Droopy wrote:You're being a Pharisaical hair splitter here just for its own anti-Mormon sake, and nothing else. In the South Seas missionaries wear white shirts, ties, and grass skirts. I've seen them. Obedience is the first law of Heaven. What the Lord requires, here or there, he requires, here or there. If the Lord says its OK to wear Kimonos in Japan to pass sacrament or lead a meeting, so be it. If he says he wants Japanese LDS to wear white shirts and ties to so officiate, then so be it. If he wants Americans to wear Kimonos to pass the sacrament, then so be it. I could care less (I like traditional Japanese men's clothing too, as well as Ming/Ching dynasty Chinese garb (and love the swordsman/scholar hairstyles)).
I'm not anti-Mormon and I'm not splitting hairs. I just do not understand the "if God says so (through some church leader), we must conform" mentality. It's the same impulse that says we aren't allowed to question or criticize our leaders, turn down a calling, or refuse to obey instructions, even if we are instructed to do something we believe to be morally wrong.
The crux of the matter is that if the Church is true, then what comes through the mouths of the Lord's servants the prophets, being the word of the Lord to us for our time and circumstances, is true and comes with blessings affixed to obedience to those standards and/or practices.
I suppose I leave room for church leaders to impose their own standards and beliefs on members, even if the church is true. I once had a bishop announce that the Relief Society room was not to be used for anything but Relief Society, as it had been set apart specifically for that purpose. I thought that was ridiculous but as long as he was bishop that rule was enforced, making Sunday School classes a bit dicey because of lack of classroom space. Even if the church were true (and I'm pretty sure it isn't), there's plenty of room for personal interpretation on the part of leaders, even the prophet.
We can also rebel against or ignore those standards and counsel, and pass by the blessings. That's our prerogative.
What are the promised blessings of wearing white shirts and ties or shaving one's beard?
"It doesn't seem fair, does it Norm--that I should have so much knowledge when there are people in the world that have to go to bed stupid every night." -- Clifford C. Clavin, USPS
"¡No contaban con mi astucia!" -- El Chapulin Colorado