stemelbow wrote:In fact, you seem to agree that suffering is required but that we misunderstand what "suffering" actually means when it comes to that kind and the kind God takes away through the atenment (D&C passage).
The suffering experienced in the atonement carried with it such impact it is considered infinited. Not infinite in time, perhaps but in extent. We simply won't have to suffer infinitely, or for very much at all. Indeed the extent of suffering we have to endure when we say punch someone for no reason is very little in the grand scheme of things.
Could you explain which suffering is lifted by the atonement?
Suffering is temporal for us, in that it ends at some point. We don't have to endure suffering long. Without the atonement the little bit of suffering we face would not end, and ultimately it would be much more profound I'd think.
Hey, thanks for your response. I think I better understand your position.
Could you perhaps elaborate on the suffering part? I'll tell you what I am thinking and maybe you could share your thoughts based on that.
According to LDS doctrine drinking coffee is a sin. A sin that will keep you out of the temple, therefore it could be reasoned, out of the CK.
If a member drinks coffee they will likely feel guilty and bad about it because they have been conditioned to feel it is a sin from a very young age. They will, in your use of the word, suffer for that drink of coffee. Let's say they repent, tell their bishop, never do it again and at some point feel relieved of their guilt and anguish over the sin.
Another person who has heard of the WoW but does not believe it to be a sin to drink coffee drink it every day. They love it. They feel great about drinking coffee. They drink it til the day they die. They never felt any guilt, anguish nor did they suffer at all for that "sin."
What kind of suffering can person #2 look forward to in the afterlife?
What it looks like to me is that religion tells humans to feel like crap for doing certain things (or even thinking certain things) and then gives them a special cure. The religion creates the problem and then offers an antedote.
Nobody would feel guilty or suffer because they masturbate if religion didn't tell them to feel that way to begin with.
Nobody would feel guilty or bad for drinking coffee without the LDS church telling them to.
There are all these normal human things that nobody suffers for doing until religion come up and tells them they should.
The things that normal, healthy humans do suffer and feel bad about doing doesn't really change by accepting the atonement. If you do something really crappy you are going to suffer for it no matter your religious preference.
So, what really does the atonement help with? I guess we have to say the afterlife of which we have no proof. Because it seems pretty impotent in this life.
To be fair, I will say that there is a placebo effect with accepting Christ. We can cause ourselves to feel peace and love and all kinds of things by reading beautiful myths and stories....listening to certain music. But, again, non-believers can do it just as well as believers.