bcspace wrote:If homosexuality is your problem, it can be overcome.
so when are you going to get over the problem you have with homosexuality?
bcspace wrote:If homosexuality is your problem, it can be overcome.
Bob Loblaw wrote:palerobber wrote:what i've seen with people in your position is that once they take that first step out the door, a lot of uncertainty and anxiety evaporates, and their journey away from not just the LDS church, but all religious faith, accelerates.
We've been conditioned to be terrified of the thought of leaving the church but when we take that step we realize pretty quickly that it isn't the end of the world. We lose "friends" but then who wants friends whose friendship depends on your religious faith?
Blixa wrote:I always wondered if we'd ever learn what kind of arcane and possibly gematric association the number has for why me, why he repeats it over and over like an incantation or spell. If I recall correctly, the number signifies disorder in various Biblical traditions, though I believe it was given positive attributes in Aleister Crowley's Thelemic writing. It is also the atomic number of sodium. Maybe the reason was to be found in mathematics: base 11? L. Ron Hubbard references the undecimal counting system in Battlefield Earth and Carl Sagan also makes use of it in his novel, Contact.
I have to say the reveal has been anticlimactic: 11 is a big number. Bigger than 3 or 2.
Drifting wrote:
But that experience hasn't been enough has it?
You don't attend Church or live Mormonism the way Mormon God explains you should via His Prophets and Apostles.
So why me, why wasn't the experience enough?
Tobin wrote:But there are 12 witnesses to the Book of Mormon.
SteelHead wrote:Wasn't it BY who taught that the most powerful sermon a man can preach is the way he lives his life?
So why me is testifying to the truth of principles he does not live. Effect!
why me wrote:Sad how cicero does not want to regain his testimony. The witnesses can certainly help him. But he got caught up in the mumbo jumbo of the critics.