As a missionary, I wish I had access to this simple flowchart. It’s true, the beauty of the gospel really is found in its simplicity.

https://mollymuses.wordpress.com/2012/0 ... your-soul/
THAT is E.P.I.C.!!!Everybody Wang Chung wrote: ↑Sat Apr 19, 2025 5:45 pm“The gospel of Jesus Christ is beautifully simple and simply beautiful.” Apostle Matthew Cowley,
As a missionary, I wish I had access to this simple flowchart. It’s true, the beauty of the gospel really is found in its simplicity.
[SNIP!]
https://mollymuses.wordpress.com/2012/0 ... your-soul/
It does sound exhausting. I did a lot of scrolling too.
I didn't get any farther than the second sentence, "Your souls were berthed on a planet near a star called Kolob." This person apparently has been reading some Cleon Skousen and some Orson F. Whitney. Neither who, as far as I am aware, speaks doctrinally for the church. If this person started off on the wrong foot...where do we go from there? Next sentence: God's wives had bodies? No doctrine on that. There might be some actual doctrine mixed in with all the other conjecture and non-doctrinal stuff.Everybody Wang Chung wrote: ↑Sat Apr 19, 2025 5:45 pm“The gospel of Jesus Christ is beautifully simple and simply beautiful.” Apostle Matthew Cowley,
As a missionary, I wish I had access to this simple flowchart. It’s true, the beauty of the gospel really is found in its simplicity.
Trust but verify. And there is no way to do that. People can get personal issues all tangled up in everything else. Yeah, some will say we ALWAYS give the benefit of the doubt to the person claiming abuse...but that has its own potential concerns/issues.The final blow to my faith came when I endured spiritual abuse by a bishop and stake president who meddled in my life and told me they knew God’s will better than I did. My bishop exercised authority over psychological issues that he was unqualified to understand, advising me to stay in an abusive marriage. He told me that I had a duty to correct my husband’s waywardness, and that God would be angry with me if I forsook my temple covenants. I felt in my heart that it was in my best interest to leave, but I trusted my Bishop as my priesthood leader. After reaching a point where I knew that my life would be at risk if I stayed any longer, I finally decided to stop listening to priesthood leaders and do what I knew was right. I finally saw that the top-down structure of the LDS church has no resources for abused members when the system fails. My trust is broken, and I will not go back to be mistreated again by a system that brushes aside those who don’t fit in perfectly.