Runtu wrote: I guess that's where I'm confused, Wade. On the one hand, your analogy depends on the church being a good-faith actor, and on the other, you've repeatedly said that it doesn't matter who is right or wrong, but what is workable. Which is it?
If it doesn't matter whether I'm right or wrong about the church, then my "closedmindedness" should not matter in the least, should it?
Two corrections: 1) my analogy doesn't depend on the Church being a good faith actor. In fact, it contains opposing perceptions. The solution, on the other hand, may very well produce that perception, but if so, seeing the Church as a good faith actor is dependant upon the solution, and not the other way around. 2) I haven't suggested that it doesn't matter who is right or wrong. My point is that FOCUSING on who is right and wrong, particularly in situations where where rightness and wrongness is at the heart of the debate, and is unresolvable in any definitive way to the satisfaction of all parties, it may be in people's mutual interest to shift the focus from who is right and wrong to what WORKS. Do you see the important difference?
Edit: I am open to the remote possibility that the church is what it claims to be. I am not in fact entirely closedminded on this issue.
Now I am confused. I thought the issue was whether the Church has been acting in good faith regarding what it claims to be, rather than simply whether the Church is what it claims to be (in other words, it is the difference between Mr. B and Mr. D, rather than between Mr. A and B). I also thought you said that, to your mind, and anyone else's who didn't have a vested interest in the Church being "true", that it was "self-evident and indisputable" that the Church hadn't acted in good faith. How can a mind be supposedly open to something it views as self-evident and indisputable to the contrary? In other words, how can yuo be open to dispute something you believe is indisputable?
This begs the question: if that is not closeminded, what would closedminded look like on this issue?
Now, as indicated, I am open to the idea that the Church may not have ever acted in good faith, because I don't see the issue as self-evident or indisputable. In fact, I think there is room for dispute.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-