maklelan wrote:
Yes, there's plenty of latitude, but that's what makes it flexible and useful.
Oh sure Mak.
Why don't you ask the LDS leaders about this latitude.
Get real.
How disingenuous.
maklelan wrote:
Yes, there's plenty of latitude, but that's what makes it flexible and useful.
bcspace wrote:He wouldn't say any such thing. But he might suggest that the Local Flood could have been the flooding of the Black Sea.
bcspace wrote:The Church itself published a statement in to that effect in 2007.
maklelan wrote:[It did no such thing.
maklelan wrote:sunstoned wrote:What the prophets say while in a official capacity is not binding on the membership? Do you say this stuff out loud before typing it?
It's not binding on membership that women have only one piercing per ear. It's not binding on membership that all dates be paired off, planned, and paid for. We could make a list a thousand miles long of the things that prophets have said while in an official capacity that are not binding on the membership. Shoot, even the Adam-God theory was something Brigham Young lamented he could not convince the membership to accept.
malkie wrote:I wish that this could be made clear to the members - all of them - so that they need not feel guilty when they fall short of what the prophets say while in a official capacity, and so that they might not judge others for likewise falling short.
Why praise the young man who broke off his relationship with the girl who did not immediately go and remove her second pair of earrings?
How often are we told that the conference talks are the equivalent of scripture for our day?
And it's not just the prophets - how often are we told that we are expected to obey the words of our other leaders?
How about having church leaders actually tell us what is and what is not binding. Otherwise the church is a church of confusion, no?
mentalgymnast wrote:malkie wrote:I wish that this could be made clear to the members - all of them - so that they need not feel guilty when they fall short of what the prophets say while in a official capacity, and so that they might not judge others for likewise falling short.
Why praise the young man who broke off his relationship with the girl who did not immediately go and remove her second pair of earrings?
How often are we told that the conference talks are the equivalent of scripture for our day?
And it's not just the prophets - how often are we told that we are expected to obey the words of our other leaders?
How about having church leaders actually tell us what is and what is not binding. Otherwise the church is a church of confusion, no?
I like to come back again and again to the injunction in scripture that says something the effect that he/she that needs to be commanded in all things is a slothful servant. We are free to act and to be acted upon. We hearken (give heed or attention) to the the words of the prophets and apostles. We then exercise agency.
Culturally, and maybe some of it has to do with WW's (one and two) and the Depression and whatever else came along the way, the church has been more prohibitive than permissive. Maybe because people wanted comfort/security/sureness so that they didn't have to deal with anxiety or whatever. Maybe they looked at God as being more or less a mean SOB. Nowadays, the culture is slowly changing in some respects although it seems as though some of the skeptics are the last ones to either see it or want to accept/condone it. When I say changing, I mean towards more diversity in thought and in action...not that anybody is going out and becoming a wicked hedonist or a Nazi sympathizer.![]()
Gosh, at our local Costco they've been running an ad on Snapple Iced Tea. Best stuff in the world and I would wager a lot more healthy than stocking up on Mt. Dew or Coke. I'd guess that our brethren in Christ, the Baptists and the Lutherans, etc., have not been the only ones cutting a good deal on the best iced tea in the world. Now is it a sin? Some in the Mormon culture would say yes. Others would say, "who cares?" Better than overloading on MONSTER drinks ain't it? In other words's, if we have to be told what to do in all things we open ourselves up to looking at the world in a very restrictive black/white way.
Regards,
MG
Malone Jacoway, age 7, in LDS Friend, Mar. 2004, wrote:"In church I learned that President Hinckley said that girls and women should wear only one earring in each ear. One day I noticed that Grandma was wearing two earrings in each ear! I told her what I had learned in Primary, and she said, 'Then I had better take one earring out of each ear.' It makes me feel good to know that Grandma follows the prophet."
malkie wrote:Here is another example of what that leads to:Malone Jacoway, age 7, in LDS Friend, Mar. 2004, wrote:"In church I learned that President Hinckley said that girls and women should wear only one earring in each ear. One day I noticed that Grandma was wearing two earrings in each ear! I told her what I had learned in Primary, and she said, 'Then I had better take one earring out of each ear.' It makes me feel good to know that Grandma follows the prophet."
mentalgymnast wrote:Bazooka wrote:What do you consider is the standing of the recent anonymous essays?
They're apparently incomplete in scope and depth, but a catalyst for further research/study for those that want to dive in deeper.
The church has never been one for FULL disclosure at any one time...line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little there a little.
I think the essays, however, were more than JUST a little. There's stuff there that will get at least some people off their collective butts digging for even more. And that's good...for those that want to.
Regards,
MG
maklelan wrote:bcspace wrote:The Church itself published a statement in to that effect in 2007.
It did no such thing.
mentalgymnast wrote:The four fold mission of the church will not fall flat whether or not there was or wasn't a global flood. The four fold mission of the church will fall flat if God doesn't exist, Jesus is not Savior/Redeemer, or Joseph Smith did not experience a vision in which deity restored knowledge/keys that had been lost, etc.
Regards,
MG