Dan Vogel wrote:I think your view of things is distorted. I understand Mormons like to view their history in this fashion, because Joseph Smith exploited the persecution narrative to unite his people and explain his failures. To be sure, the violent persecution Mormons experienced can never be justified, but it should never be confused with so-called anti-Mormon publications. It’s unrealistic to expect the world, specifically the world of Christianity, not to respond to Mormonism’s attack on their beliefs.
The Latter-day Saints have never attacked anyone's beliefs. There are fundamental differences in the doctrines, but if there were not we would all be of one religion. You could say, and I am assuming you're referring to this, that the First Vision account attacks Christianity. Even if we grant that (which I do not, but will for the sake of this discussion). Does that one statement justify 180+ years of violence, tarring and featherings, extermination orders, massacres, assassinations, bigotry, and hatred?
In this respect, Mormonism is the aggressor plain and simple. The Mormon press issued a steady stream of anti-Catholic, anti-Methodist, anti-Baptist, anti-Presbyterian propaganda.
Show me where any member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints published anything remotely similar to the following:
- One Nation Under Gods: A History of the [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian] Church.
- Under the [pastor, preacher, minister, priest] in [state]; the national menace of a political priestcraft.
- The God Makers.
- The Maze of [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian]ism .
- Reasoning from the Scriptures With the [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian]s.
- [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian]ism Unmasked: Confronting the Contradictions Between [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian] Beliefs and True Christianity.
- [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian]ism : Shadow or Reality?
- The Word of God: Essays on [Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian] Scripture.
Some Mormons think it’s a sign of being the true church to receive so much attention from the Christian world,
It absolutely is. If we were not such a threat, we'd just be ignored.
but this situation was created by the antagonistic nature of Mormonism.
What antagonistic nature? You mean being constantly driven out, killed, tortured, hated, and protested against for 180+ years?
Anti-Mormons were created by Mormons because their brand of the gospel needs them.
No, Dan. This is flatly wrong. If we "needed" hatred, we would have stayed in Missouri and not attempted to isolate ourselves in the west.
The concept of a great apostasy, the mother of harlots, apostate Christendom, and the restoration are violent and colonialistic claims to the rest of the world. When the world, specifically the Christian world, decides to fight back, the Mormons cry persecution. Nonsense!
Critical thought is one thing. There is a free market of ideas, and there should be. I am fine with respectful criticism and discussion. I am not fine when people here complain that LDS apologists are taking some small cues from the behavior which anti-Mormons wrote the book on. As if people can criticize the church, but we are not able to correct or respond to those criticisms.
Apologists don’t exist to protect the church from persecution; they exist to explain problems that would crop up without anti-Mormon anyway, because the Book of Mormon, Book of Abraham, and Joseph Smith’s early revelations are absurd in the face of modern scholarship. This is the same reason Christian apologists exist as well.
That is your opinion as a disaffected member. It is wrong. The perceived problems, when properly examined, are not problems in the large scheme of the work of God. Apologetics is a response to critics and anti-Mormons. It always has been.
If Mormons really want to practice their religion in peace, they need to discontinue their aggressive, culturally hostile missionary program.
Almost every religion has a missionary program, Dan.
Missionaries don't force anyone to do anything. They just share their message
to those who want to hear it. If you don't, then don't invite them in. It's as simple as that. We have a right to practice our religion in peace, and to share it with those who want to share it.