KevinSim wrote:Themis wrote:This is just another excuse. You are making crap up to protect your beliefs.
No I'm not. Making "crap up to protect" my beliefs implies that I'm making it up right not, in response to the objections you've raised. What I'm telling you is things I have believed for the 35 years since asking God my question.
No it just implies you are making it up to protect your beliefs whether done 35 minutes ago or 35 years ago.
I agree with you, to some extent. The LDS Church doesn't teach that the asker needs to be as prepared for a no answer as the asker is prepared for a yes answer.
They don't teach it because they teach God will not lie to you and since they think the church and Book of Mormon is true you can't get a no answer.
But I knew that at the time, as a 17-year-old. I knew that I wanted a yes answer, and therefore the answer I got couldn't be counted on to have come from God. It wasn't until I was prepared for either a yes answer or a no answer that I got the answer that I could be sure came from God.
BS. You are only deceiving yourself here. Either the Book of Mormon is true or not true. God is not going to lie, but somehow you need to believe this to explain why good people get a no answer. people who may be ready for a no answer can still get their body to produce those feelings they will interpret as the HG. Of course this gets difficult now to know what a no answer even is. If you get nothing is that a no, or a bad feeling. This is why it is self deception to go with such an unreliable method here.
There's no arrogance in putting two and two together and coming up with a conclusion.
I never said it was arrogant for you to incorrectly attribute a feeling you had was God telling you something. This two and two together is a bad method taught by the church that is circular and done by people in many religions who get very different results.