P
PazzoGrande
Guest
Okay, but how about in those cases where it didn’t involve deception? Like going to the cemetery or obituaries or the public records to get names? And how about cases where they didn’t break previous promises? They could get an old phone book from many decades ago and baptise everyone in there as the majority of those people listed would probably be dead by now. They could get a history book. They could go to a patent office where the names of inventors and their inventions are available for the public to see. They could go to IMDB.com and get names from movies of the silent era. They could just open to the obituaries page literally every day.I’m afraid you can’t pussyfoot around the deceptiveness.
As I’ve pointed out before, some of the names were volunteered by family members (often through work with Mormon genealogists) who a) either didn’t know about the posthumous baptism controversy (and therefore couldn’t make a fully informed decision to volunteer the names), or b) were assured that their loved ones’ information wouldn’t be used for posthumous baptisms. Sorry, but someone was deceitful.
Furthermore, someone decieved not only families, but also the Mormon Church, according to it’s promises. The Mormon Church agreed in 1995 not to posthumously baptise Holocaust survivors.
The possibilities are limitless and don’t deceive the survivors of the deceased. With those conditions, they aren’t using deception and (presumably) they aren’t breaking previous promises.