Charity, how is LDS right and FLDS, Strangites, RLDS, wrong?

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_harmony
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Post by _harmony »

charity wrote:I explained that already, harmony. T

There is a difference between a transitory experience and a continual presence. That is the difference.

The gift of the Holy Ghost is given by God, not demanded, as a specific ordinance, referenced in Article of Faith #4. We believe that the first principles and ordinances of the Gospel are: first, Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; second, Repentance; third, Baptism by immersion for the remission of sins; fourth, Laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost.

You did say you were a member, I believe? This is basic doctrine. Not my opinion. The word of God. A truth.


You are mistaken. That is not basic doctrine. At least, as my bishop explained it to me, you are mistaken. The Holy Ghost is not transitory, ever. The light of Christ is what you are calling the transitory Holy Ghost. The light of Christ is what all nonmembers have access to. The light of Christ is not the Holy Ghost. Only members have access to the Holy Ghost.

I will refrain from wondering if you really are a member. It's so tacky.
_Mercury
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Post by _Mercury »

Still waiting for the replies Charity.
And crawling on the planet's face
Some insects called the human race
Lost in time
And lost in space...and meaning
_beastie
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Post by _beastie »

charity: This is a distraction off the topic, but okay. I read a lot of William James, Carl Jung and Abraham Maslow on numinous experience. I read some of the work of Persinger when I was backin school later. While is work has other flaws, the major one is that his conclusions are based on induced experiences. I don't think his assurances that induced experiences are identical to spontaneous experiences is very compelling. Do you want to go on with this?


Persinger’s induced experiences aren’t what I’m talking about. The book I previously mentioned, Why God Won’t Go Away (which was written by two men, one of whom is a believer, can’t remember about the other), talks about what actually happens in the brains of people who are having “natural” numinous experiences. They studied monks who excel meditating to the point where they enter an altered state. And studying works such as Phantoms in the Brain, which gives detailed case studies on how the brain creates an alternate reality, also helps to understand the power of the brain. When you insist that the chemistry of the brain could not possibly explain the Mormon experience, you minimize the power of the brain. The brain creates the reality you perceive. That does not mean that the reality doesn’t exist, which is something that Newberg is careful to explain in Why God Won’t Go Away, but it does explain the mechanism by which it occurs. Even you must admit that there is a physical mechanism by which these processes take place. Newberg compares it to the structure of the eye – understanding exactly how, physically, the eye/brain creates sight does not mean there is nothing there to see in the first place. Studying which portions of the brain are heightened and which are de-accentuated during a numinous event demonstrates why we feel the particular sensations we feel during the event. This alone does not mean there is no God to perceive in the first place. It just provides an explanation of the process by which the brain creates certain sensations, whether they are God induced or induced by something else.

I’m not insisting that you, or any other believer, accept my premise that these numinous events are the natural products of the brain. I am asking you to at least try to understand how it is possible for an individual, such as myself, to experience a powerful numinous event, and still come to view that event within naturalistic bounds.

Let me give another example of the power of the brain, from Ramachandran’s Phantoms of the Brain. He talks about individuals who believe that one of their limbs really belongs to someone else, and about individuals who believe that their family members have been replaced by identical aliens, among many other strange examples. Yet all of these phenomenon were caused by the brain. The brain can create an alternate reality ever bit as convincing as what we perceive to be our daily reality.

charity: What I think is that other people have geniuine, God-given spiritual experiences. I have said that over and over and over. How many repeats does it take?

beastie: I said you are DISMISSIVE of them [the spiritual experiences of others]. You are dismissive of them in that you do not believe those experiences mean what the people think they mean, just like what you think yours means - which is that their spiritual path is the correct one.

charity: Not true again. I think any spiritual experience sent from God confirms a truth. That simple.

I think that non-LDS and LDS may on occasion misinterpret what the witness was meant to convey. For instance, Paul Dunn often told stories of sacrifice and heroic action based on his experiences. Listening to those stories many people felt what they said was a spiritual confirmation. Later on, it was revealed that he really did not have those experiences. This caused a crisis for some because they felt they had been deceived, that obviously the spirit wouldn't testify to a false story, so they disallowed the experience as not being what they thought it was. I think they had misinterpreted the witness. They thought it was to the story, which was not true. I think it was to the truth that sacrifice is a honorable action, that heroics in the face of danger Old Testament save others, etc. That was the truth the Spirit was witnessing to.


The problem, charity, is that you are every bit as susceptible as any other human being to misinterpreting what that witness was meant to convey. You do not seem able to admit this obvious fact.

charity: Guilty. But with a couple of the witnesses I have experienced, there is no way I could ever go back and say it was something so trivial as random neuron firings. So I cannot see how something, if it were as powerful, could be so easil dismissed by you. But I will admit to thinking that your experience had to be of a less strong influence.


These are the sort of statements that lead me to believe you really have not read much about the brain.

The reality of the individual who believes that one of his/her legs really belongs to someone else, and would like it amputated, is every bit of strong as the reality that you experience on a daily basis.

Moreover, I never said that I “easily” dismissed it. In fact, I have stated that I stayed in the church long past the time I could intellectually believe due to the strength of this experience.

beastie: So help me out. What is the difference between the still small voice and the voice of thunder?

charity: The difference is only the form of the answer. Sometimes the answer comes in the still small voice. Sometimes the voice of thunder. The same source. Different format, style.


You need to be more specific. You are not clarifying, simply repeating yourself.

beastie: Who said anything about envy??? What in the world are you talking about???

charity: When someone says, "you just think you have some kind of special experience, but you don't" it is because they are envious. Since they don't have the experience, the way they can feel better about themselves is only be convincing themselves that no one has that kind of experience.


Once again, you put words in my mouth. This is not what I said at all. It is a special experience, one I also had. You are the one who resists admitting that it’s possible that someone who no longer believes may have also had a powerful experience.

The envy you imagine is nonexistent. I know, from my years in the church, that what I experienced was unique in that it was quite specific and powerful. The vast majority of believers had no such experience, and rather believed due to the sort of emotions that some also experience during a moving movie.

charity: It is your determination of "less." I said "different." And the doctrine of opposition in all things is not something I made up.


I don’t care what word you use, your meaning is clear. If they interpret that experience as meaning that their path to God is “the path”, then they have misinterpreted their experience. Or it came from Satan.

I know you’re not making any of this up. You are simply repeating what you’ve been taught by those you are convinced speak for God.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
_charity
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Post by _charity »

harmony wrote:
charity wrote:I explained that already, harmony. T

There is a difference between a transitory experience and a continual presence. That is the difference.

The gift of the Holy Ghost is given by God, not demanded, as a specific ordinance, referenced in Article of Faith #4. We believe that the first principles and ordinances of the Gospel are: first, Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; second, Repentance; third, Baptism by immersion for the remission of sins; fourth, Laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost.

You did say you were a member, I believe? This is basic doctrine. Not my opinion. The word of God. A truth.


You are mistaken. That is not basic doctrine. At least, as my bishop explained it to me, you are mistaken. The Holy Ghost is not transitory, ever. The light of Christ is what you are calling the transitory Holy Ghost. The light of Christ is what all nonmembers have access to. The light of Christ is not the Holy Ghost. Only members have access to the Holy Ghost.

I will refrain from wondering if you really are a member. It's so tacky.


I doubt your bishop said that.

1. The Light of Christ is given to all mankind. I don't know that it is identical to the conscience, but that is its function. It is not the Holy Ghost.
2.The witness of the Holy Ghost can be given to any one any time that they need a witness to the truth, a truth.
3. The gift of the Holy Ghost is a specific ordinance, and that is what is meant in the sacrament prayer when it says, "that his spirit may always be with them." (Doctrine and Covents 20:77)

Please refer to The Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith. ( I think that is pretty authoritative.) "There is a difference between the Holy Ghost and the gift of the Holy Ghost. Cornelius received the Holy Ghost before he was baptized, which was the cnvincing power of God unto him of the truth of the Gospel, but he could not receive the gift of the Holy Ghost until after he was baptized. Had he not taken this sign or ordinance upon him, the Holy ghost which convinced him of the truth of God, would have left him."

Now do you understand. The Holy Ghost witnessed to Cornelius BEFORE he was baptized. And would have LEFT him had he not acted on the truth he was given.
_Tori
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Post by _Tori »

charity wrote:
beastie wrote:
To beastie 2: If you think this was a false witness, please refer to the comment above. And if you wonder how a false spiritual experience can sound like a true spiritual experience, just remember who is the Father of Lies. Lies aren't really very effective if they are unbelievable. The best liars are very convincing.


Funny, that's how many people would explain YOUR testimony.

To sethbag: If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Didn't your mother teach you anything?


That's certainly not what you told me on MAD. I shared my story, which includes the fact that I "tried, tried" again for a long time. Never received an affirmative answer. You told me that my problem was I should have prayed ONCE and then lived faithfully, waiting patiently for an answer.

I remember this very specifically, because it was a first. I'd never had an LDS tell me I was asking God too much. Usually LDS tell me I did it wrong somehow. LDS are big on revelation, but only when it works in their favor.


I understand that people think that about my testimony. I am not accountable to them. Only to God, so it doesn't bother me.

And the reply to sethbag was a joke. Dang. I wish this board had smilies. I hate the little :) thing. Makes the person look like they're drunk.

I said in this post, the important thing is to live the truth you know. I think that applies to what I replied to back on another board. Although I am pretty sure it would have been the FAIR message board, and not MA&D.


Here's a smile:....Image

and another:
Image
And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who cold not hear the music. ----Nietzche
_charity
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Post by _charity »

beastie: Persinger’s induced experiences aren’t what I’m talking about.

charity: No, you are also relying on meditating monks. That isn't the kind of experience I am referencing to at all, so it is not comparable.

beastie: Studying which portions of the brain are heightened and which are de-accentuated during a numinous event demonstrates why we feel the particular sensations we feel during the event.
beastie: The problem, charity, is that you are every bit as susceptible as any other human being to misinterpreting what that witness was meant to convey. You do not seem able to admit this obvious fact.

charity: Not at all. YOu have never asked me about any times I have misinterpreted something that I figured out later. But it never involved denying the inspiration or the witness. It was a thunk on the forehead of why I didn't understand the meaning. I have never said, oh, well, it was probably just a random brain chemical event.

beastie: These are the sort of statements that lead me to believe you really have not read much about the brain.
The reality of the individual who believes that one of his/her legs really belongs to someone else, and would like it amputated, is every bit of strong as the reality that you experience on a daily basis.

charity: I have studied the brain only a little more than the graduate level study of neurology that we did. You ever read Oliver Sachs "The Man Who Thought His Wife Was A Hat?"

beastie: Moreover, I never said that I “easily” dismissed it. In fact, I have stated that I stayed in the church long past the time I could intellectually believe due to the strength of this experience.

charity: Spiritual witnesses are not "intellectual" events.

beastie: So help me out. What is the difference between the still small voice and the voice of thunder? You need to be more specific. You are not clarifying, simply repeating yourself.

charity: The still small voice comes as a thought, as an idea, as a question, as a feeling of peace and assurance. It is a very quiet experience. I will not speak for others as what kinds of strong spiritual witnesses can be. For me, I have hd several, a couple of them so sacred I will not talk about them in public, only with family and close friends in the temple. But my testimony of the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith was like a giant illuminating explosion. I did not perceive it located in the brain or in the heart. It was as though my whole body had become filled with light. The feeling lasted for probably no moire than 30-60 seconds, and then the light faded as you would experience a light with a dimmer switch. But the feeling of light persisted for a long time. And since that time I have had similar reconfirmations of the truth of Joseph Smith's calling as a prophet. Those have certainly not been quiet events, ideas, questions, a feeling of peace and assurance.

beastie: I know, from my years in the church, that what I experienced was unique in that it was quite specific and powerful. The vast majority of believers had no such experience, and rather believed due to the sort of emotions that some also experience during a moving movie.

charity: And now who is trying to tell people what kind of experiences they had?

beastie: I don’t care what word you use, your meaning is clear. If they interpret that experience as meaning that their path to God is “the path”, then they have misinterpreted their experience. Or it came from Satan.

charity: Absolutely not true. I think people can receive witnesses to the truth they need at that time. I don't think everyone needs to join the Church at this very moment.

beastie: I know you’re not making any of this up. You are simply repeating what you’ve been taught by those you are convinced speak for God.

charity: Thanks for that little piece of condescension. And of course, you are simply repeating what you have been told by the secular humanist culture.
_Zoidberg
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Post by _Zoidberg »

Chap wrote:
Zoidberg wrote:"Does it affect my slavation?" .


Probably nyet.


ROFL. Good one.

Luckily, my slavation is already assured.
"reason and religion are friends and allies" - Mitt Romney
_Polygamy Porter
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Post by _Polygamy Porter »

charity wrote:
Polygamy Porter wrote:Yes, but one thing that you have stated is that your spiritual experiences come from god and all other non LDS spiritual experiences come from Satan.


Again, not true, Polyg. I have stated that many non-LDS people have spiritual experiences which come from God. But if ANYONE, LDS or non-LDS has a "spiritual" experience that is not from God, there is only one other source. Maybe that is too subtle a difference for you to undestand.
Nnn-kay, so then how does one discern which spiritual experiences are from God?

If a man feels that his spiritual experience tells him he should become a Roman Catholic Priest, should he follow it?Is that from God? How can you tell?

If an active LDS woman has a spiritual experience that she feels is telling her to join the FLDS and become a polygamous wife, should she? Is that from God? How can you tell?

Perhaps everyone is biased when it comes to qualifying a spiritual experience? You being LDS would say to both of these people that their spiritual experiences where not from God, because he would not send his children into the false religions.....


How can we discern that these spiritual experiences are nothing more than self induced emotional epiphanies?
Last edited by Ask Jeeves [Bot] on Mon Nov 12, 2007 4:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
_beastie
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Post by _beastie »

beastie: Persinger’s induced experiences aren’t what I’m talking about.

charity: No, you are also relying on meditating monks. That isn't the kind of experience I am referencing to at all, so it is not comparable.


And how in the world would you know that? By definition, mystical, numinous events are not accessible for comparison.

Oh, I forgot. You’re LDS, that means your spiritual confirmation is right, so monks cannot possibly provide information about the state of the brain during numinous events.

This conversation is pointless, isn’t it?

charity: Not at all. YOu have never asked me about any times I have misinterpreted something that I figured out later. But it never involved denying the inspiration or the witness. It was a thunk on the forehead of why I didn't understand the meaning. I have never said, oh, well, it was probably just a random brain chemical event.


Who said anything about a “random brain chemical event”?

Moreover, I do not deny the experience, I never have. I simply understand it differently.

In your world, that could never, never happen.

charity: I have studied the brain only a little more than the graduate level study of neurology that we did. You ever read Oliver Sachs "The Man Who Thought His Wife Was A Hat?"


Yes. So you do have some familiarity with the topic. Why then are you so dismissive to the power of the brain to create reality? You call it “random brain chemical events”.

beastie: Moreover, I never said that I “easily” dismissed it. In fact, I have stated that I stayed in the church long past the time I could intellectually believe due to the strength of this experience.

charity: Spiritual witnesses are not "intellectual" events.


I never said it was. Please reread what I said.

charity: The still small voice comes as a thought, as an idea, as a question, as a feeling of peace and assurance. It is a very quiet experience. I will not speak for others as what kinds of strong spiritual witnesses can be. For me, I have hd several, a couple of them so sacred I will not talk about them in public, only with family and close friends in the temple. But my testimony of the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith was like a giant illuminating explosion. I did not perceive it located in the brain or in the heart. It was as though my whole body had become filled with light. The feeling lasted for probably no moire than 30-60 seconds, and then the light faded as you would experience a light with a dimmer switch. But the feeling of light persisted for a long time. And since that time I have had similar reconfirmations of the truth of Joseph Smith's calling as a prophet. Those have certainly not been quiet events, ideas, questions, a feeling of peace and assurance.


Yes, this is what I thought you likely meant. The still small voice is a quiet experience, a thought, an idea, a question, a feeling of peace and assurance. And you, and church leaders, tell members that this experience can provide a more than adequate basis for a testimony.

After defining the still small voice, are you still going to pretend that it’s simply not possible to equate these experiences with other, natural, life experiences?

I have shared my Book of Mormon experience many times, but I will share it once more for your benefit.

The missionaries gave me a Book of Mormon at our first meeting, and by our second discussion, I had already read half of it. Since they hadn’t been able to actually give the discussion the first time, since we were arguing with them so much, they gave it at this second meeting and taught me to pray with the LDS formula. They told me about Joseph Smith, the first vision, the translation of the Book of Mormon, and told me to ask God if these things were true.

So that night, laying in my dark dormitory room with my roommate sleeping in the same room, I silently prayed to God: “Is the Book of Mormon the word of God”? I know the exact words I used because I wrote it in my journal.

Immediately, I felt as if I had been suddenly plugged in an electrical current of light and ecstasy. I didn’t open my eyes, but I felt bathed in light, I felt as if every cell of my body suddenly came alive and were all glowing in the light. I’m not sure how long it lasted, probably only a minute or two. I had no doubt that God had just answered my prayer. It was a remarkable experience.

The next night I again prayed, this time asking: “Was Joseph Smith a true prophet of God?” No answer. None. Nothing but the dark night. I had been so confident, so certain that God would readily answer me again. I despaired. I instinctively realized that the Book of Mormon being the “word of God” and Joseph Smith being a true prophet called to restore a church were two different issues. The missionaries had told me to pray about each of them. I had no doubt that God had answered my prayer about the Book of Mormon, but I also had no doubt he had not answered my prayer about Joseph Smith.

I was very upset and sad. I wanted so much to feel God in my life. So I called my sister, who had previously joined the church, and talked about my experience. She convinced me that if the Book of Mormon were the word of God, then the rest of it had to be true, too. I felt very good talking to her, more like the still small voice experience. I decided to be baptized then and there.

Believing that the answer to my prayer meant yes to everything worked for me until I began to read more about church history. I began to doubt Joseph Smith’ calling to restore the church. I was troubled by his behavior. I decided that it was time to get a testimony of Joseph Smith in specific. When it became obvious God was NOT going to affirm to me that Joseph Smith had been a true prophet, I began to wonder if he was a fallen prophet. Maybe God had called him to translate the Book of Mormon and he then over-reached and did other things, claiming God gave him that authority, too, but He didn’t. So I began to ask slightly different questions, like “is the CoJCoLDS the one true church with the sole priesthood authority”? I tried to be as specific as possible, giving God every opportunity to somehow salvage my faith.

beastie: I know, from my years in the church, that what I experienced was unique in that it was quite specific and powerful. The vast majority of believers had no such experience, and rather believed due to the sort of emotions that some also experience during a moving movie.

charity: And now who is trying to tell people what kind of experiences they had?


I did not try to tell people what kind of experience they had, I asked them. When my faith was wavering, I asked every member of my ward I felt comfortable enough to talk to about my doubts how they knew Joseph Smith was a true prophet. To a person, they all told me the generic “feel good” type of story. Not one had a distinct, numinous experience.

And why should that matter? The still small voice can also provide an adequate testimony.

beastie: I don’t care what word you use, your meaning is clear. If they interpret that experience as meaning that their path to God is “the path”, then they have misinterpreted their experience. Or it came from Satan.

charity: Absolutely not true. I think people can receive witnesses to the truth they need at that time. I don't think everyone needs to join the Church at this very moment.


Maybe it’s you who has just received “the truth you need at this time”.

beastie: I know you’re not making any of this up. You are simply repeating what you’ve been taught by those you are convinced speak for God.

charity: Thanks for that little piece of condescension. And of course, you are simply repeating what you have been told by the secular humanist culture.


You were the one who asserted you weren’t making this stuff up, why is it now condescending to agree?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
_Lucretia MacEvil
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Post by _Lucretia MacEvil »

charity wrote:the road to hana: As I recall from a discussion on FAIR some time ago (when it was still FAIR and before I was kicked off), Charity believes that all ex-mormons are inherently untrustworthy, as evidenced by their unfaithfulness to the church. She certainly wouldn't ever expect to learn any sort of truth from any of us.

charity: you don't recall correctly. I said that people who violate sacred covenants and publish temple ceremonies are not trustworthy. And people who lie to get a temple recommend so they can secretly vido tape the temple ceremony. I have seen those behaviors defended. I don't know that you did. But that is what I was referring to. Like the man who makes a vow of love and fidelity to his wife, and then changes his mind later,and decides he isn't in love with her. He doesn't have permission to break his vows.


I vividly recall you saying that all ex-mormons are untrustworthy, or maybe you used the word dishonest, but no use arguing that point now. Often what we say and what we mean to say get mixed up.

However, I still take issue with your "conditions." If people who violate sacred covenants (meaning temple covenants) are untrustworthy, that includes every ex-Mormon who has been to the temple. Publishing temple ceremonies is not inherently dishonest. Lying to get into the temple, agreed, is dishonest for whatever purpose, and I dare say that supposedly good Mormons lie to get into the temple a whole hell of a lot of more often that ex-Mormons do. And if a man deciding he is not in love with his wife any more is supposed to be an analogy for why ex-Mormons leave the church, it's a very poor one. When we realize that the covenants we made in the temple are totally meaningless, why would we continue to bind ourselves by them? That is not a question of honesty.
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