So you would refuse to even pray about something to discover it’s true meaning or value, simply because your human brain sees no possibility that it could be true?
Basically that’s saying you know better than God, which patently is not true. If the Book of Mormon is, indeed, not true and not the word of God, what would you have to lose by taking the advice in James 1:5-6. I find it extremely odd that a church professing to believe in Jesus Christ, in His existence and resurrection, in God’s love for His children and in the teachings of the bible: both OT and NT of which provide doctrinal evidence for personal revelation from God; would teach it’s members that prayer to find out truth is unnecessary. I see only two reasons for this (which are really two sides to the same coin); either the church is afraid that it’s members will be told by God that it is not true; or that they will discover the truth of something else not included in that church’s teachings. what other possible reason could there be to encourage people not to pray for guidance?
First of all I have to say that is true that the answer some of us and maybe me included may sound aggressive. So before saying what I have to say I hope you don’t feel aggression. Polemic, yes, of course, as I feel polemic in a Catholic when he talks to me that I am Easter Orthodox. Polemic can be constructive if is not felt as too aggressive.
To this statement I can answer for myself and for my wife. I was mormon fro not a long time my wife since birth before changing direction.
When I converted as a mormon after a while I realized in my way of feeling the truth there was too much introduction of emotive response.
The same emotion I could have watching a touching moment in a movie, the same emotion I could have holding the hand of my extremely loved wife.
Mormonism gave me a place and a position that was very easy to live with . I had many friends, social life with the mormons is great, you have strong values that most of us like, like family and so on.
When I was praying for something in mormon teaching all the emotional package was entering in resonance. It was not possiblefor me to cut it off.
If you feel extremely well with something that makes you feel extremely well and that has stron human values it is difficult to be neutral.
But I didn’t get into mormonism to feel well and accepted, I realized I was searching the truth. So before searching the truth I had to be able to be neutral.
To see I was reacting inside emotionally when I was praying I started to pray for many things, many things and I realized that the things that contained a stronger emotional response from myself where handle differently.
I realized I had to work on my emotional response. My wife tried to do it too and we both tried to have an answer whatever was the cost of this answer, whatever this answer implied, loosing friend, loosing our family, loosing our work, we accepted to loose everything we liked in the name of Jesus.
Yes we had an answer that was given us in many ways not only in feeling, yes in feeling of being afraid. And of course we lost everything we were deeply attached to.
I discoverd much later that Orthodox monks also are very aware of emotional influence in the prayer, and they are prepared for it not to be misleaded.
The procedure can be long. And to get it we must we passionate of the truth. The truth can cost you a lot, sometimes everything that you have (as for my wife) but you find something else that I cannot talk about but that has a strange unusual, unemotional, still very strong presence.
Have a nice week end, I hope you enjoyed your last general conference.
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