zeezrom wrote:Do you think some people are just afraid to stop believing?
Absolutely. This is why when asked what
they believe, most Mormons will start with, "Well
we believe..." It's a collective mindset that's reinforced every time they say they
know the church is true. Because you climbed out of Plato's cave to seek the truth, he's wondering if the dancing shadows on the wall are real; they fear that they are not real.
I respect your plan in this whole thing. Why burst his bubble if he's happy? On the other hand, there's a lot of ways to point out the inconsistencies just using the Book of Mormon itself. Questions that involve the so-called Urim and Thummim and what happened to them (D&C 10:1-3) have answers, and most Mormons don't have a clue about seer stones and rock-in-hat.
If I were you, I stay on the side of caution and just be friends, but if you really are friends, maybe he wants to know? Hold out the red pill and the blue one and explain once one knows the truth they can't go back. If he chooses to want to know, even if it's a plan of his to bring you back, start with one thing and show him some data. Whatever he accepts or rejects is up to him. Is your life happier since you learned the truth? The answer is that it doesn't factor into this. The truth is the truth and what one does with it is up to them. If you are good friends, I really don't see how you can avoid the above conversation.
Well I've been sittin' here, thinkin' about you
'Bout what it is that you, you want from me
You know it seems that I still don't know you well
Know many faces I have seen
Still I try, to make you happy
Still I try, to make you sing
Now if you're wonderin', what I think of it all
Just read the back of this postcard
The air here, breathing's greatPostcard - Widespread Panic
2 Tim 4:3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine.
2 Tim 4:4 They will turn their ears away from the truth & turn aside to myths