moksha wrote:Gotta love this quote because it is implicitly true:Mormons are certainly Christian enough to know how to spitefully abuse their power.
+1
moksha wrote:Gotta love this quote because it is implicitly true:Mormons are certainly Christian enough to know how to spitefully abuse their power.
KevinSim wrote:Lucretia MacEvil wrote:Why do Mormons care whether the Baptists, for example, acknowledge their Christianity or not ? What common sense or practical reason is there? Why not just bide their time, non-desperately?
Let's say for a moment that influential people in the Southern Baptist Convention (as just one example) say that Latter-day Saints are not Christian, and Latter-day Saints say nothing. In that case, Southern Baptists will very possibly read the silence from the LDS Church as an indication that Latter-day Saints really aren't centered around Jesus Christ. That's not the result Latter-day Saints want. They want as many people as possible to think that they are in fact centered around Jesus.
KevinSim wrote:angsty wrote:as far as I know, Jews don't view Christians as a "legitimate" successor to their faith at all-- why would we expect Christianity to acknowledge Mormonism that way? Mason was making the point that Mormonism doesn't need that acknowledgment at all, that Mormons need to stop looking to "broader Christianity" for some kind of approval as if they needed it somehow-- in the way that Christians eventually came to see themselves as their own thing instead of waiting and battling for some kind of validation from Judaism. What Christians acknowledge or don't acknowledge about Mormons shouldn't figure in.
I don't think the LDS Church is worried about how Biblical Christianity as a collective unit feels about whether the LDS Church is potentially a legitimate successor to Christianity, as much as it cares about whether individual Christians feel about that, in particular individual Christians who might investigate the divine inspiration of the LDS Church. This may sound cynical, but in all honesty it makes perfect sense to me. The LDS Church wants potential investigators to see the LDS Church as an organization that centers around Jesus Christ, which is what it in fact is.
DarkHelmet wrote:This guy makes an interesting point. Why are Mormons so desperate to be accepted as Christians?
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/13/opini ... stian.htmlI’m with Harry Emerson Fosdick, the liberal Protestant minister and former pastor of Riverside Church in Manhattan, who wrote that he would be “ashamed to live in this generation and not be a heretic.” Being a Christian so often involves such boorish and meanspirited behavior that I marvel that any of my Mormon colleagues are so eager to join the fold.
stemelbow wrote:Lucretia MacEvil wrote:Okay, let's say there is no desperation. Why is there any common sense or practical reason for Mormons to be accepted as Christians?
Rather simple stuff:
Christian: one who believes Jesus Christ is LORD and Savior.
An LDS believer: among other things, Believes Jesus Christ is LORD and Savior.
LittleNipper wrote:What matters is not what "they" think, but what Christ expects.
KevinSim wrote:LittleNipper wrote:What matters is not what "they" think, but what Christ expects.
That implies that what Christ expects has no relation to what "they" think, and I don't think that's true at all. Christ expects us to reach out to people who don't understand Him, and that involves being very sensitive to what "they" think, and living lives that "they" can tell are centered around Christ.
LittleNipper wrote:But does not preclude acceptance, even though Christ would be happy.
KevinSim wrote:DarkHelmet wrote:This guy makes an interesting point. Why are Mormons so desperate to be accepted as Christians?
I have no problem with the assertion that Mormons are to Christians what Christians are to Jews, which the author David Mason seemed to argue. I think the problem is that Biblical Christians seem to think that their faith is a legitimate successor to Judaism, whereas they proclaim that my faith is not a legitimate successor to Christianity.
KevinSim wrote:Also, the thing I keep coming back to is the dictionary definition. I look Christian up at "www.dictionary.com" and I get, "1. of, pertaining to, or derived from Jesus Christ or His teachings: a Christian faith; 2. of, pertaining to, believing in, or belonging to the religion based on the teachings of Jesus Christ: Spain is a Christian country; 3. of or pertaining to Christians: many Christian deaths in the Crusades; 4. exhibiting a spirit proper to a follower of Jesus Christ; Christlike: She displayed true Christian charity; 5. decent; respectable: They gave him a good Christian burial.
So my question is, why should I believe Biblical Christians have more of a right to define the term Christian than the dictionary does?
1.
the popular name given to a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
2.
See under Book of Mormon.