Hello Idea,
I’ve wondered if the thread didn’t stop so suddenly due to the profound nature of Joseph Smith’s summation of the Purpose of God and the relationship of men to God and God’s purposes. To go from the milieu of his profound revelatory summation of God’s plan for mankind to a mundane argument would have seemed incredibly petty and small minded. I have been reading the Book of Mormon and it’s testimony of Jesus as the Savior of Mankind and considering the implications.
1) Example implications if the Book of Mormon's testimony regarding Jesus Christ is true:
If the Book of Mormon’s testimony regarding Jesus Christ is true, then the ancient pattern of communication established by God, where he speaks to mankind through personal revelation and through prophets,
continues to be his unchanging pattern. just as it always has.
If the Book of Mormon’s testimony of Jesus is true, then
it represents, (along with other sacred libraries), profound evidence that Christianity, in it’s more ancient and purest form, is the most correction version of what God is like and his purposes and the ultimate destiny of mankind. I have been reading about the Book of Mormon’s testimony regarding who Jesus was and I cannot stop thinking about the vast implications.
2) There is a difficulty in recognizing profound truth among the mundane (which is only made worse if we concentrate our lives on the mundane and trivial)
idea said:
"As I sat looking at the chalkboard the Holy Ghost bore a powerful witness to me that what I was looking at was true – ....... It was the moment that changed everything – where religion went from people trying to be goodie-two-shoes stuck-up self-righteous prideful control freaks trying to manipulate me and force me into guilt trips – sorry – but that had become my viewpoint of Christian churches – though deep down I felt atheism was somehow wrong – Religion became real, so very real..."
However profound the Book of Mormon’s testimony regarding Jesus as the Son of God might be,
there is a difficulty that all great testimonies of God and of his son Jesus must overcome. . Profound testimony of a real truth is mixed with the ordinary and mundane (and often with the vain things) so that in our desire to avoid one, we miss the other. Men would “
judge after the sights of [their] eyes” and they
“reprove after the hearing of [their] ears” rather than making righteous judgments. Because of this tendency, the apostolic fathers lamented that the world would consistently misjudge authentic Christianity;
the world would reject perfectly profound and true religious data because it would come from imperfect sources and under unusual circumstances.
For example, Your description made perfect sense when you said that we
“read things, and speculate about things” but don't expect to find the truth, at least not among the mundane.
idea said:
“It never crossed my mind that it was real - the kind of real that you could touch, and hear, and see - I don't know why. I had an experience in that room though “
You were able to recognize a spiritual experience while inside a mundane situation with
“crazy rowdy kids crawling over their chairs”. It was, as you said “
not a "spiritual" environment”, but you “
had an experience, “. How many individuals would have concentrated on the
"rowdy kids" so much that they would have missed the Holy Ghost and the accompanying "
spiritual experience"?
I have wondered if erroneous religious pre-conceptions we all have aren’t part of what is so difficult for religious people coming to terms with religious truths. The lazy caricatures we all form about truths are a problem for us when real truths don’t match our caricatures. We form ingrained ideas of what authentic religion will be like and what it's source will look like (i.e. regarding the “
entirely perfect people” who will both possess and teach authentic religion). Erroneous pre-conceptions may blind us to some extent to the real thing, especially if the real thing differs from our prior bias. NO real, but imperfect prophet seems to have matched the ancient pre-conceptions people held, just as Moses did not meet the expectations of many who, expecting perfection in a Prophet, saw his frailties, heard his poor speech, were offended at his perceived “lack of better planning” or at his perceived “hypocrisy” of having married an Ethiopian wife, etc., etc., etc. Modern individuals seem just as biased in the same ways as the ancients.
Other "pre-packaged" and traditional pre-conceptions are just as likely to throw us off. For example: Enoch saw not only
“...all the prophets of Israel and their generations, their deeds and their acts”, but he also saw
“all the prophets of the gentiles and their generations, their deeds and their acts...” (3 enoch 45:4). If Joseph Smith is one of the
gentile prophets which enoch said would come to the gentiles, it may be just as difficult for him as one of the gentile prophets to overcome modern erroneous Caricatures and erroneous expectations just as it was for authentic and ancient prophets to overcome ancient erroneous expectations as to what they were to be like.
For example: What happens if one holds the pre-conception that prophets will exist only among ancient Israelites? How many individuals have the ability to give up a comfortable religious pre-conception for a religious truth? ESPECIALLY if they do not know where that new truth will ultimately lead them.
This is my point regarding the type of faith in the LDS Sunday school lesson I heard. The children were being taught to give up ANY level of understanding and truth in order to gain better understanding and more truth. It is the most profound lesson we can learn. Accept truth. Accept it from anywhere.
Even presumed brilliance doesn’t protect us from the error of pre-conceptions. For example: Leonardo Da Vinci purposefully draws human anatomy incorrectly so that the drawings agree, not with what he sees with his own eyes, but rather he makes them agree with religious pre-conceptions of his age.
3) The important differences between the authentic and the counterfeit is rarely apparent by simple or superficial consideration.
Another difficulty in making religious progress is that
what is really important about people themselves
is often invisible to the eyes. The important difference is not something you can see on the surface. New Testament era Hermas describes this life as the “wintertime” of the righteous. He compares people to leafless trees in winter time when all trees look dead and leafless and one cannot tell the living trees from the dead and explains that in this life, one cannot tell the righteous from the unrighteous merely by their appearance. It is only after this life, “when the summer comes” that one can see which trees produce possess leaves and which bear fruit (the righteous) and which remain dead and leafless trees (the unrighteous)
In the same way, how can one, by superficial study (which is the only type of study most individuals are willing to engage in...) tell by a mere “glance” as it were, which group is living the authentic Christianity?
If authentic Christianity differs from the counterfeits in principles such as having “authentic authority”, then who would know which Christianity HAS authentic authority given them from God merely by appearance?
If authentic Christianity differs from the counterfeits by the type of covenants authentic Christians make with God what can we learn from superficial consideration of Authentic religion?
If Authentic Christianity differs from counterfeit religion in the type and degree of on-going communication with God what can be gleaned by biased and superficial glances at the truth?.
For example: Authentic religion embraces and possesses ongoing communication with an active and living God while some non-authentic religions deny revelation, (not because God does not communicate today, but rather as a means of explaining why God does not talk to
them), how can one tell by mere superficial appearance? For example, in the LDS thread “What would you do?”, the authentic Priesthood may simply ask God for guidance in the moment of their need, receive revelation through the Holy Ghost, and then follow what the inspiration they are given (even if the guidance is to do “nothing”
. An authentic relationship with God represents a different level of relationship with God that represents a different quality of communication and different mode of prayer than for a normative “passive or dead” faith.
Idea, I simply don’t have time to continue. I am sorry to ramble, but I promised myself that I would post and let you know that I have not taken these principles lightly nor abused them by placing them at the mercy of prior tradition or prior bias (any more than I can avoid).
I had once observed that the testimony of Jesus Christ in the Book of Mormon was one of the Most Profound and moving testimonies of him I have ever read. I have not changed my mind in my current reading.
clear
viauvisiviou
I'll have to edit the mistakes tomorrow - I've run out of time