consiglieri wrote:Hades wrote: How can anything be good for your soul if you don't enjoy it?
A question for the ages, Hades.
I think the standard Mormon response would be that, if you don't enjoy it, the problem is with you. After all, "everybody else" is enjoying it.
This got brought up again last General Conference when some GA repeated the hackneyed story about President Kimball being asked how he handles boring sacrament meetings. "I don't know," he reportedly replied, "I've never been to one."
Leaving aside the fact this is a bald-faced lie, the subtext is clearly to put the blame on any person who finds any sacrament meeting boring.
On the other side of this equation, though, is President Eyring's story about how his Dad handled boring sacrament meetings (so, yes, they apparently do exist)--he would close his eyes and think of the sermon the speaker should be giving.
Hugh Nibley just took books to read.
All the Best!
--Consiglieri
I'd always pay attention to the youth speaker no matter how boring. I figured that public speaking is bloody hard enough without having to do it when you are 12-18 and completely self-conscious.
After that I'd open my scriptures and find passages that would contradict everything the remaining speakers were saying. That usually whittled away the time and brought me some satisfaction.
Sunday School and high priests group (especially high priests group) were spent arguing.
H.