LDS worship

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Haha, OUR church managed to get God and Mammon to collaborate, and this is perfectly fine to most Mormons. Wow, how can you lose with that sort of flexibility?
Your sarcasm noted and enjoyed. If a religion fails to meet the spiritual needs of its people, it becomes a business. The third option is the feds declaring it a business, and taxing it appropriately. However, that won’t happen until option two has taken its course. Otherwise the “poor suffering saints” could return to some old-fashioned strategies. :eek:
we often call it “borrowing” unless we despise the person or suspect their motives, in which case we turn to the language of Hate and say “steal.”
Plagiarism is a form of theft, but wasn’t that much of a legal concept back then. I’m sure that Texas will try to correct me there. 😛
 
Texan Knight alluded to the HORRIFIC BLOOD OATHS that are a complete affront to the 5TH Commandment “Thou shalt not kill (murder)” which is completely UNCHRISTLIKE is it not? God is NOT the author of such confusion.

(TK what is the Latin for the thing speaks for itself, a legal term is it not?, “Resipse Loquitor” - where is Latin spell check when you need it!)

There’s the “temple” skit that makes a MOCKERY of clergymen & one wears the “sacred” garb with the Masonic emblems, practices the Grips (handshakes also of Masonic origin), then practice discussion & handshake for when you hit the Veil after death & beckon your wife to get off her grave if you so desire to have her come & come have eternal sex with you & forever generate “spirit children”.

Funny, this clearly contradicts ST PAUL: There is NO MARRIAGE IN HEAVEN - Paul says point blank one lives as the Angels (do we not?) How do the LDS square these aspects of their “temple” ceremonies with the Bible?

One would think if you have a “temple”, the TABERNACLE is there also where the DIVINE PRESENCE dwells, but none to be found is there?

? to think about: How could GOD be the AUTHOR of different versions of “TRUTH” floating around? He could not be GOD in that case so evidently someone else is the author.
Hello,

Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe that our temples are literally houses of the Lord. Latter-day Saints believe that the Spirit dwells in the temple, and God’s Divine presence is there and can be felt even more powerfully there (one of the reasons why I love to go to the temple, to commune with God). The Endowment rite is actually a symbolic journey back to the presence of God (symbolized by the Celestial Room, which represents the Celestial Kingdom), made possible through the atonement of Jesus Christ.

I am not sure of your understanding of alleged “blood oaths”, however pmccoombs gave a great comment on “penalties” (what I assume you are referring to by “blood oaths”) found related to certain covenants entered into in the temple. A very brief commentary on the issue of penalties is found here: Mormonism and Temples/Endowment/Penalties.

Also, I love Latter-day Saint Jeff Lindsay’s page “Questions About the LDS Temple Ceremony and Masonry”, which also specifically discusses covenant penalties and the temple, including its relationship to Biblical covenants and “penalties” associated with those covenants, which many times included very strong language (stated by God Himself), as well as the Ancient Near Eastern/Hebrew notion of “cutting a covenant”.
 
The Mormon temple oaths were Masonic oaths and penalties, not of divine origin.
 
In your view, I suppose it has to be very wrong. If you doubted that it was wrong, you might doubt your own conversion to Catholicism. But I, at least, am perfectly willing to believe that when someone says “I’d rather be dismembered than commit adultery,” they are making a certain kind of statement that is not meant to be taken literally. I’m sure there are nutjobs, like this Gary Gilmore, in every religion who take the hyperbole literally. But they aren’t to be set up as the stereotype for the whole program, unless of course your agenda is to tear it down.

RESPONSE: Why do you try to mislead these people? Are you really trying to say there was no blood oaths? The temple was clear. Unlike your little example, in the temple, it was an OATH with hand motions to describe how you would have your blood spilled. Joseph taught. certain grievous sins put a sinner “beyond the reach of the atoning blood of Christ.” Their “only hope is to have their own blood shed to atone.”. BY taught Will you love that man or woman well enough to shed their blood?” He knew hundreds of people who could have been saved “if their lives had been taken and their blood spilled on the ground as a smoking incense to the Almighty, but who are now angels to the devil.” If a man wanted salvation and it was “necessary to spill his blood on the earth in order that he might be saved, spill it … That is the way to love mankind.” It was strong doctrine to cut “people off from the earth,” he conceded, “but it is to save them, not to destroy them.” Sinners should welcome blood atonement and “beg of their brethren to shed their blood.”. How dare you mislead the good people on this site!

Haha, to say that it isn’t even “arguable,” you have to set up a story that all Mormons are deluded fools who can’t even speak rationally about their own faith. There can be no other interpretation of subjunctive mode language than the one you have put forth, which is to take it literally and call it “blood oath.” In my mind, there’s nothing remotely “oathy” about these subjunctives, and I’m hardly sympathetic to my own church. I believe it’s clearly a tactic of Mormon haters to point out “blood oaths.” And then you cherry pick some crazy Mormon who doesn’t represent the general population and paint a bulls-eye on him. See? Mormons were an evil and bloodthirsty lot.

RESPONSE :Not true. I take the history you ignore or whitewash and tell the truth.

Well, there you have another example of interpretation. You point out that the scripture only says there will be a thirst for hearing the name of the Lord. The LDS are pretty sure the scripture says that the Lord himself will send a famine, and that it will be a famine of hearing the words of the Lord. And that sounds like apostasy to the Mormon, and confirms his doctrine to him. Now, some people are convinced by your argument to the contrary, others are not. When it comes to the strivings of mens’ intellects, there is no sure way to establish universal truth. There will always be those skeptics who doubt the mind of men because their own minds see things differently.

RESPONSE: the difference is, I do not make up doctrine to have an excuse to form a false church. The verse simply does not say what you said it said.

Ideas are not things that can be taken and returned. Once an idea is spread, the one who first had it remains with it still. To “steal” the idea would mean that Joseph Smith deprived the Freemasons of their own stuff. When people appropriate the ideas of others (in music, literature, politics, religion, etc.), we often call it “borrowing” unless we despise the person or suspect their motives, in which case we turn to the language of Hate and say “steal.”

RESPONSE: that simply is wrong. If I write. Song and you steal it and use it for yourself, you have not deprived deprived me of it…but it is still stealing. It is a shame that you need to rewrite what stealing really is to justify the thefts done by Joseph
 
Orthodox theologians freely admit the influence of Greek philosophy on Christian belief; Mormons have a problem with that (we have Satan himself describing it as, “the philosophy of men, mingled with scripture”).
Do you have an example of this Greek Philosophy changing Christian belief before the last Apostle died?
 
RESPONSE: Why do you try to mislead these people? Are you really trying to say there was no blood oaths? The temple was clear. Unlike your little example, in the temple, it was an OATH with hand motions to describe how you would have your blood spilled. Joseph taught. certain grievous sins put a sinner “beyond the reach of the atoning blood of Christ.” Their “only hope is to have their own blood shed to atone.”. BY taught Will you love that man or woman well enough to shed their blood?” He knew hundreds of people who could have been saved “if their lives had been taken and their blood spilled on the ground as a smoking incense to the Almighty, but who are now angels to the devil.” If a man wanted salvation and it was “necessary to spill his blood on the earth in order that he might be saved, spill it … That is the way to love mankind.” It was strong doctrine to cut “people off from the earth,” he conceded, “but it is to save them, not to destroy them.” Sinners should welcome blood atonement and “beg of their brethren to shed their blood.”. How dare you mislead the good people on this site!
Well, I’m waiting for Jesus to come and tell me to stop kicking against the pricks. See? If I mislead enough people, it might happen. Hey, you never know! Honestly, how many people here are going to take a Mormon agnostic seriously? Who knows what I’m going to think or believe tomorrow or a week hence? Paul talked about people like me, ever learning and never coming to a knowledge of the truth.

Anyway, I figure people can make up their own minds about things. I’m familiar with the tactics of True Believers, who desire to shape the minds of men after their own image. You quote Brigham Young, but conveniently leave out the language that tempers and softens the outrageous stuff. You’ll never quote Brigham Young telling his people to leave their own apostates in peace, or that even if it were better to let someone put a millstone around your neck and throw you into the sea, that nevertheless if the Lord allows these sinners to live and foam out their sins before all men and women, it is all right. Nope, that stuff is conveniently omitted from your diatribe.

Am I saying there were no blood oaths in Mormon temple rites? I have no idea, since I never experienced them or got into the mind of anyone who did to know if they thought they were taking a blood oath. But I have been made familiar with the language of those “oaths” and find them lacking in the oath department, regardless of what masonic hand wiggles went along with them. These people were using fraternal devices in their worship, and it didn’t bother them at the time. It didn’t seem to make them significantly more bloodthirsty than usual. And when the practice started to bother them, they stopped doing it. If those were oaths, they must not have taken them very seriously.

If I tend to whitewash my Church, forgive me; I have a long habit of thinking favorably of it. But I accuse you of doing the opposite and using the cheap tactics of our sensational detractors. I know you have come to believe those claims. Myself, I am a skeptic. I doubt the horror stories as much as I doubt the miraculous ones.
If I write. Song and you steal it and use it for yourself, you have not deprived deprived me of it…but it is still stealing. It is a shame that you need to rewrite what stealing really is to justify the thefts done by Joseph
Well, whatever. The freemasons haven’t lost any royalties that I know of, and I don’t begrudge Joseph for using their ideas any more than I despise my American founding fathers for stealing the ideas of Republicanism for use in their sham republic. Masonry in Mormonism didn’t bother my heavily-masonic Mormon forbears and it doesn’t bother me. It found its way out of Mormon practice for the most part, with some echoes remaining in our Temple ceremonies. I’m more concerned with the modern Church than the past one. I have to live in the present.
 
Well, I’m waiting for Jesus to come and tell me to stop kicking against the pricks.

He won’t. He lets people mislead others. Look at how he let Joseph…for awhile…

See? If I mislead enough people, it might happen. Hey, you never know! Honestly, how many people here are going to take a Mormon agnostic seriously? Who knows what I’m going to think or believe tomorrow or a week hence? Paul talked about people like me, ever learning and never coming to a knowledge of the truth.

Jesus did too…"beware of wolves in sheep’s clothing…

Anyway, I figure people can make up their own minds about things.

Yes, but it is easier if they are not misled.

I’m familiar with the tactics of True Believers, who desire to shape the minds of men after their own image. You quote Brigham Young, but conveniently leave out the language that tempers and softens the outrageous stuff. You’ll never quote Brigham Young telling his people to leave their own apostates in peace, or that even if it were better to let someone put a millstone around your neck and throw you into the sea, that nevertheless if the Lord allows these sinners to live and foam out their sins before all men and women, it is all right. Nope, that stuff is conveniently omitted from your diatribe.

Ah…so a prophet can spout the “kill others” doctrine and it is all ok if he also says good stuff? So, if Hitler said good stuff, all his evil diatribes can be overlooked? Interesting concept.

Am I saying there were no blood oaths in Mormon temple rites? I have no idea, since I never experienced them or got into the mind of anyone who did to know if they thought they were taking a blood oath. But I have been made familiar with the language of those “oaths” and find them lacking in the oath department

of course you do. Despite the words, hand motions and language from Joseph and BY. It is the LDS tactic…overlook, whitewash, ignore and deny

If I tend to whitewash my Church, forgive me; I have a long habit of thinking favorably of it. But I accuse you of doing the opposite and using the cheap tactics of our sensational detractors. I know you have come to believe those claims. Myself, I am a skeptic. I doubt the horror stories as much as I doubt the miraculous ones.

The difference is, I post the truth. You whitewash the truth. I apologize if you find truth “sensational”

Well, whatever. The freemasons haven’t lost any royalties that I know of, and I don’t begrudge Joseph for using their ideas any more than I despise my American founding fathers for stealing the ideas of Republicanism for use in their sham republic. Masonry in Mormonism didn’t bother my heavily-masonic Mormon forbears and it doesn’t bother me. It found its way out of Mormon practice for the most part, with some echoes remaining in our Temple ceremonies. I’m more concerned with the modern Church than the past one. I have to live in the present.

Ah…even a NEWER definition of theft. Now, to be theft, one must lose royalties. You have gladdened the hearts of thieves everywhere…

I wish you a fine and blessed day. Despite the debates, I do respect your presence here.
 
Please, do you really need use the word “pricks”:tsktsk:
There was no bad intent from him using this phrase. It is a very common LDS phrase that does not mean anything bad…it is actually a Biblical term…

The question is probable referring to Acts 9:5 or 26:14. Saul (later called Paul) had been persecuting Christians (Acts 9: 13,14). Even though Saul had been sincere, Saul was wrong (Acts 23: 1,26:9). Saul was acting according to the law of Moses, but this system had been abrogated (2 Cor. 3). Hence, Saul had no authority for his actions.
A large percentage of people in the first century were tillers of the soil. Oxen were used to work the soil. The prick or goad was a necessary devise. The prick was usually a wooden shaft with a pointed spike (prick) at one end. The man working the ox would position the goad in such a way as to exert influence and control over the ox. You see, if the ox refused the command indicated by the farmer, the goad would be used to jab or prick the ox. Sometimes the ox would refuse this incentive by kicking out at the prick. As result, the prick would be driven deeper into the flesh of the rebellious animal. The more the animal rebelled, the more the animal suffered. Hence, the statement to Saul: "It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks." (Saul was rebelling against God.)
 
I know that. I have many LDS friends, but they do not use it around non LDS so as not to offend them.
 
I know that. I have many LDS friends, but they do not use it around non LDS so as not to offend them.
I suspect that, since most of the people he deals with here are former LDS like me, he felt comfortable using the phrase. I was not offended.
 
There was no bad intent from him using this phrase. It is a very common LDS phrase that does not mean anything bad…it is actually a Biblical term…

The question is probable referring to Acts 9:5 or 26:14. Saul (later called Paul) had been persecuting Christians (Acts 9: 13,14). Even though Saul had been sincere, Saul was wrong (Acts 23: 1,26:9). Saul was acting according to the law of Moses, but this system had been abrogated (2 Cor. 3). Hence, Saul had no authority for his actions.
Yes, the KJV of Acts 9:5:

And he said, Who art thou, Lord? And the Lord said, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest: it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks.
 
He won’t. He lets people mislead others. Look at how he let Joseph…for awhile…
By your terms, he’s probably still misleading people.
Jesus did too…"beware of wolves in sheep’s clothing…
I don’t need to don the sheep’s clothing. I come among you under no false pretense; just a plain wolf. I invite all Catholics to flee from my teachings! I like that there are good Catholics and don’t wish to harm them or their faith. However… I don’t think that a caricatured version of my Church needs to be a part of the Catholic worldview.
Ah…so a prophet can spout the “kill others” doctrine and it is all ok if he also says good stuff? So, if Hitler said good stuff, all his evil diatribes can be overlooked? Interesting concept.
No, it’s about context. When you remove some language and allow other language, then you change the entire message. After all, it was Jesus who talked in the subjunctive about how it’s better to have a millstone about your neck, but I don’t see you criticize that. You’ll jump to the defensive and try to explain this violent language in the New Testament. Yes, the scriptures are replete with the sort of bloody talk that early Mormon leaders sought to emulate. You apply your standard selectively, it seems.
Ah…even a NEWER definition of theft. Now, to be theft, one must lose royalties. You have gladdened the hearts of thieves everywhere…
No, I merely subscribe to a view of intellectual property espoused by guys like Thomas Jefferson and Richard Stallman.
I wish you a fine and blessed day. Despite the debates, I do respect your presence here.
Thanks! I value polemic as a form of argument and am not affronted by it.
 
By your terms, he’s probably still misleading people.

And what terms would those be? Oh, I suppose his fictional books are still misleading people, but not personally. It is not my call where he spends eternity, but after all he did as a false prophet, I hope he has asbestos underwear.

I don’t need to don the sheep’s clothing. I come among you under no false pretense; just a plain wolf. I invite all Catholics to flee from my teachings! I like that there are good Catholics and don’t wish to harm them or their faith. However… I don’t think that a caricatured version of my Church needs to be a part of the Catholic worldview.

Me either. That is why I post only the truth. I am only here to post the truth after folks like you come here with a false and whitewashed version of what the LDS Church has stood for.

No, it’s about context. When you remove some language and allow other language, then you change the entire message. After all, it was Jesus who talked in the subjunctive about how it’s better to have a millstone about your neck, but I don’t see you criticize that. You’ll jump to the defensive and try to explain this violent language in the New Testament. Yes, the scriptures are replete with the sort of bloody talk that early Mormon leaders sought to emulate. You apply your standard selectively, it seems.

Again, not at all. I understand why you blindly post. You claim I post selectively. I have taken direct quotes from alleged prophet about the need to spill blood to avenge sin, and you act like the quotes mean nothing because they are out of context. The problem is, you make the claim without showing the entire discourse from those alleged prophets and showing how the rest of their talk somehow makes the blood talk less bloody. You can;t. I have posted truth and you can;t honestly refute it, so you make claims you cannot substantiate. I totally understand. Often, when I have no support for an argument, I, too, will make baseless claims. Sometimes, it is all we have.

No, I merely subscribe to a view of intellectual property espoused by guys like Thomas Jefferson and Richard Stallman.

Ah…well, Thomas Jefferson knew what theft was. Richard Stallman is a computer programmer. An odd person to get the definition of theft from, or from whom to obtain the idea of right and wrong. The bottom line, it was stolen. All your whitewashing and computer programmer ideas cannot change that. Joseph was a thief. He ised the works of others to develop his books and ceremonies.

Thanks! I value polemic as a form of argument and am not affronted by it.

Never heard the use of truth considered polemic before, but ok.
 
And what terms would those be? Oh, I suppose his fictional books are still misleading people, but not personally. It is not my call where he spends eternity, but after all he did as a false prophet, I hope he has asbestos underwear.
Hey! Stop it with the asbestos underwear talk, already! I mean, that’s like saying you hope someone is ready for the suffering you just know they surely deserve. Sheesh, like if someone were to say the vile sinner deserves some violent consequence for being so wrong. Um, is thinking someone is eligible for eternal suffering in hell worse than thinking they should die for their wrongs, or is it not as bad? I’m just trying to weigh your righteous Catholic commentary against the unrighteous Mormon commentary of Brigham Young. Maybe you hoped Joseph Smith had asbestos underwear because you are charitably concerned for the comfort of the poor man’s soul while it roasts in hell?

My own suspicion is that he’s spending “eternity” in nirvana, even without having to achieve buddha-hood! They probably buried him in his regular underwear.
Me either. That is why I post only the truth. I am only here to post the truth after folks like you come here with a false and whitewashed version of what the LDS Church has stood for.
I don’t know… it gets to the root of my problems. Problems? Maybe… they don’t bother me, like an ingrown toenail or something; but you say you know the truth about my Church and that I only have a false and whitewashed version of it. “Whitewashed” is the code word that anti-Mormons always use, like it’s part of their creed or something; as if they’re spouting the “non-thought of received ideas” (as I believe you are). I’m an agnostic, and I don’t know whether or not any portrayal of my Church is accurate, and have no particular reason to “whitewash” it. None of our Churches are really what we think they are. We only catch glimpses of what we’d like them to be. All I know is that if my Church stands for anything now, or ever stood for something in the past, it can only have done so or continue to do so in my mind as I choose to interpret it. That’s what people are converted to, the good they see and not what they choose to overlook.

Thus, in the words of a 70’s television show, later made famous by Adam Savage, “I reject your reality and substitute my own!” Why should anyone believe anything? Answer me! Sometimes I think that a thing is true only because someone believes that it is. Truth is mostly a label used by the propagandist to change people’s minds, and the man-made idea of orthodoxy has always been an enabler of systemic evil and of hatred.
Again, not at all. I understand why you blindly post. You claim I post selectively. I have taken direct quotes from alleged prophet about the need to spill blood to avenge sin, and you act like the quotes mean nothing because they are out of context. The problem is, you make the claim without showing the entire discourse from those alleged prophets and showing how the rest of their talk somehow makes the blood talk less bloody. You can;t. I have posted truth and you can;t honestly refute it, so you make claims you cannot substantiate. I totally understand. Often, when I have no support for an argument, I, too, will make baseless claims. Sometimes, it is all we have.
I’ll leave the arguing about quotes and claims to the Mormon apologists who think they have all manner of support. I admit I haven’t cared enough about Mormon apologetics to find out all of the alleged facts from their perspective. So, whose apologist should I believe? On what grounds? Each will call the other a liar and produce some sort of reason for it.

Anyway, if Mormon apologists have accurate sources, these serve to comfort the doubting Mormon by making your claims look like a bunch of twisted lies, labeled as truth, that have been honestly refuted a thousand times over. You call them misleading, they call you misleading. Who’s right? Ohhh, it’s you? How can I know that?

And what do I care? My doubts go much deeper than the past dealings of silly men and the modern squabbles over historical fact. Every scandalous allegation hurled by rabid anti-Mormons could be historic truth for all I care, and we’re still here in this world trying to pour our own meaning into things and find the bits of good that speak to our hearts from among the wreckage of fallen men, even the likes of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. Hey, I don’t whitewash stuff. I paint it with all kinds of colors. White is so boring.

Paul wrote to the Corinthians that Jesus would choose the foolish and weak things of the world to confound the mighty. Maybe Joseph Smith was the weakest fool of them all. Why couldn’t the Mormon believe that Jesus might speak to them through a money-digging womanizer? Good heavens, the Lord chose a traitor to be one of his own apostles! Prophets have always been reviled by the people, for we have always pretended to know just whom the Lord couldn’t possibly choose for his mouthpiece.
Ah…well, Thomas Jefferson knew what theft was. Richard Stallman is a computer programmer. An odd person to get the definition of theft from, or from whom to obtain the idea of right and wrong. The bottom line, it was stolen. All your whitewashing and computer programmer ideas cannot change that. Joseph was a thief. He ised the works of others to develop his books and ceremonies.
No, the bottom line is just that he used the works of others to develop his books and ceremonies. I’m hardly alone, even among Catholics, in claiming that using the ideas of others is not thievery. OK, there are times when copying stuff is ethical and times when it is not. You think Joseph Smith did it unethically because you’re predisposed to think every ill of him. I, on the other hand, don’t see how that’s obvious. Early Mormons–good people–clearly recognized the masonic roots of their temple worship, because they were freemasons. They didn’t seem concerned about thievery (Oh no! I’m believing in some stolen ideas!). Influences from the KJV Bible and other sources are readily apparent in the Book of Mormon. There’s nothing to suggest that these influences were so unethically utilized as to call them stealing. At best, Joseph is only possibly a thief. All your blackwashing and, um, non-computer programmer ideas cannot change that.
Never heard the use of truth considered polemic before, but ok.
Well, polemic has nothing to do with content but with presentation. You and I are having a pretty good row, whereas other kinds of arguments might but be presented in a less-polemical tone. It’s the tone of the speech that constitutes polemic.

Similarly, belief has little to do with content and everything to do with quality. Whatever story we most fervently believe in becomes the most unassailable of truths. You claim that saying something is true can’t change the truth of the thing… I say, maybe it is precisely with language that truth is made. Some kinds of truth, anyway; religious truth almost certainly. Sigh… I’m sounding like Thomas Hobbes now. He made some Catholics mad too. Well, I suppose even Mormons would disagree with me. Many of them are perfectly certain of their truth too.
 
Hey! Stop it with the asbestos underwear talk, already! I mean, that’s like saying you hope someone is ready for the suffering you just know they surely deserve.

Well, say what you will, but God made it clear what awaits false prophets. I am sorry if that offends you

Maybe you hoped Joseph Smith had asbestos underwear because you are charitably concerned for the comfort of the poor man’s soul while it roasts in hell?

I did not realize you would take me so literally. After all, the way you whitewash the horrible things Joseph and Brigham said…and the way what they said does not offend you, I thought I had the same green light.

I don’t know… it gets to the root of my problems. Problems? Maybe… they don’t bother me, like an ingrown toenail or something; but you say you know the truth about my Church and that I only have a false and whitewashed version of it. “Whitewashed” is the code word that anti-Mormons always use, like it’s part of their creed or something; as if they’re spouting the “non-thought of received ideas” (as I believe you are).

I had no idea that whitewashed was a code word. To me, it is just what the LDS Church does to cover their past. Do I know their history? I believe I do…all good Mormons should…and I was a very good Mormon. I was a good missionary. I was a good member. I studied. I read. So, yes. I know.

Thus, in the words of a 70’s television show, later made famous by Adam Savage, “I reject your reality and substitute my own!”

Yes. That is what the LDS Church. They reject reality and substitute the whitewashed version they hope everyone believes.

I’ll leave the arguing about quotes and claims to the Mormon apologists who think they have all manner of support. I admit I haven’t cared enough about Mormon apologetics to find out all of the alleged facts from their perspective. So, whose apologist should I believe? On what grounds? Each will call the other a liar and produce some sort of reason for it.

Maybe so. I simply read what they said and post it. You made claims I see you now cannot support. I can accept that.

No, the bottom line is just that he used the works of others to develop his books and ceremonies.

He plagiarized. It is a crime. It is theft.

Well, polemic has nothing to do with content but with presentation. You and I are having a pretty good row, whereas other kinds of arguments might but be presented in a less-polemical tone. It’s the tone of the speech that constitutes polemic.

I know what polemic means. I thought you would get my point. I was wrong.

Similarly, belief has little to do with content and everything to do with quality. Whatever story we most fervently believe in becomes the most unassailable of truths. You claim that saying something is true can’t change the truth of the thing… I say, maybe it is precisely with language that truth is made. Some kinds of truth, anyway; religious truth almost certainly. Sigh… I’m sounding like Thomas Hobbes now. He made some Catholics mad too. Well, I suppose even Mormons would disagree with me. Many of them are perfectly certain of their truth too.

You have not made me mad. Not even close. And I can why a Mormon would want truth to be a movable target. It isn’t.

Be Blessed
 
Thus, in the words of a 70’s television show, later made famous by Adam Savage, “I reject your reality and substitute my own!” Why should anyone believe anything? Answer me! Sometimes I think that a thing is true only because someone believes that it is. Truth is mostly a label used by the propagandist to change people’s minds, and the man-made idea of orthodoxy has always been an enabler of systemic evil and of hatred.
‘Berkeley asserted that there was no “real” matter—only perceived matter. Moreover, the world as man perceived it was simply an illusion impressed upon the human mind by divine will. Samuel Johnson, a Fellow of the Royal Society and contemporary of Newton, attended one of Berkeley’s sermons and later, while standing with friends outside the church, participated in a debate concerning the merits of Berkeley’s sophistry regarding the nonexistence of matter. When it was Johnson’s turn to speak he sharply stubbed his toe on a large rock and proclaimed, “I refute it thus!”’

…keep stanidng around talking about the unreal nature of truth. Maybe you’ll eventually stub your toe on a rock.
Similarly, belief has little to do with content and everything to do with quality. Whatever story we most fervently believe in becomes the most unassailable of truths. You claim that saying something is true can’t change the truth of the thing… I say, maybe it is precisely with language that truth is made. Some kinds of truth, anyway; religious truth almost certainly.
Truth most certainly is made by a Word.

But, don’t bother to notice that you’ve painted yourself into a corner. Even if you think it is colorful paint. (I always pictured nihilism as black.)
 
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