Simon
Who were you on ZLMB?
Why do you think I was on ZLMB?
Who were you on ZLMB?
Simon Belmont wrote:Why? Any intelligent person in their late teens and early twenties understands that the world does not operate in sugar-coated stories like our elementary school history books, or our Sunday school classes. The history of any church, or of any organization should not come as a surprise to anyone. Nothing on this entire planet is perfect... nothing. That doesn't mean imperfection is harmful.
Unsympathetic Mopologist as Modeled by Professor Belmont wrote:But it was available the whole time. As I said, I learned much of these controversial parts of History from seminary and institute class. The time spent involved in the Church is not harmful if one decides to disagree with it later. It wasn't harmful to me, it wasn't harmful to anyone I know, and it wasn't harmful to the entire faculty and student body of BYU and LDSBC, and it wasn't harmful to the bloggers on MST. So how can it be objectively harmful if it is harmful only to those who have a grudge with the Church?
honorentheos wrote:The irony of this is it is only true to a point. I didn't choose to be LDS, and I didn't choose to accept as truth things that were never taught to me.
That it is not standard in the church to allow people to exercises their agency is very much part of the point. What you excuse as "focusing on the gospel" is just message control in an attempt to prevent people from doing as you suggest above. That's all, really.
The Wentworth Letter lesson I cited is a very good example. To quote the entire letter except a small part that might cause (gasp) adults to have to think and make a choice - God forbid! Better to focus on "the milk toast gospel". Good times, there.
Jersey Girl wrote:Why do you think I was on ZLMB?
Kishkumen wrote:Yes, this is another one of those sticky issues, isn't it? And you won't be surprised, I am sure, to find that I have a different view from the one expressed above. You see, it is one of my pet peeves against the geeks of the Mopologetic set (and here we are excepting professor Belmont, who is once again modeling this behavior for research and educational purposes), that they judge everyone by their own solipsistic standard.
They say, "Why, I was savvy enough to figure these things out, so what is your problem? You must have been lazy and negligent not to pick up on what I was taught in my seminary/institute/BYU religion class/etc. It was right under your nose the whole time. For shame that you are upset with the LDS Church for your own failings."
Oh, yes. Indeed, everyone out there must have possessed the requisite talents, idiosyncratic interests, and opportunities that helped apologist X grapple with the discovery that Brigham Young wanted to build a temple out of sandstone because he believed it would turn into marble in a thousand years or some such. Shame on them for not seeing this as the Easter Bunny issue that it in fact is!
Obviously, this condescending and shortsighted view is problematic, in addition to sounding remarkably unsympathetic and school-marmish. Indeed, one should think that the last person to rely on anecdotal evidence and their own life stories to cover everyone else's personal experience would be this hyper-educated nerd apologist who comes onto the boards practicing his Latin composition for s***s and giggles.
Surely, this geek is not the person by whom we should measure the average LDS member's experience of Mormonism! But professor Belmont is right on target: the last person one would expect to make such a clubfooted error is the very person who makes it.
Why yes! The bloggers at MST are just regular folk with IQs somewhere north of 135 who have PhDs and professional degrees as well as a burning desire to share their polysyllabic vocabularies, eloquently written prose, and long-considered truths.
ROFLMAO!!!
Wow. You are laying it on thick here, professor. Do you really think that a blockheaded Mopologist could push his head up his rear end that far?
In all seriousness, though, while it is surely reasonable to expect adults not to believe in fairy tales, it would help if the lessons and the materials most of them were exposed to on a regular basis included something decidedly superior to fairy tales.
Simon Belmont wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:Why do you think I was on ZLMB?
You said that you have frequented Mormon related message boards for 11 years. 11 years ago, ZLMB was the hotspot of Mormon debate and discussion. I simply assumed you were a part of it. Perhaps I was wrong.
Simon Belmont wrote:Well what do you choose? Do you simply accept only things that are taught to you, or do you endeavor to discover things on your own -- to find out more about those subjects which interest you?
That it is not standard in the church to allow people to exercises their agency is very much part of the point. What you excuse as "focusing on the gospel" is just message control in an attempt to prevent people from doing as you suggest above. That's all, really.
I reject your claim. If it were true, I am many others would have been excommunicated long ago. Throughout my life in the Church, I was always encouraged to read everything I could about topics which interested me, to expand my education in Church matters, and in secular matters. I took that to heart, and today I consider myself very successful.
The Wentworth Letter lesson I cited is a very good example. To quote the entire letter except a small part that might cause (gasp) adults to have to think and make a choice - God forbid! Better to focus on "the milk toast gospel". Good times, there.
If it has nothing to do with the lesson, it is not necessary to be in that particular lesson manual. It is a simple concept.
Simon Belmont wrote:We do disagree on many things, but we also agree on some things. This academic diversity is what makes Cassius University such a lighthouse in an oppressed world. I welcome your disagreements!
Kishkumen wrote:When you begin bringing solipsism into a discussion, my ears perk. I hold a Master's Degree in philosophy. I tell you this not to sound arrogant, but to inform everyone that it is okay -- even healthy to pursue subjects that interest you to their terminus. I, for one, highly encourage it as it has been the greatest ride of my life!
Professor Simon wrote:I am not so harsh. I was simply pointing out that I, and everyone I know, did not have anything close to the experiences some ex-Mormons claim they had in the Church. I did not seek out esoteric tomes, or participate in Aleister Crowley-style sex magick. I was simply taught these things throughout the natural course of my experience in the Church, as were many, many others. It is far from hidden.
professor Belmont wrote:I do feel bad, but I also do not understand how the Church "lied" when the information was readily available.
Professor Belmont wrote:Surely we must expect some level of intelligence among the common populace, would you not agree with that? The ability to read and to write would be a necessity for reading the Book of Mormon, for example.
Professor Belmont wrote:Experience is what we have to go by in this life. My own experience, and the experiences of the people who were and are in my circle of colleagues, friends, acquaintances, and family have painted a picture for me that is in stark contract to the claims of those who feel they have been duped by the Church. That is why I point it out, because it is foreign to me.
Professor Belmont wrote:By the way, I also admitted that I was rusty on my Latin.
Professor Belmont wrote:I do not expect everyone to make similar choices, but surely we must expect some level of comprehension and logic? Is it logical, by any measurement, to assume that a Sunday School class, which caters to various ages and levels of understanding, to delve into deep historical truths of the Church? The average member should think about this, then come to the conclusion "no, there is much more that isn't being said here because of the target audience. I should find out more about it."
Professor Belmont wrote:I have some friends who happen to be Baptist. I have been to their services many times. Do you know what they teach from? The Bible, as surprising as it is. Do I expect the pastor to preach a sermon on the Southern Baptist's early history of supporting slavery? Or racist, sexist, or otherwise objectionable things past church leaders have done? Of course not!
Professor Simon wrote:They appeal to a mass target audience of people who range in age from 18 to 100. That is why it was helpful for me to take seminary and institute classes, which is where I feel I have learned most of the "meat."
Kishkumen wrote:Wonderful for you. I imagine that is a very enriching adventure indeed. In this discussion, however, the point at issue was not your personal explorations of philosophy, but rather your expectations of what is normal for other LDS. You are clearly not representative of the "average" member, so your experience is actually quite a poor standard by which to judge others' experience of Mormonism. See?
! As should be clear to you by now, your experience as a geeky LDS person who holds an MA in philosophy and likes to play around with Latin online is not likely to be representative of the natural course of most other members' experience. Ergo, you are a particularly poor person to judge what that experience might be, unless of course you are interested in engaging in a thorough scientific study of the LDS correlated curriculum, members' experience of it, and why the internet obviously poses a danger to these poor people.
Omitting important information can be tantamount to lying. I am not accusing the LDS Church of lying, but I certainly sympathize with those who feel like they were lied to.
Professor Belmont wrote:I will assume that you served an LDS mission. Cast your mind back to the amount of reading and study that was actually required for baptism. What one requires as a minimum standard is probably the most one can expect of many people. The chances that 90% of these people would ever bother to read a Michael Quinn book from cover to cover, or even crack one issue of the FROB is frighteningly low. Heck, most of them don't read the Ensign (pitched at what, a second grade reading level?) on a regular basis. What they do is sit in the pews, and if they are really adventurous and dedicated, read some amount of the scriptures almost daily. My guess would be that there is a much larger number of Mormons addicted to World of Warcraft than really study out LDS history and doctrine, and I am probably right.
If this works so well, how come it isn't working? Why is it that the Church has identified the internet as a special challenge in our time? It's not just about the naked pictures.
They must realize, on some level, that something is not working as it should. My answer would be a one-size-fits-all Correlation, which may be a swell idea for the universal Big Mac, but not so swift for religious doctrine.
Come now, professor. Isn't this demonstration going a little too far? Its credibility is straining to the breaking point. Surely most apologists understand that it is the Titan's role of Joseph Smith in the Restoration that makes the history of him and his times so very crucial to LDS people. You set up a group of men to be on par with Abraham, Moses, and the apostle Peter, and now you want to moan about why people should be interested in the lives of these men enough to "google" them? Really?