posted by Horton:
Why do you believe the LDS is the true church?
Because I find it to be the most in line with scripture, logic, my observations of life/nature/sociology, and my personal conversations with God.
Then you have not followed through with your investigation of comparing which churches are “most in line with scripture,” “most in line with logic,” and most in harmony with nature and sociology. Your personal conversations with God are another issue. But there are many churches which conduct themselves much more in harmony with scripture (excluding for the moment the Doctrine and Covenants but not the Book of Mormon) than does the Mormon Church. And there are religions with a much stronger support from logic than the Mormon Church has, most notably the Catholic and Orthodox churches, and Islam - and, imo, a couple of other non-traditional religions.
I find history and “because someone told me so” to be poor methodologies for discerning truth (both are secondary sources).
History per se is in effect a primary source. Someone telling you what is true could be a secondary source, or a tertiary source, depending on where they are getting their information from. Mormons of my acquaintance habitually accept what someone tells them if that someone holds a certain status in the Church hierarchy, or is a certain sort of teacher in the Church. I have never met a Mormon who seriously recounted a series of conversations with their priesthood leaders in which they told their leader, “Hold on, I think you might be wrong. You’ll have to let me ask God about that.” Likewise, no one has ever said, “I rejected what the Bishop (or Apostle, or Prophet, or other officer) said a few times, because I had a personal testimony that I should do so, and I am still a member in good standing.”
I respect that other people’s views differ, and have no interest in critically dissecting their reasons, or vise versa.
I wonder then why you post on forums whose members do that very thing – critically (in the proper sense of the word) analyze (“dissect”) and compare the history and teachings and practices of their own and others’ religions.
“History” is the incomplete recounting of past events, recounted by the victor, and interpreted by who fallible beings whom live in a completely different world when things occurred. Hence my opinion of it’s poor usefulness for discerning Truth. .
By “history” you mean historical accounts, not history per se. Even there, however, I’m afraid you are not entirely correct when you limit historical accounts to those produced by victors. That is *generally *true in the case of World War I and World War II, at least in the west, though less so in the Middle East and Far East. It is not, however, the case of the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire – that has been written by people far enough divorced from the topic that they can rightly be considered neither victors nor vanquished, and in some cases read like rather disinterested parties altogether. Historical accounts of Mormonism, for example, have been written by passionate, sometimes paid, Mormon apologists, free-lancing lay apologists, anti-Mormon demagogues, fair-minded critics, and disinterested authors writing just to make a buck or get a good grade for turning in a term paper.
I totally get the sentiment (I’m here to satisfy curiosity about Catholicism, after all
Having studied both Catholicism and Mormonism in depth, I can say that Catholic doctrine is more in line with the Bible and Book of Mormon, based on logic a hundred times more sound, more self-consistent , more in harmony with the appearance and workings of the universe, and possessed of my explanatory power in the area of human nature and society, than Mormonism can ever hope to be without becoming a quite different religion than that founded by Joseph Smith. A good place to start with Catholicism, other than the obvious attendance at Mass and meeting with currently practicing Catholics, would be to study the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and Papal Encyclicals (especially those by Pope John Paul II).