antishock8 wrote:And Mormons wonder why people don't like them.
We do?
antishock8 wrote:And Mormons wonder why people don't like them.
The Nehor wrote:Perhaps I was unclear. I meant that you don't have some God-given right to have no one ever offend you.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:antishock8 wrote:And Mormons wonder why people don't like them.
We do?
The Nehor wrote:asbestosman wrote:The Nehor wrote:Do you really expect the Church to deviate from one of it's prime mandates from God so a bunch of people can feel better?
Some would say that's what happened with polygamy and also blacks and the priesthood.
Perhaps, I am not part of that 'some' though.
asbestosman wrote:The Nehor wrote:asbestosman wrote:The Nehor wrote:Do you really expect the Church to deviate from one of it's prime mandates from God so a bunch of people can feel better?
Some would say that's what happened with polygamy and also blacks and the priesthood.
Perhaps, I am not part of that 'some' though.
Actually, when it comes to polygamy I do think God changed it due to how outsiders took it (and therefore acted against the church). The Official Declaration hinds about as much. When it comes to blacks and the priesthood, I think there are other issues.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:*As far as reasoning goes, I might ask questions like this: What is it that offends you about the practice? Do you believe the LDS Church has any authority or power from God to perform vicarious baptism on behalf of your loved one? If not, can it really affect you if such a ceremony (which is very brief) is performed far away from your loved one and you? What is something constructive you can do to overcome your offense?
LifeOnaPlate wrote:guy sajer wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:asbestosman wrote:I also find there is a difference between performing a religious ordinance on my living children and performing a religious rite using the name of a deceased person. That said, it does not mean that nobody should ever be offended by what I do with the names of the dead. People are offended by whatever they are offended by.
We're pretty much in the same boat on this one.
So what is it? Do they have a legit cause to be offended, or are they just a bunch of malcontents looking to take offense? Or something else?
I'm curious how you explain your answer, whatever it is.
It's not the same across the board. There is no prototypical answer from my perspective. Different people take offense for different reasons and in different degrees.
If someone calls me an idiot do I have the right to be offended? Will I be offended? What will I do with my offense? It doesn't make me feel great when I hear some are offended by baptism for the dead, if that is what you are asking. What is my answer? I suppose I would try to reason* with such a person and help them get past their offense. If we reach an impasse I would see it as unfortunate, but there isn't much else I can do.
*As far as reasoning goes, I might ask questions like this: What is it that offends you about the practice? Do you believe the LDS Church has any authority or power from God to perform vicarious baptism on behalf of your loved one? If not, can it really affect you if such a ceremony (which is very brief) is performed far away from your loved one and you? What is something constructive you can do to overcome your offense?
If the person is a good friend who has a sense of humor I might suggest they perform an "unbaptism" ceremony just for good measure.
asbestosman wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:*As far as reasoning goes, I might ask questions like this: What is it that offends you about the practice? Do you believe the LDS Church has any authority or power from God to perform vicarious baptism on behalf of your loved one? If not, can it really affect you if such a ceremony (which is very brief) is performed far away from your loved one and you? What is something constructive you can do to overcome your offense?
for what it's worth, I would imagine that many would find such questions further offensive. Or feelings about deceased loved ones are not always rational. In fact, I might argue that they are rarely rational. Many simply want to have good memories of them and almost think about them as still living not some dead pile of ashes in an urn or corpse in a field. That, I suppose, is why they are offended at what we do to their names just as we would be offended at someone mutilating the corpses of our deceased loved ones. We almost think of the corpse as them or even as alive although it's not strictly rational.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Personally, I think comparing a vicarious baptism with mutilating a corpse over the top.
guy sajer wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:guy sajer wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:asbestosman wrote:I also find there is a difference between performing a religious ordinance on my living children and performing a religious rite using the name of a deceased person. That said, it does not mean that nobody should ever be offended by what I do with the names of the dead. People are offended by whatever they are offended by.
We're pretty much in the same boat on this one.
So what is it? Do they have a legit cause to be offended, or are they just a bunch of malcontents looking to take offense? Or something else?
I'm curious how you explain your answer, whatever it is.
It's not the same across the board. There is no prototypical answer from my perspective. Different people take offense for different reasons and in different degrees.
If someone calls me an idiot do I have the right to be offended? Will I be offended? What will I do with my offense? It doesn't make me feel great when I hear some are offended by baptism for the dead, if that is what you are asking. What is my answer? I suppose I would try to reason* with such a person and help them get past their offense. If we reach an impasse I would see it as unfortunate, but there isn't much else I can do.
*As far as reasoning goes, I might ask questions like this: What is it that offends you about the practice? Do you believe the LDS Church has any authority or power from God to perform vicarious baptism on behalf of your loved one? If not, can it really affect you if such a ceremony (which is very brief) is performed far away from your loved one and you? What is something constructive you can do to overcome your offense?
If the person is a good friend who has a sense of humor I might suggest they perform an "unbaptism" ceremony just for good measure.
You haven't answered the question. I'm curious to see whether and to what degree you are capable of empathy/understanding something from someone else's point of view.
What offends me about the practice? Many things, among them is this. If a person in life choose NOT to associate with a particular group, or holds core beliefs directly at odds with said group, inducting him/her into the group post-mortem dishonors that person's memory and is an act that violates what he/she stood for in life.
Do I think the LDS Church has any authority? Of course not. Can it affect me? Not directly, no, but symbolically, absolutely. You must live under a rock if you cannot figure out that symbols matter, and they matter a lot, to people. (By way of analogy, displaying the Confederate flag on state property doesn't affect anyone directly, but symbolically it affects many, and powerfully. You remind me of the Southern redneck/racist/good ol' boy/etc. (take your pick) who for the life of him cannot fathom why black people find public displays of the Confederate flag offensive.)
Try for once to step outside your self identity as a Mormon and perhaps perceive that people world--wide aren't quite so anxious to kiss the Mormon backside (metaphorically) as you are.