John McLay; Brooke McLay

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_Buffalo
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Buffalo »

Yahoo Bot wrote:
Buffalo wrote:I'm not sure what you're even getting at with your first sentence. Regarding your second sentence, there is no indication of any romantic relationship there either way.


Yes there is. But that isn't one of my points above.


I'm sure saying that helps make this all more comfortable for you.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.

B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
_Wisdom Seeker
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Wisdom Seeker »

bcspace wrote:
Oddity: Yahoo Bot, insecure in his own faith, must make the couple's apostasy all about Brooke's gay friend and not the issues. Typical.


Not have read or listened to this story, I'd say Yahoo Bot, if he's actually done this, is likely correct. Wanting to be helpful or liberal or cool with regards to homosexuality could indeed be the impetus of finding a excuses not to believe.


You might want to watch some of the videos. Really interesting but very long. The only real issue I think about the gay friend and her religious belief was her concern that a loving homosexual couple would have less rights to living together in a celestial world than an unloving heterosexual couple. I watched parts of it and may have missed some aspects of it, but it seems as if many things in their lives caused them to take a step back and really investigate the issues.
_Buffalo
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Buffalo »

Aristotle Smith wrote:
Willy Law wrote: Once you turn that microscope from Mormonism to Jesus you find that the story of Christ does not hold up much better.


I've seen very few people who actually do that. My experience has been that people spend months on polyandry, Book of Abraham, Book of Mormon DNA, etc. I have seen very little evidence that most ex-Mos have spent any time investigating Christianity outside of Mormonism. The pattern I have usually seen is that Jesus and the Church are a package deal for most Mormons and are not seen as separable.

Just to take an example, there are scores of people on this board who can give me the basic issues on Book of Abraham, polygamy, MMM, the Book of Mormon, or whatever their pet issue was in leading them out. Of those, who can tell me what the four source hypothesis is? Or give me a rundown of what was the Johannine community? Or tell me the basic issues at play in the Council of Nicea? I'm willing to bet not that many.


No, honestly I'm not very well informed about New Testament scholarship. But I learned enough about the origins of Yahweh and El to discredit, in my mind, any religion that finds its origins in the Torah.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.

B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
_LDS truthseeker
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _LDS truthseeker »

Aristotle Smith wrote:
Willy Law wrote: Once you turn that microscope from Mormonism to Jesus you find that the story of Christ does not hold up much better.


I've seen very few people who actually do that. My experience has been that people spend months on polyandry, Book of Abraham, Book of Mormon DNA, etc. I have seen very little evidence that most ex-Mos have spent any time investigating Christianity outside of Mormonism. The pattern I have usually seen is that Jesus and the Church are a package deal for most Mormons and are not seen as separable.

Just to take an example, there are scores of people on this board who can give me the basic issues on Book of Abraham, polygamy, MMM, the Book of Mormon, or whatever their pet issue was in leading them out. Of those, who can tell me what the four source hypothesis is? Or give me a rundown of what was the Johannine community? Or tell me the basic issues at play in the Council of Nicea? I'm willing to bet not that many.



You make an interesting point and I agree to some extent. I see that ex-Mos know a LOT about Mormon problems and little about historical Jesus problems. However, I would say that's partially because since Mormonism happened so much more recently, there is much more reliable stuff to examine. The Jesus stuff happened so long ago that it is hard to come to a really, totally 100% definitive conclusion.

But ex-Mos have been burned once so they often don't want to make the same mistake, so for many of the ones I know it is enough to know that the gospels were written decades after Christ lived and by others than the listed authors so the exmos quickly disbelieve in Jesus. Also, most exmos totally, quickly discount much of the Old Testament as there are many obvious fairy tales in there like Adam and Eve, Noah's Ark, Tower of Babel, etc. And that doesn't help believing in Jesus.
_Buffalo
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Buffalo »

Yahoo Bot wrote:
Aristotle Smith wrote:
Just to take an example, there are scores of people on this board who can give me the basic issues on Book of Abraham, polygamy, MMM, the Book of Mormon, or whatever their pet issue was in leading them out. Of those, who can tell me what the four source hypothesis is? Or give me a rundown of what was the Johannine community? Or tell me the basic issues at play in the Council of Nicea? I'm willing to bet not that many.


I think that the more vocal ex-Mormons who post on boards are likely to have become atheists. I've had a long relationship with dissidents over the years, friends and acquaintances. I've seen many of them join the local Lutherans or Baptists

And I don't expect an ordinary Mormon, or non-Mormon Christian for that matter, understand the principles of Nicea or what St. Augustine taught. But I do expect them to know the Jesus of the Bible. I don't think the McLays do.


You don't learn very much about the Biblical Jesus in the LDS church, to be fair.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.

B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
_Jason Bourne
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Jason Bourne »

Intersting summary. I have a long drive tonight and tomorrow and hope to hear most of it. I can better comment then. But a few remarks in general:

Yahoo Bot wrote:My conclusion is this:

1. Hooking up with CES is really a dangerous thing to do if things aren't exactly right in your life, and really, who is perfect in their lives and marriage? Unhappiness with your CES job translates to unhappiness with the Church. The kind of raw ambition and assertiveness you need in your job from day to day is inappropriate in a church setting. John couldn't deal with this conflict. Weakness in the CES system and its personnel translated to weakness in the Church.

I've long had my objections to CES. [And EFY for that matter.] In one funny anecdote, John relates a comment by Elder L. Thom Perry as to whether or when CES would join the Church. The time will come when CES as we know it will come to an end and the educational system at the high school and local institute level will come under the control of the stake presidents (with the possible exception of larger Utah universities, which will be under the control of the Seventy). Until then, CES will be burdened with the mediocre, weak and effeminate who are not called to their positions, but volunteer. They can't function as IT experts, writers, accountants or high school teachers. These are the types who will just tell kids what they want to hear to become popular in their own minds, and develop the cult of personality John was trying to develop. CES will not attract, for instance, capable female instructors.



I must admit I am surprised by your low and even harsh view of CES. Personally I am thankful that I did not go this route because I started college with aspirations to teach full time in CES. But I have known some seminary, institute and other CES personnel. I do not find them anything like you view them. And if CES is really rogue and staffed with whining weenies why would we ever want our kids to go to seminary?

On the local early AM seminary, again, I think those who do this are noble. They give a lot of time and effort into the call-it is now a calling by the bishop and I think approved by the SP-this a recent development. But it is a tough job. I know a few who taught for years. They get up early many mornings to teach our kids and they spend hours each evening preparing.

But yes I can see a full time CES person who does not progress as they wish becoming unhappy with the Church. Working for the Church in any position can be a dangerous thing. I have had some experience with Church employees in my ward of which we had quite a number. There have been some rather difficult issues over the years.



3. Oddity: Her discussion of her relationship with her gay friend, and how it disrupted their marriage shows that these two are very naïve. In any work environment as a professional you're going to be thrown into relationships with persons of the opposite sex and gay people, and you will spend time in bars (unless you are in Utah). It seems that the first time this happened with her, all hell broke loose.


A fair observation.




6. I can see why somebody would have a crisis of faith if they first encountered without explanation the polyandry, MMM and Kinderhook plates. But, he was a CES employee. CES has held seminars on these topics. He doesn't seem all that well-read in his own faith and he is an educator. Whereas I particularly dislike the apologists' argument that people should study up on their faith and become expert in the latest research and publication before throwing stones against their Primary teacher, I am going to hold a CES employee up to a higher standard. I mean, Grant Palmer was obviously familiar with these issues.



CES has seminars of difficult issues from LDS history? You sure about that>


8. They miss essential Christianity. An understanding of Christ's mission is completely missing from their 4 hours, although she occasionally mentions His name in sort of a New Age context. It is striking that a CES instructor is so lacking in faith and knowledge in Christ's ministry. I spent too much time hearing him explaining how was admired he was a testifier and a speaker. If I said to my close friends how often I have been admired as a speaker and a lawyer, I'd be ridiculed, disbelieved and hooted into oblivion with no friends remaining. He deserves to be criticized for focusing too much on self-admiration.



I have not listened so I will reserve judgement. But I think it hardly fair for you to conclude this from a podcast the focuses on their disaffection. You really do not know what the husbands testimony was like when he taught and testified to his students.



10. He's desperate because his isn't the kind of marriage to which he agreed. He also comes across as a weak hanky-twister, the kind of man supremely acceptable in CES --- the crying and sobbing, but not the one to keep up with a hard-driven, capable woman. She's coming to grasp with her feminism, after years of living in an extremely insular and protected environment. As a result, she's blaming the church for her insular state, and he's blaming the church for what she's doing. But she signed onto CES, and CES is not the Church.



CES is certainly a part of the Church. If there are the issues you insist within CES it is the job of the Church to clean it up.


12. One of their final points deals with emotion, arguing that so much that passes for the Spirit is just emotion. This is basically just an attack on all of Christianity. Unfortunately, for those who study the New Testament, the Spirit and emotion go hand in hand. Jesus taught that knowledge of Him could not come without the intervention of the Holy Spirit. So, the McLays can certainly jettison that doctrine, but it is an essential element of Christianity.



I am not sure where in the New Testament it equates the spirit of God communicating through feelings and emotions. I have discussed this at length with many non LDS Christians and they all object to such an idea.


14. I hope the McLays come back. They expect perfection of themselves but fail to realize that nobody's perfect in the Church. Not even close. As I used to tell the teenagers I'd counsel, I'd tell them that each of the adults in the ward had terrible stories to tell about themselves if required. Christ is about forgiveness, not perfection.


I am glad you believe this and taught it. I wish it was more emphasized in the Church.
_Yahoo Bot
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Yahoo Bot »

Buffalo wrote:You don't learn very much about the Biblical Jesus in the LDS church, to be fair.


Yes, it does. It devotes one-half of its curriculum to the Bible. I've become intimately familiar with CES instructional materials used for both seminaries and Gospel Doctrine, as I have taught both.

The institutional problem the church has is that, in all cases, it uses volunteers to teach these materials. Too often they don't know the materials and don't want to learn them. Gospel Doctrine can be particularly difficult when there is no discussion of the scriptures but lots of discussion how one applies the non-read scriptures to their own lives. I suspect that John McLay was a touchy-feely instructor who cracked his Bible open long enough to master the Scripture Mastery scriptures but nothing else.

Each one of us must develop our own understanding of and belief in Jesus Christ. Brooke McLay may have been the only one to mention His name, and only to condemn other Mormons for not being Christian for excluding gays.
_Willy Law
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Willy Law »

Jason Bourne wrote:But yes I can see a full time CES person who does not progress as they wish becoming unhappy with the Church.


I'm not really sure where this came from. Jason let me know if I missed something when you listen tomorrow, but I did not pick up on him being frustrated for his lack of progression at all. In fact he seemed surprised that he was called as principal and given so much responsibility so quickly.
It is my province to teach to the Church what the doctrine is. It is your province to echo what I say or to remain silent.
Bruce R. McConkie
_Willy Law
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Willy Law »

Yahoo Bot wrote:
Yes, it does. It devotes one-half of its curriculum to the Bible.


Or, put another way, once every four years to the New Testament.
It is my province to teach to the Church what the doctrine is. It is your province to echo what I say or to remain silent.
Bruce R. McConkie
_Buffalo
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Re: John McLay; Brooke McLay

Post by _Buffalo »

Yahoo Bot wrote:
Buffalo wrote:You don't learn very much about the Biblical Jesus in the LDS church, to be fair.


Yes, it does. It devotes one-half of its curriculum to the Bible. I've become intimately familiar with CES instructional materials used for both seminaries and Gospel Doctrine, as I have taught both.

The institutional problem the church has is that, in all cases, it uses volunteers to teach these materials. Too often they don't know the materials and don't want to learn them. Gospel Doctrine can be particularly difficult when there is no discussion of the scriptures but lots of discussion how one applies the non-read scriptures to their own lives. I suspect that John McLay was a touchy-feely instructor who cracked his Bible open long enough to master the Scripture Mastery scriptures but nothing else.

Each one of us must develop our own understanding of and belief in Jesus Christ. Brooke McLay may have been the only one to mention His name, and only to condemn other Mormons for not being Christian for excluding gays.


One section in four is devoted to the New Testament. And less than half of that focuses on the gospels. And instead of letting the gospels speak for themselves, it's the usual Jehovah's Witness-style prooftexting.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.

B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
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