truth dancer wrote:I recently read a blog by a Xed but believing member of the FLDS; a "best friend" of Warren Jeffs.
He sounded like your typical LDS apologist... if people would only pray and obey and soften their heart, etc. etc. etc., they would know by the power of the HG that their gospel was true and that they are led by Christ.
When someone can figure out how to tell the difference between the HG and personal intuition/ideas/desires/wants/needs, then maybe the HG would be the way to go.
Until then it seems to just add to the confusion and messiness of religious beliefs.
What is most interesting is that this issue (of a very unreliable HG), is pretty much ignored by apologists. They hold the HG as the ultimate source of testimony and truth but (as far as I know), do not address the issue at all.
Actually to be fair, I have heard some apologists claim that those with differing beliefs are able to get inspiration but it is not necessarily true, or that they are limited in understanding truth, etc. etc.
The problem is, everyone who claims they are receiving revelation and inspiration believe they are the special ones with the real truth.
~td~
At the same time, though, you can never really know what sort of revelation anyone else has received. Simply because they say they have or haven't doesn't mean that they aren't deluded, asking the wrong questions, or just trying to fit in and avoid criticism.
If someone really has received revelation from God that cannot possibly be explained through psychological or other non-divine means, then following that revelation is only logical -- you can't judge it based on contradictions with the internal worlds of others to which you have only superficial access.
Then again, after a lifetime in the Church, a faithful mission, many callings, seminary and institute, and temple attendance... when I was totally honest with myself there was nothing there that couldn't be chalked up to wanting to believe very, very badly.