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September 15, 2011 at 5:49 pm #206163
Anonymous
GuestI am an active LDS member. I have had questions about hard history and doctrines of the church. I feel like I have come to a balance with these issues. Here is a longer description of my journey.
September 16, 2011 at 12:57 am #246088Anonymous
GuestRich — thanks for the intro and the well-written statement of how you got to the point you’re currently at. I keep hearing about Rough Stone Rolling, and its balanced approach to the history, but I haven’t the guts to read it as I didn’t come here with questions about the history, and would rather not disturb that aspect of my testimony.
You said a few things though, I wanted to respond to….
Quote:
I believe truth will prevail. Randy quoted J. Reuben Clark in one of his emails, “If we have the truth, it cannot be harmed by investigation. If we have not the truth, it ought to be harmed.” Truth will prevail in more than in the factual “what is real” questions.I didn’t really see how this counteracted or helped you deal with the hard history you were talking about ….it’s more of a statement of faith that the things you already believe will prevail, and that it won’t be dented even by questioning. That was the message I got — not how you managed to get past the tough history.
I do agree that if you look at what the Church DOES today, in general, there’s a lot of good, and its one reason I stick around. In fact, that’s how I personally deal with the history — whatever happened in the past, one can take part in the good people who come together in the Church, and let the opportunities for good works develop your character — while setting the right boundaries.
September 16, 2011 at 2:03 am #246089Anonymous
GuestWelcome Rich! I enjoyed reading on your blog, and look forward to hearing more from you. September 16, 2011 at 5:45 am #246090Anonymous
GuestWelcome, Rich. Nice to see you here! I can relate to your personal blog – your optimism & tone, and your pragmatism also. Your comments on the site will doubtless be a welcome addition. I too see our history and even some of our present culture as troubling and flawed, but every culture has flaws, and if we become mindful of the problems, deliberate in our values & assumptions, we can still have personal growth. In time, we can become insulated from what is icky and uplifted by what is positive. Many arrive here at StayLDS, just discovering the ickiness and are dismayed at how much it is touching them. It’s helpful to have mentors here who’ve been there, who are neither afraid of the ickiness nor in denial that it exists.
September 16, 2011 at 12:45 pm #246091Anonymous
GuestWelcome Rich. I also enjoyed your writing and sincere tone. All I have to say for now is “paradox” – it is something that can teach us if we let it, but it can be scary to face when we go to church and feel we should know all things with certainty and doubt not. Paradox is ok.
September 16, 2011 at 9:28 pm #246092Anonymous
GuestWelcome, friend. Since I’ve read your blog regularly for a long time and you’ve read mine just as long, I’m curious how you ended up here – if it was something I said at some point or if it was totally independent of me.
September 16, 2011 at 10:01 pm #246093Anonymous
GuestWelcome, Rich! I especially like this part that you wrote in your blog…
Quote:We eventually get what we want. The trick is to choose that which will bring lasting happiness instead of only immediate pleasure. As any person truly seeks to find and follow truth, truth is inevitable to come and that truth will make us into what only God can imagine.
This is such a needed reminder for me in my life now. Thanks.September 19, 2011 at 3:18 pm #246094Anonymous
GuestHey Rich, Real excited to have you here with us! Welcome!
September 30, 2011 at 7:38 am #246095Anonymous
GuestSilentDawning wrote:
You said a few things though, I wanted to respond to….Quote:
I believe truth will prevail. Randy quoted J. Reuben Clark in one of his emails, “If we have the truth, it cannot be harmed by investigation. If we have not the truth, it ought to be harmed.” Truth will prevail in more than in the factual “what is real” questions.I didn’t really see how this counteracted or helped you deal with the hard history you were talking about ….it’s more of a statement of faith that the things you already believe will prevail, and that it won’t be dented even by questioning. That was the message I got — not how you managed to get past the tough history.
I guess it is more a statement of faith. How did I get past the tough history? As I have looked at the whole body of my experience with the church, I come up with a huge positive balance. The same goes for our history on its own. There are warts, but there is incredible beauty, sacrifice, love and Goodness. That probably sums up in the smallest nutshell how I have processed our messy history.Rough Stone Rolling has so much good in it. There are parts that were disturbing. From the outset Bushman says that he is a faithful Mormon. He also says that he was writing the book from a scholar’s tone, recognizing his bias for the church. It wasn’t until long after I read it that I started to understand what that meant. He was trying to preserve credibility among historians. He was not just writing for a Mormon audience.
September 30, 2011 at 7:47 am #246096Anonymous
GuestHeber13 wrote:All I have to say for now is “paradox” – it is something that can teach us if we let it, but it can be scary to face when we go to church and feel we should know all things with certainty and doubt not. Paradox is ok.
Yeah, just thinking about the pardox that I have come across in my adventures is making me smile. It is incredible. I truly see through a glass darkly. The best I am hoping for is some strands of truth and goodness. And I will never part with them! Until and unless I see their folly. lol.It truly seems like the rock foundation I had evaporated. But somehow I feel solid again. Probably a few months ago, I decided to stop waiting for complete and ultimate answers. I am becoming satisfied with the practical answers. Do I believe God lives? yes. Is Jesus the Son of God and my Savior? yes. Was Joseph one of His prophets? yes. Is TCoJCoLDS where God wants me? a resounding yes!
It is the practical answers that seem to have most solace for me. How is the church blessing the lives of my family and I? And then I start counting them.
Paradox indeed.
September 30, 2011 at 7:59 am #246097Anonymous
GuestOld-Timer wrote:Welcome, friend.
Since I’ve read your blog regularly for a long time and you’ve read mine just as long, I’m curious how you ended up here – if it was something I said at some point or if it was totally independent of me.
You, my friend, are probably the single reason that I felt safe to join this forum. I have come to respect you as my most trusted and wisest friends. I know of your commitment to the church. Your dedication to be a disciple of Christ. To become what He wants you to become.You have also challenged me in some of my conceptions on many topics. Topics that I think I had taken for face value and had not thought if they were true or not. I smile when I think of some of the Mormon “urban legends” that I have heard. I just accepted them because it was from a trusted source. If I had gotten the same thing today in an email from the same source, I probably would have looked it up on snopes or some other trusted source to see what it was all about. Before I decided it was a true story or an accepted teaching of the church.
So to answer you directly, you have contributed to my journey in a positive way. I participate in a Facebook group but I was looking for somewhere else to participate. This seems like a good place.
September 30, 2011 at 8:01 am #246098Anonymous
GuestTo everyone else: I look forward to participating. Thanks for all the welcome posts. -
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