I’ve read the Ivins quote and don’t really think it addresses Southerton’s criticisms well. The reality is the Book of Mormon does not mention any other groups of people besides the Jaredites, the Lehites and the Mulekites. The Jaredites according to the Book of Mormon were all destroyed except for one person. The Lehites and Mulekites were both Israelite groups. … that humans were in the Americas several thousands of years before the traditional Mormon belief about the creation of Adam and Eve. … would have to say that Meldrum and others in his camp are actually more true to traditional Mormonism than you … I joined the LDS Church in the early 70s. … many who were once “true believers” have abandoned the faith – the BYU scientists have clearly demonstrated that our beliefs were wrong.
As a Catholic I was never a “young earth” creationist. My mother’s liberal mindset gave me great freedom to question and ponder. Still there were things I believed/thought as a Catholic that I would not today (see the limbo thread).
One of the olive branches I have regularly offered here is that I left Catholicism ignorant of just what I had. This is absolutely true, and I do not know if I could have departed had I really internalized that the Eucharist was Christ, the church was started by Christ in a way that Protestants can’t claim, and … There were real differences that my “Catholic Community” (that is what we called ourselves as we started from a middles school gym and eventually moved into a new church we raised money to build) didn’t emphasize.
So, my former Catholicism is an interesting mix. There were seeds of ideas that I could not embrace today as a Catholic (limbo is Catholicism was surely there, and as I explored Catholicism there were perhaps many seeds that I will now imply were not there, but they came from somewhere). And yet there was this liberality that meant I was not losing anything much when I left a Catholic Church in Idaho (because the priest said we should not throw just $1 in the collection, and I was too selfish to be unoffended by this) to visit Protestant churches and even get to know returned Mormon Missionaries (who drove like idiots just like me, but didn’t drink and treat woman like **** - again like me actually).
I became a LDS with little more than awe for what had been created via the initial efforts of a New York farm boy (brilliant or simpleton as I now know he was called). I had very little “spiritual witness.” As a new LDS (less than 3 years), an engineer (just out of the Navy), and just getting access to the Internet, I explored my new faith. This was 1996. Dr. Shades (we are friendly BTW) would call me an Internet Mormon (I do not completely buy his dichotomy, but if it is true I was/am and always have been an Internet Mormon).
Other’s in the BOM: it was 1998 when Brant Gardner introduced me to such a thing. There is a 1992 article from Sorenson. This was/is just part of my Mormonism. I remember in about 2000 traveling with the Bishop to a small branch in northern NM. The branch president spoke and I was quite concerned. I told the Bishop, “He is talking about the Hemispheric geography model, we should correct him.” The Bishop kindly told me that we didn’t need to make a big deal about it. At the time I learned I was smarter than everyone else (a real pride problem, born of insecurity as most pride problems are, with which I still deal) and maybe it wasn’t too important which model of BOM geography we as members of the church embrace.
There are things that I really struggle to believe are a significant part of my church. The beleaguered woman ruled by her husband. The oppressed Indian taught he is scum and must become “white and delightsome.” (and I am referring to a person posting on the Internet, not some document from the 1950’s). Then there are things that are quite foreign to my experience that people like you say, “BYU scientists have clearly demonstrated our beliefs were wrong.”
I do not know where I would be had I imbibed of 1970’s Mormonism. I do not know where I would be had I imbibed of pre-Vatican II Catholicism rather than the liberal anything goes with which I grew up (and still how can Catholicism be true if LIMBO is not).
I look at the JWs and see my former JW, former Catholic, brilliant friend. He explained how the JWs end of the world thoughts didn’t occur and how he began to investigate. I look at my Ultra-Trad Catholic friends (other than the one who was a former Protestant minister) who don’t believe Vatican II was a council and one who doesn’t believe the Pope is the Pope. I look at you and John Dehlin and …
I am sad when disillusionment becomes hyper-skepticism. I like to say however may we become disillusioned because who would want to be illusioned. I do not believe that:
Anyone truly open to TRUTH will leave the LDS Church
Any more than I believe "anyone truly open to TRUTH will leave Catholicism, but I see great parallels that I only occasionally draw here.
Charity, TOm