Runtu wrote:I think that's a bit of an exaggeration in applying this broadly to Mormons (though I do know people who are like your mom, unfortunately). What I think is going on is something a little less dramatic. When you're told that your good feelings are from God and they constitute absolute knowledge, then your testimony becomes reality. The church isn't simply true; it is reality; it is the way the world works.
Right. And how it the world could anyone possibly be blinded enough to accept things contrary to reality? Answer: Satan, the Deceiver, blinds your mind, and leads you astray. It all comes back to Satan. When you "know" the church is true, that is indeed a defining aspect of your reality, and only something like The Adversary, The Deceiver, yea verily, even
The Devil could get you to be blinded to reality in this way.
]So, when you find evidence that the church isn't what it claims to be, that evidence is literally contradicting reality.
Right. In other words, evidence that the church isn't true is somehow lies planted by Satan.
And nobody is going to be happy about denying reality.
You mean, nobody is going to be happy accepting the lies of Satan.
To steal from Thomas Kuhn, when the crisis of faith comes, it's not easy to redefine your paradigm, much less to dismantle it. It's painful, and sometimes you think you're going crazy. And yes, it is one hell of a humbling experience.
That's because you have to be willing to break with the mindset that contrary evidence is necessarily from Satan, and that considering such evidence is tantamount to inviting Satan to deceive you. But this attitude is so entrenched, and ingrained in peoples' minds, that it's very hard to do that. Seriously considering contrary evidence is to
risk something, and what it's risking, from the LDS believer's point of view, is their salvation. That's a pretty hard thing to get over. I think a lot of difficulty comes, as well, after that point, when one faces the fact that church isn't really true, and how their whole worldview is a big fantasyland, a virtual reality created and maintained through superstition and mythology. But that difficulty comes, really, after one can get over the idea that even considering the evidence is to risk being deceived by Satan.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen