I wonder what the reaction would be of a sincere worshiper in St. Peters of having someone say that it looked like a 'fancy hotel lobby?"
I too have seen some very fancy hotel lobbies. The decoration isn’t the point, is it?
A hotel lobby is not a bad place at all, but it’s purpose is very different from that of a place of worship, and comparing a place of worship to a hotel lobby, no matter how lavish the lobby, is an insult to the place of worship, no matter how plain the place of worship.
Defending a snide remark by claiming that 'Hotel Lobbies" are beautifully decorated and so are appropriate comparisons is, in my opinion, is an attempt to back pedal that isn’t working. In fact, it’s just digging deeper.
You may as well have compared a temple to a Las Vegas casino. They are beautifully decorated, too, and the insult would only be slightly more obvious.
We Mormons do not believe all the same things about God, our Heavenly Father, that you do. But we believe in Him. We don’t believe all the same things about Jesus that you do, but we believe in Him and accept Him as our Savior and the Savior of the world. We live our lives the best we can, deal with our neighbors the best we can, and though we are also human, we come up against people of other faiths who are equally ‘human,’ that is, imperfect.
We are all, simply, human; being Mormon or Catholic doesn’t change our basic makeups.
…and we all hold to the symbols of our precious beliefs, and should, rightly, expect others to at least respect the fact that we do believe, if they don’t respect the beliefs themselves.
For one thing, if your goal is to make the other guy ‘see the light,’ taking pot shots at what HE holds precious is counter productive. NOTHING cements any idea like opposition to it, and that goes double for religious beliefs.
I watched one of my sons start yelling at his sister for being clumsy and unable to ‘get’ the rules of a game that he and some friends were playing. She yelled back. They were in quite a row there for about two minutes, until one of his friends chimed in with a “yeah, you stupid girl, what are you doing messing up our game?” My son decked him, and he and his sister went swimming.
(yes, said son got into trouble for hitting his friend, that’s not the point)
The POINT is that the friend would have gotten a lot further with both son and daughter if he had simply helped daughter figure out the rules. As soon as he started criticizing, the brother, even though HE had been yelling just a second ago, did something about it…and that ‘something’ was not abandoning his sister and joining the critical group.
Does anybody see the point, here?