Is Mormonism so bad?

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dastardly stem
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

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Manetho wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:10 pm
There was a time when I was somewhat open to the idea that Jesus did not exist, but the more I looked into it, the more I realized it fails Occam's Razor. In addition to the evidence of Paul, we have Josephus, who wasn't even a Christian. And while one of the two mentions of Jesus in his works is contaminated by blatant and clumsy Christian interpolation, the other isn't, and it's the one that mentions the execution of James, "the brother of Jesus who was called Messiah", in the course of political events that Josephus, as a member of the Jewish priestly class, personally witnessed. Carrier has a convoluted explanation for why this passage exists, in addition to his convoluted explanations for the passages of Paul that treat Jesus as a human being, but the simpler explanation is that the Josephus passage is genuine and Paul means what he seems to mean.

Moreover, the mythical aspects of the Jesus story are equally explicable using the much more widely accepted explanation, that Jesus was a real person who was mythologized after his death. Kishkumen has made that point quite clearly, in my opinion, regarding the miracle stories. Some elements of the gospels are actually more convincingly explained by the conventional explanation than by the mythicist one, because the gospels show signs that they're struggling to adapt a genuine story that doesn't fit the preexisting messianic prophecies. To quote from a page that all advocates of mythicism should read:
Tim O'Neill wrote:The idea of a Messiah who dies was totally unheard of and utterly alien to any Jewish tradition prior to the beginning of Christianity, but the idea of a Messiah who was crucified was not only bizarre, it was absurd. According to Jewish tradition, anyone who was “hanged on a tree” was to be considered accursed by Yahweh and this was one of the reasons crucifixion was considered particularly abhorrent to Jews. The concept of a crucified Messiah, therefore, was totally bizarre and absurd... Paul acknowledges how absurd the idea of a crucified Messiah was in 1Cor 1:23, where he says it “is a stumbling block to the Jews and an absurdity to the gentiles”.

The accounts of Jesus’ crucifixion in the gospels also show how awkward the nature of their Messiah’s death was for the earliest Christians. They are all full of references to texts in the Old Testament as ways of demonstrating that, far from being an absurdity, this was what was supposed to happen to the Messiah. But none of the texts used were considered prophecies of the Messiah before Christianity came along and some of them are highly forced. The “suffering servant” passages in Isaiah 53 are pressed into service as “prophecies” of the crucifixion, since they depict a figure being falsely accused, rejected and given up to be “pierced …. as a guilt offering”. But the gospels don’t reference other parts of the same passage which don’t fit their story at all, such as where it is said this figure will “prolong his days and look upon his offspring”.
Finally, as I've looked deeper into it I've realized that Christianity and mythicism are rather like mirror images of each other, in ways that are unflattering to both. In all the bizarre varieties and offshoots that Christianity has produced over the centuries, the one thing that remains consistent is the idea that Jesus was special. Mythicists obviously doesn't believe he was special in the sense that Christians do, but they still give him special treatment by applying to him a standard of proof that, if applied consistently, would erase a lot of other people from the historical record.
Thanks for your thoughts, Manetho. I keep saying I won't get bogged down trying to defend Carrier, but I can't help but wonder what you mean by saying his explanation of Josephus not really ever mentioning Jesus to be convoluted?

Admittedly feeling the Tim O'Neill quote is a bit of a stretch, to say the least.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos
dastardly stem
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by dastardly stem »

mentalgymnast wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:18 pm


So then Ananias was in on it too?
In on what? Religion? I guess so.
Paul related his experience with Christ on his way to Damascus at least three times. Three witnessings of this experience. One thing for sure, he stuck to his story even when under persecution.
So have millions of others.
I believe that Paul experienced something that forever changed his trajectory in life. And that trajectory involved/included great discomfort and persecution. I guess you can look at him as being deluded or conspiring to gain a following, but I think the evidence seems to show Paul was not an ordinary man and one would have to question what he had to gain by fabricating a vision.

He was in a pretty good place and had a good gig going before traveling the road to Damascus.

Regards,
MG
Ok. No offense, but you keep offering the same thought--you think Paul is right even if everyone else is wrong because you like Paul and his story. Fine. Have at it. The problem is, of course, the data doesn't really provide good reason for your position.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos
mentalgymnast
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by mentalgymnast »

dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:53 pm

Ok. No offense, but you keep offering the same thought--you think Paul is right even if everyone else is wrong because you like Paul and his story. Fine. Have at it. The problem is, of course, the data doesn't really provide good reason for your position.
You’ve said this a couple of times now, that “the data doesn’t provide good reason for your position”.

Care to elaborate? We have the New Testament. Do you see that as a problem or a help in understanding Paul and his experiences? It seems as though the plethora of evidence, at least from the New Testament, would come to the aid of accentuating the veracity of Paul’s experience on the road to Damascus.

Anyway, what’s this data you’re referring to?

Regards,
MG
mentalgymnast
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by mentalgymnast »

dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:53 pm
mentalgymnast wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:18 pm


So then Ananias was in on it too?
In on what? Religion? I guess so.
No. Paul’s purported scam.

Regards,
MG
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Manetho
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by Manetho »

dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:49 pm
I keep saying I won't get bogged down trying to defend Carrier, but I can't help but wonder what you mean by saying his explanation of Josephus not really ever mentioning Jesus to be convoluted?
Carrier says the passage where Josephus mentions James's execution originally referred to another Jesus, not the Messiah claimant from Nazareth, and he posits a series of scribal errors that ended up inserting "who was called Messiah" in that passage of Josephus's work. Scribal errors and interpolations happened in ancient manuscripts, so it's possible, but it's conspicuous how Carrier's complex series of them is supposed to have happened to exactly the passage he needs to eliminate from consideration.
dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:49 pm
Admittedly feeling the Tim O'Neill quote is a bit of a stretch, to say the least.
It's only one example. The other major one is the two nativity stories from Matthew and Luke, both of which are blatant (and contradictory) inventions to set Jesus's birth in Bethlehem, where the Messiah was supposed to come from, even though everyone knew he was from Nazareth. I strongly recommend reading the whole page.
dastardly stem
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by dastardly stem »

Manetho wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 7:30 pm
dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:49 pm
I keep saying I won't get bogged down trying to defend Carrier, but I can't help but wonder what you mean by saying his explanation of Josephus not really ever mentioning Jesus to be convoluted?
Carrier says the passage where Josephus mentions James's execution originally referred to another Jesus, not the Messiah claimant from Nazareth, and he posits a series of scribal errors that ended up inserting "who was called Messiah" in that passage of Josephus's work. Scribal errors and interpolations happened in ancient manuscripts, so it's possible, but it's conspicuous how Carrier's complex series of them is supposed to have happened to exactly the passage he needs to eliminate from consideration.
dastardly stem wrote:
Fri Feb 19, 2021 6:49 pm
Admittedly feeling the Tim O'Neill quote is a bit of a stretch, to say the least.
It's only one example. The other major one is the two nativity stories from Matthew and Luke, both of which are blatant (and contradictory) inventions to set Jesus's birth in Bethlehem, where the Messiah was supposed to come from, even though everyone knew he was from Nazareth. I strongly recommend reading the whole page.
Thanks, Manetho. Appreciate the comments.

As I recall Carrier is really convinced of the notion that Jesus was snuck into Josephus from later writers. Apparently he feels he has a good case that there was a better candidate for the Jesus and James and "the Christ" was added later. I don't know if its convoluted. I thought context fit much better with the other Jesus guy.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos
Doctor CamNC4Me
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by Doctor CamNC4Me »

I've been following the thread and think it's important to get away from the philosophical and historical narratives for a bit. How about how Mormonism impacts people from a personal perspective?

So. First. Mormonism is a supremacist ideology - if your opinion differs from mine you can probably just stop reading right here because we're on two planes of existence the run parallel to each and understanding can't happen. The profound psychological effect of having The TruthTM cannot be understated. EVERYTHING else for the adherent follows from this one unalterably fixed psychological point.

Take a moment to ponder that for a hot second.

In other words, the insidiousness of a man or woman possessing The TruthTM, presumably from God as confirmed by God the Spirit otherizes everyone who isn't in the in-group. They start from the premise they're 'more right' and they work from there. A quick example, yes?

My SIL passed away a few days ago. For brevity's sake, I'll just say she wasn't a fan of the #patriarchy, she didn't go out on the best of terms with everyone that's rooted in other issues, and left behind an unbelievable mess for us to clean up. Like. Literally. In the midst of this, in a sea of familial emotions our BIL was determined to 'take the lead' and make the arrangements for her memorial service. It would be a LDS-centric service because their family is LDS and to have anything else would be uncomfortable or weird for them. However, it never occurred to him to ask the eldest daughter what she wanted, or what his sister would've wanted. When we pointed out some obvious philosophical differences between the deceased (the fact that she'd be horrified at having a memorial service at a LDS chapel presided over by a man who is exercising authority she didn't recognize or respect) and him, he got pissy. Beyond that we arranged a local funeral home to take care of liaising with the daughter who is 22 and overwhelmed. The BIL got pissy again because he wanted a funeral home to take care of business closer to him, and expected the daughter to travel 40 minutes out of her way because 'he got a good deal'. We went ahead of checked around, found a place that the sister would've loved, it's catered, has all the right stuff to handle an affair like this during COVID, and we presented it as an option. There was no pressure. The daughter could choose one or the other, no skin off our nose. The BIL got pissy, and talked about how weird it would be and how it'd make the family uncomfortable.

Long story short the daughter consistently chose options that were better for her, and honored her mother's memory that had zero to do with the LDS church. BIL is giving us the silent treatment, and cut my wife out of the eulogy with he and my wife's other LDS brother are putting together. To make matters worse, BIL and the daughter's father actually told my wife to be quiet after she expressed her opinion about some matters that were unfolding yesterday. My wife is a 40-year-old woman and these guys hushed her.

Un-damned-believable.

The thing is one is tempted to believe that the BIL's behavior (and that of the daughter's father) is anomalous, that it's a people problem, not one that can be attributed to an ideology. However, how many times have we seen this play out? The rightness of being Chosen, to have Authority, to have the Truth, it gives people tunnel vision when dealing with others. They pay lip service to respecting others, to being inclusive, to not judging, but it's all BS because they're right. They're chosen. They have the truth. We're wrong. We're fallen. We're in error. How can there be true collaboration when the starting point already starts with such a large psychological gulf? It's one thing to have a worshipful heart, and it's another to operate within a total system that excludes others who aren't in that system. BIL is psychologically stunted and is socially rigid.

How is that good?

- Doc
Doctor CamNC4Me
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by Doctor CamNC4Me »

Update. Our niece’s father yelled at her today because her mother’s celebration of life isn’t a memorial service being held in a LDS chapel in the form of a church service.

BIL isn’t talking to my wife, and they were close before this.

That’s what Mormonism does to families.

- Doc
Lem
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by Lem »

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
Sun Feb 21, 2021 12:54 am
Update. Our niece’s father yelled at her today because her mother’s celebration of life isn’t a memorial service being held in a LDS chapel in the form of a church service.

BIL isn’t talking to my wife, and they were close before this.

That’s what Mormonism does to families.

- Doc
Omg. I am so sorry. I have been following your story here, and I have to say, I am not surprised at the Mormon inappropriateness. They take over events and brook no disagreement, no matter how inappropriate their interference is.
Lem
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Re: Is Mormonism so bad?

Post by Lem »

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
Sun Feb 21, 2021 12:54 am
That’s what Mormonism does to families.
Yes. It destroys families.
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