For me, the church just isn't that important, other than an opportunity to serve our fellowman. I know that doesn't sound like a typical Mormon, but I guess I'm really not one of those.
why me wrote:Now all this happened a few decades ago but...it happened.
bcspace wrote:My experience is that antiMormonism, including the internet, drives people to join the Church because of the questions it induces and the answers and proofs that differ vastly from what is claimed by them.