Mary wrote:Although I have been inactive for about 20 years now I well remember that 'anti-mormon' is a cue to active members for 'Satanic' and 'don't even go there'.
I honestly don't find that helpful and I wish Scott could get through that. Dan P once argued that 'anti-mormon' is a specific term that is used in a scholarly way, and that is fine. But that's not how the average member interprets the term and I think Scott would know that. It's not helpful.
Isn't there anyway to get above this? Bart Ehrman is not anti-christian because he takes a more nuanced view of christian origins. James Tabor isn't anti-christian because he is willing to go where the evidence leads on the original church and the family of Jesus.
The loose use of the word "anti-Mormon" does bother me. It is clearly used to prejudice people against folks like Twede and members of the LDS Church who post on this board and it is used for rhetorical effect. It probably works in scaring off the unwary. More to the point, those who misuse the term reveal themselves for the sophistical bigots that they are.
In any case, I have no trouble saying that MormonThink is a site that is designed to show people a Mormonism that is not faith promoting. We all know that the presentation of facts is an important element of swaying people. MormonThink is, I would say, presenting information in such a way that it depicts Mormonism, overall, in a negative light.
I don't really care for that, personally. I prefer Saints without Halos, which has a more straightforward, factual approach. It comes much closer to letting the facts speak for themselves, and ends up presenting the reader a Mormonism they probably did not know existed. I have benefited much more from this site than MT.
So, I don't see anything wrong with calling MormonThink a faith-demoting website. But to call it "anti-Mormon"? I don't think so. Those who call it such are either being lazy or unscrupulous, or they are the kind of people who think that anything diverging from the Correlation message is anti-Mormon. I would say that the apologists probably fall into the latter category. These are the zealots who pay a kind of fealty to ecclesiastical leaders that borders on cultish--like Danites.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist