Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

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_KevinSim
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _KevinSim »

Gadianton wrote:Oh I don't know Kev. What's straightforward about walking into work and saying "G'day" to your friends vs. hoping they will all feel the well wishes you harbor for them as you silently walk by?

There's a big difference between "walking into work and saying 'G'day' to your friends" and coming down from the sky and calling a conference for thousands or millions or billions of people. So I guess the relevant question is, who is the virtual equivalent for God of the friends at work you walk among and say "G'day" to? How many "friends" does God work with that He says "G'day" to on a regular basis?

Gadianton wrote:The problem with Lafferty isn't an expectation that the world agree with him for killing a kid as God instructed, but that he killed a kid as God instructed.

How has anybody concluded that God ever instructed Lafferty to kill a child?
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_beefcalf
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _beefcalf »

KevinSim wrote:How has anybody concluded that God ever instructed Lafferty to kill a child?


This is an Abrahamic religion we're talking about, after all.

There is precedence.
eschew obfuscation

"I'll let you believers in on a little secret: not only is the LDS church not really true, it's obviously not true." -Sethbag
_Gadianton
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _Gadianton »

Kev wrote:How has anybody concluded that God ever instructed Lafferty to kill a child?


Irrelevant. As you say:

Kev wrote:instead I say that anybody else should ask God herself/himself what God's will is in that person's life.


Ron Lafferty asked God what his will was for his own person's life and he carried out that will. He did exactly what you say he should do.
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _KevinSim »

beefcalf wrote:This is an Abrahamic religion we're talking about, after all.

There is precedence.

Regarding the incident on Mount Moriah, Abraham made a very difficult decision. I personally wouldn't have made it.

I feel strongly enough about my faith that I would be willing to die for it, but I think I wouldn't be willing to kill for it. If I felt God was telling me He wanted me to kill my son or one of my daughters, I would probably say, "No, thank you." Does that make me a lesser person than Abraham? I don't know.
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _KevinSim »

Gadianton wrote:Ron Lafferty asked God what his will was for his own person's life and he carried out that will. He did exactly what you say he should do.

As I said in the other post, I draw the line when it comes to killing someone, except perhaps for clear cases of self defense.

I guess I can understand how someone like Abraham might have felt obligated to attempt to kill Isaac, and how someone like Nephi might have felt it necessary to kill Laban, and even how someone like Saul would might have felt the need to commit genocide on the entire Amalekite race, down to infants and "sucklings" (but that's a stretch), but I personally would have passed on the killing thing.

And even though I say I do "understand," I still think it would have been quite appropriate for a government (had one existed at the time) to have prosecuted Abraham, had he actually killed his son, and given him whatever punishment that government saw fit to give him for the crime. What punishment did the US government see fit to give Lafferty?
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _sock puppet »

KevinSim wrote:
Gadianton wrote:Ron Lafferty asked God what his will was for his own person's life and he carried out that will. He did exactly what you say he should do.

As I said in the other post, I draw the line when it comes to killing someone, except perhaps for clear cases of self defense.

I guess I can understand how someone like Abraham might have felt obligated to attempt to kill Isaac, and how someone like Nephi might have felt it necessary to kill Laban, and even how someone like Saul would might have felt the need to commit genocide on the entire Amalekite race, down to infants and "sucklings" (but that's a stretch), but I personally would have passed on the killing thing.

And even though I say I do "understand," I still think it would have been quite appropriate for a government (had one existed at the time) to have prosecuted Abraham, had he actually killed his son, and given him whatever punishment that government saw fit to give him for the crime. What punishment did the US government see fit to give Lafferty?

Do you understand that Lafferty might have felt god-obligated or that it was necessitated by god to kill Lafferty's sister-in-law and baby niece? Like Abraham and Nephi, Lafferty too thought god was talking to him and instructing the killing. As I see it, the only difference for us--observers--is that Abraham's and Nephi's experiences have been recorded in books revered by many as holy. Lafferty's story just has been written into a holy book--yet.
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _beefcalf »

KevinSim wrote:
beefcalf wrote:This is an Abrahamic religion we're talking about, after all.

There is precedence.

Regarding the incident on Mount Moriah, Abraham made a very difficult decision. I personally wouldn't have made it.

I feel strongly enough about my faith that I would be willing to die for it, but I think I wouldn't be willing to kill for it. If I felt God was telling me He wanted me to kill my son or one of my daughters, I would probably say, "No, thank you." Does that make me a lesser person than Abraham? I don't know.



That makes you a better person than Abraham, and it is one reason you are not a TBM.

You correctly see the problems with the story of Abraham and Isaac. The LDS church (indeed, all of Christianity, Islam and Judaism) revere Abraham for his "bravery" and "faith" in demonstrating his willingness to obey God's commands, even to kill his own son. Once you've wrapped your head around the idea that barbarism is still barbarism even when it comes from 'god', you are 90% of the way to recovery from the Mormon (or Christian) delusion.

I am quite certain this God of Abraham doesn't exist. But, even if it could somehow be proven to me that He does exist, the proper, ethical and moral course of action would be for me to flatly refuse to worship such a bully. That would be standing for something... even if it meant an eternity in hell.
eschew obfuscation

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_Pollypinks
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDD -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _Pollypinks »

Lafferty is doing LWOP, and I watched an interview of him maybe five years ago or so on "Court T.V." at the time, and he was wackier than ever. A classic case of paranoid pschizophrenia unmedicated. Honestly, that would have made all the difference in the world.
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Re: Blocked from posting at MDB -- Mor. 10:3-5 question

Post by _keithb »

KevinSim wrote:
My response is that I really don't see that much difference between either a Deist model of God or a Calvinist idea of God, and no God at all. Think about it.

If the Calvinist model really is accurate, and therefore God really does choose "who to reveal the truth to or not independent of human effort," then what's to keep such a deity from doing anything at all? Why would such a deity have any qualms about putting lies about himself into the scriptures? Sure, we think that would be a bad thing to do, but there are plenty of people who think choosing favorites where individual merit (or at least some effort on the individual's part) doesn't come into the equation is also a very bad thing to do. There's absolutely nothing we can know about that type of a deity, because what seems good to us might not be good to that deity, so we could never ever have a clue as to what type of deity he really was.

The Deist model is just as bad, and the whole appeal of the Deist model was that it gave an explanation for how the world and universe came into being, and we don't need that anymore anyhow.

So, why even consider the possibility that either the Deist model or the Calvinist model might be right? What's the difference, as far as we mortals are concerned, between those two models and no God at all?

I'm reminded of one atheist's argument some time back that belief in God was like belief in what he postulated as invisible pink unicorns. Belief in either a Deist God or a Calvinist God is no different from belief in invisible pink unicorns. Sure, either of those two types of God or invisible pink unicorns may in fact (hypothetically) exist, but why would anybody in their right mind care whether they did?

It just seems to me to make more sense to believe in the existence of a deity that we can actually draw conclusions about.


My only point here was to point out that Mormons do assume certain things about their God in order for them to have faith in this Moroni challenge. As you rightly pointed out, under several historical models of God, this challenge wouldn't work.

If it is, you should inform SETI. :)

In all seriousness, though, I have no idea whether or not you can objectively demonstrate that you've "been abducted by aliens." A lot of people turn skeptical when someone says s/he (or someone else) has "been abducted by aliens," and I'd probably include myself in that group. But I certainly don't know any inherent reason I could use to conclude that someone that would make that claim must be out of that someone's mind.

I guess that someone's ability to objectively verify that someone had "been abducted by aliens" would depend on the care the aliens had been taking to keep people from knowing they exist. The greater the care they'd taken, the harder it would be to objectively verify the someone had been abducted.


Again, I would venture to guess that you would apply a vastly different standard of evidence to proving a claim of alien abduction than you do to believing the Mormon faith. Again, thinking about the alien abduction claim and about Santa Claus (or Adam or whatever) and then talking to the sky about it WOULDN'T be sufficient proof, even if you did have a warm feeling in your heart.

To make this more concrete, I had a lady on my mission that claimed that Jesus, angels, and demons used to talk to her through the TV. How much credence should be given to her claims versus those of Joseph Smith? Who is to say that God spoke to him and not her or vice versa? What standards of proof would you need to believe the lady versus Joseph Smith?

The idea of subjective truth has been around for a long time. Descartes thought he had discovered the subjective truth that he existed back in the 1600s. His argument turned out to be flawed, but there's a certain amount of attractiveness to it that has won him disciples all the centuries since and probably will continue to win more for the rest of eternity.

The principal advantage of objective truth is that large groups of people can agree on a set of easily observable, easily verifiable, facts. The principal disadvantage of objective truth is that, technically, not one person out of that large group really knows that any of the rest, or even the non-animate observable universe, really exists.

But peple who listen to Descartes (and I do to some extent) would say that regardless of what we see in the observable universe, each one of us can be certain that that one exists, and I think I agree with Descartes that far.

If you have actually undergone an experience that makes you believe you've been abducted by aliens, then that's a real phenomenon, and it's perfectly understandable that you might be interested in exploring its implications. It might be wise for you to consider the possibility that you hallucinated the whole thing, but it would be unwise in my opinion to let that possibility overshadow everything else.


One of the triumphs of science is to realize that there is a real, predictable, and independent universe that exists even when nobody is looking. We can argue about the finer details of philosophy, but I think all of us realize this implicitly, thanks to the advances of science.

Respected how? I personally believe that anybody's strong beliefs should be respected, to some degree. So I guess I need to know what you mean specifically by respected.


Hypothetically: Let's say I believe that Elvis is still alive and faked his own death. I also believe that women are the spawn of Satan and should be burned alive if they have sex outside of marriage. Should either of those beliefs be respected, even if I believe them strongly?

Once again, that depends on the care the aliens had taken to keep people from knowing they exist.


There are elves living on the moon. You just don't know about them because they are magical.
"Joseph Smith was called as a prophet, dumb-dumb-dumb-dumb-dumb" -South Park
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