(emphasis added)juliann wrote:It is refreshing to even see some critics begin to admit some responsibility. I was always told to avoid anti-Mormonism in former years...but it has been a very long time since I have even heard it mentioned. I find it almost incomprehensible that Joseph Smith's polygamy is sitting right in one of the most important pieces of scripture for LDS belief yet some people don't know. I didn't know how many sealings (and we still don't, by the way). I'm not exactly sure what is supposed to be taught when no one can come to a conclusion on this board about some pretty fundamental things. It is very clear the purpose of teaching this for the countermos is to paint Joseph Smith as a terrible person because that is what they think polygamy makes a person. The breakdown seems to occur when they can't understand why not everybody thinks it does....and I don't see that being argued in church manuals anytime soon. So what they really want would never be acknowledged anyway and they would find themselves in the same frustrated existence....a burning need to convert us to their way of thinking.
I still find it so bizarre that we get so much tongue clucking over D&C 132 and how awful the flaming sword is ....while another thread is claiming the church hides it. I don't even know how to respond to that.....cognitive dissonance? Compartmentalization? What is going on with the critics when they can take two competing positions and be so completely oblivious while they do it?
I vote that we end this silly apologetic effluvium once and for all. Let's all say it together: The Church discourages members from reading the full history!
Edited to add: I cannot help but point out that juliann is one of the most egregiously nasty posters towards those people who appear on MAD in order to express their mixed emotions upon finding out some embarrassing tidbit about the Church. In other words, she, along with her "harpy brigade," tend to deride and victimize these upset posters, and to blame them for not "studying up." How interesting, then, that juliann herself admits that she was given council against reading!