beefcalf wrote:cksalmon wrote:As a group, Mormons strike me as a generally-deistic lot, at least in the general sense that you're highlighting.cksalmon also wrote:Heck, Mormons consider God to be so hands-off that he utterly refuses to meddle with human agency. If he stays hands-off in that regard, I don't know why you'd be so concerned that he would mess with ballistics on a mere whim.
ck,
I ceased all activity in the church only in the last year or so, but was completely active until right around three years ago. So I had to read what you wrote twice to be completely sure I read it right.
It has been my experience that LDS are among the most theistic (vs. deistic) people, ascribing divine intervention to a host of events on a weekly, even daily, basis. Intercessory prayer is a staple of LDS meetings, priesthood blessings, family home evenings and virtually any childhood or adolescent emergency. Assistance in finding lost car keys, helping Sister Rheinhart with her diabetes, asking for God himself to adjust the chemical and physical properties of post-fireside refreshments so as to make them nourishing and strengthening... are these platitudes? Empty rhetoric? Purely symbolic? I'd wager that most LDS you talk to on Sunday would say 'no'. They are literally expecting the invisible hand of God to reach down and help rearrange the whatnots and wherefores of their daily lives. Frequently and regularly.
Did I read you wrong?
No, you read me correctly, beefcalf. I'm a neverMo, so I'll take your word for it and consider myself corrected on the matter.
I didn't realize Mormons took such an interventionist position. I suppose that with the heavy LDS emphasis on the inviolability of human agency, I'd assumed the hands-off approach held across the board.
Do Mormons ever ask God to change people, or just physical objects?
Apologies to Buffalo for any confusion I've injected into his thread.