Kevin Graham wrote:I should add that Loran's belief and attitude is very similar to that instituted in a number of Muslim communities/countries.
Slay those who insult Mormonism!
Kevin Graham wrote:I should add that Loran's belief and attitude is very similar to that instituted in a number of Muslim communities/countries.
And here is that fine line that always gets droopy into trouble. For him, you can have your opinion, but you better keep it to yourself or else you're going to be called an anti-Mormon.
This is the standard attitude among so many of self-ordained sheep herders in the Church. They know their job becomes infinitely more difficult when those with a "different viewpoint" make their views known, because these instances are almost always followed with evidence and argument.
When this happens, the intellectually deficient folks like Droopy are immediately threatened by truths they don't know how to handle other than to attack those who hold them.
Like he said, he is worried about the "influence" that can come from expressing one's difference of opinion.
An anti-Mormon is someone who holds theological/social/moral/cultural views different than those claimed as true by the Church and who actively, ether in a professional or non-professional capacity - attacks, impugns, and defames the Church, its ideas, its leaders and/or members, who actively seeks opportunities to do so, and who has placed him/herself in a position of opposition to the Church; not just a difference of viewpoint, but a position of active counter influence and criticism.
These opinions frequently are supported by truths that run contrary to the delusion they have embraced for so many years, so they respond indignantly, pretending to be innocent victims of some heinous intellectual crime, when in reality, the greatest enemy to Mormonism is truth and reason.
This is why so many people fall into Droopy's category of anti-Mormon. You can have your difference of viewpoint, just keep it to yourself or else we're going to attack you.
So much for liberty and freedom of speech. You have it, but he's gonna make you pay for expressing it.
Mormons on the other hand, are free to have "difference of viewpoint" and pound on thousands of doors a week to express it, and that doesn't make them anti-anything. The classic double-standard born from the Mormon mind.
But the fact is you cannot express a difference of viewpoint without being in a "position to influence" others. It just doesn't happen.
Can anyone name a single person on these forums who has made his or her "difference of viewpoint" known publicly, and who hasn't been the recipient of droopy's semi-literate, rhetorical wrath?
Not entirely. For example, Warren Jeffs is not a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but I wouldn't call him a "non-Mormon." Personally, I would define a non-Mormon as someone who does not believe in any of the traditions that claim descent from the teachings of Joseph Smith.
Fair enough. Since I don't meet your definition of an "anti-Mormon" in this sense, will you be withdrawing your accusations to that effect?
Droopy wrote:2.1 At a deeper level, and ideas, concepts, or doctrines which are incompatible, incongruous, and inharmonious with the gospel of Jesus Christ are "anti" in the sense of leading human beings away from God and from salvation and exhalation. Any doctrine or teaching that is makes claims counter to those of the gospel are "contra" or "anti" in nature, in a gospel sense. This sense, however, need not encompass active, open opposition or hostility, which would place it beyond the scope of point 2.
Which also sounds fair enough, but I think it is a bad idea to describe people and ideas that qualify for 2.1 as "anti-Mormon" because of the potential for conflation with 2.
Sounds fair to me. I would describe my own "opposition" (if you can even call it that) to Mormonism in similar terms. I certainly pose intellectual criticism of its elements and culture from time to time, and I'm as in favor of converting Latter-day Saints to my religion as I am anybody else, but those are the only ways in which I am "contra" to it. I hold great admiration for Mormonism in other respects, and I liked it well enough to make it a permanent part of my life by marrying a Latter-day Saint.
Kevin Graham wrote:I should add that Loran's belief and attitude is very similar to that instituted in a number of Muslim communities/countries. Technically one can hold a negative opinion of Muhammed, but one is not permitted to express such an opinion without being held accountable. By simply being a non-Muslim in a Muslim country, the community is to forever be on their guard because your mere presence represents a threat to the sanctity of the community. This is why some Muslims refuse to touch a dirty Kaffir (unbeliever), or if they do, they'll wash their hands immediately. It is why a kaffir's testimony is worthless under Islamic law, no matter how many witnesses support it. Droopy's mindset is similar to this. Non-Mormons are only treated with respect to the extent that they express absolute ignorance about the Mormon faith. Ignorance is a missionary-minded member's best friend. But once it becomes clear the person is not going to convert, and has in fact come to the opposite conclusion, well then droopy will do what most Mormons do, and dispense with them and move on to the next potential victim. The more ignorant they are the better it is for the Mormon. They know their chances of gaining a convert plummets as the knowledge level increases among those in their teaching pool.
Droopy wrote:By the Church's own definition of itself, Jeffs is not a Mormon, because he is not a member of the organized, visible Kingdom of God on earth, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. He is a "non" Mormon in a full and unambiguous sense.
Droopy wrote:By the Church's own definition of itself, Jeffs is not a Mormon, because he is not a member of the organized, visible Kingdom of God on earth, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. He is a "non" Mormon in a full and unambiguous sense.
I've always acknowledged that Facsimile 3 is missing, but the evidence strongly suggests that whatever is "missing" from the papyri collection has no significance because all historic and textual evidence points to the extant portions being the catalyst by which Joseph Smith purported to translate the Book of Abraham.
The fact that we don't have all that Joseph Smith had is rendered irrelevant to the argument at hand, which is simply this: Joseph Smith "translated" Egyptian characters and produced an Abraham narrative that has absolutely nothing to do with those characters.
So no, I haven't ignored this. I've addressed it repeatedly and have even pointed out that the more "missing material" the apologist postulates, the more significant the extant material becomes, since all the historical evidence points to it. So for example, if we propose that Joseph Smith had 500 feet of scroll, or better yet, ten thousand feet of scroll at his disposal, well then this means that the extant portion represents less than 1% of the available material. And yet, all the historical and textual evidence somehow refers to nothing of the other 99%?!?! No, instead they directly or indirectly point to that tiny 1% that is extant, which further highlights their importance for Joseph Smith.
The apologist is digging his own grave on this one. The more missing material he invents, the more he needs to explain why Joseph Smith was showing off and translating that tiny piece that supposedly had nothing to do with the Book of Abraham.
Droopy wrote:By the Church's own definition of itself, Jeffs is not a Mormon, because he is not a member of the organized, visible Kingdom of God on earth, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. He is a "non" Mormon in a full and unambiguous sense.
Droopy wrote:If you insist, then for the present, and barring any obvious departures from your asserted status here, then yes.