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April 28, 2014 at 8:33 pm #208757
Anonymous
GuestI was talking to my bishop and he referenced looking at “anti mormon” sites and sources as being similar to a porn addiction. What are your thoughts on this analogy? Offended? Agree? The context was discussing a person in a faith crisis. April 28, 2014 at 8:46 pm #284262Anonymous
Guest……… April 28, 2014 at 9:11 pm #284263Anonymous
GuestThe initial impact is the comment is designed to be offensive, or at least attention grabbing. I feel like I can understand where it comes from, but I disagree with it. If I was in the room I would be horrified for the person that spoke it. I also heard some difficult “attacks” this weekend – aimed at those members who would dare disagree with church leaders. I don’t engage that discussion, it is not profitable. Maybe if it is initiated as a reasoned moderate position, but there is nothing moderate or reasoned about emotional (or even fear based) attacks.
April 28, 2014 at 9:25 pm #284264Anonymous
GuestIt was just me and the bishop. My husband was leaving the church. I was for all intents a Tbm, but had a past faith crises which of course is back, more virulent than ever… Lol April 28, 2014 at 9:37 pm #284265Anonymous
GuestNo they’re not like p*rn sites. No one visits them for a thrill.
While a lot of the anti-Mormon sites make very reasonable points about
various concerns or history, sometimes they can be very one sided, or
even ridiculous.
I get irritated by a lot of the atheist evangelizing on them. I’ve never
been an atheist, or interested in becoming one. Agnostic yes, but not
atheist. When I went inactive and looked at some of these sites, I found
their aggression (and yes even bigotry) offputting. It was like some of
these atheist exmormons were back on a mission.
But the silliest are often the evangelical ones by other churches. The
Lighthouse lot I would exclude from that list, as their website is well
written, by people who know Mormonism. There’s also an anti-Mormon site which is extremely funny (intentionally)
So they shoot themselves a lot I think. You end up with polar opposites.
Not a lot in the middle.
April 28, 2014 at 9:50 pm #284266Anonymous
GuestMy post got lost, I think Sam and I were posting at the same time. Anyway from a TBM and a Bishop point of view, I think he is correct. There are many bloggernacle sites I visit daily. I like the insight. I see the people on them as saviors in a way. Through their essays and comments I can process my struggles, but I remember choking the first few times I heard/read things. At the same time I was hungry for what I felt I was lacking. Needless to say I needed my daily Mormon-Jo to go on. If a TBM, CES instructor, Bishop heard this and listened to my faith struggle or watched me turn my back and walk away – he would conclude and pretty rightly so – that the online blogs were anti- stuff. What often doesn’t get taken into account though are the non-anti sites. The Mormon Mommy Blogs, LDS.org forums, LDS.net. FARMS and FAIR. Shoot even the Maxwell Institute blog/podcasts can lure you in. The difference is perception. If I were losing flock members who had visited STayLDS regularly, and then I checked it out. I’d probably see it as damaging a internet porn.
Twenty years from now, that won’t be the case, but for now it is or can be.
April 28, 2014 at 9:56 pm #284267Anonymous
GuestIt’s possible I interpreted in incorrectly but I’m pretty sure he was implying anti mormon as meaning anything not faith promoting. We are talking “rough stone rolling” as anti mormon. April 28, 2014 at 10:14 pm #284268Anonymous
GuestI do believe that anti-mormon material can be all-consuming for some former members of the Church. I suppose in that way, there are some parallels with porn, but I wouldn’t say it’s “similar”… more like some of the effects can be similar. As has been stated many times on these forums, stuff that is on lds.org today was considered anti a decade ago. Yet there is nothing on lds.org that was considered porn a decade ago. April 29, 2014 at 3:58 pm #284269Anonymous
GuestKcarp wrote:It’s possible I interpreted in incorrectly but I’m pretty sure he was implying anti mormon as meaning anything not faith promoting. We are talking “rough stone rolling” as anti mormon.
This is a very precarious way to define anti-Mormon isn’t it? All is fine and good when everyone has the same experience, but some of the simplified stories I hear in church are anything but faith promoting to me — does that make them anti-Mormon? I receive strength from solid truths, stories of milk strippings and Facebook challenges simply don’t bolster my faith.
I much prefer the definition of anti-Mormon as something designed to take people away from the church. RSR is anything but that.
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