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Symmetry wrote:So anyway, how much power does a Mormon have over his or her own decisions vs what the church says?

demonfork wrote:Symmetry wrote:So anyway, how much power does a Mormon have over his or her own decisions vs what the church says?
Not sure what you mean bubb. Mormons have 100% free will over their decisions.
demonfork wrote:pimpdave wrote:There are plenty of other threads discussing facts about different religions. Several about Christianity and Islam, I can remember a couple about Scientology in the past. I can't find anything in the guidelines that the thread went against. Everyone please feel free to share what you know here. Then the mods can just merge this into the one that already exists.
Could someone please explain what was wrong with the thread about historical facts regarding Mormonism? It was never bashing the religion.
Quit the innocent act, its insulting.
Like john9blue said, you are a bigoted anti-mormon with an agenda. You and I and everyone else know that you are not interested in "sharing facts about mormonism". You are here to try and cast a negative shadow on the Mormon gospel by using half truths and innuendo.
You are using the same sad and tired act that every other two bit anti-mormon uses. Its old and boring....worst part is that you are not very good at it.
Go take a trip over to http://www.concernedchristians.org and get a few pointers from Bob Betts. His full time job is to be an anti-mormon and he gets paid a nice salary to do so.

jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
pimpdave wrote:22. Joseph Smith taught that there were inhabitants on the moon, and Brigham Young taught there were inhabitants on the sun as well!

demonfork wrote:pimpdave wrote:22. Joseph Smith taught that there were inhabitants on the moon, and Brigham Young taught there were inhabitants on the sun as well!
Was never "taught". You will not find this "teaching" in ANY authoritative works within the Mormon gospel.
Did J. Smith and Young believe in sun and moon inhabitants? Probably but so did a lot of others in the early 1800's. A pretty common belief back then.
Symmetry wrote:demonfork wrote:Symmetry wrote:So anyway, how much power does a Mormon have over his or her own decisions vs what the church says?
Not sure what you mean bubb. Mormons have 100% free will over their decisions.
So, the church has no say?

demonfork wrote:Symmetry wrote:demonfork wrote:Symmetry wrote:So anyway, how much power does a Mormon have over his or her own decisions vs what the church says?
Not sure what you mean bubb. Mormons have 100% free will over their decisions.
So, the church has no say?
Joseph Smith was once quoted saying.. "I teach them correct principles and they govern themselves."
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
b.k. barunt wrote:demonfork wrote:pimpdave wrote:22. Joseph Smith taught that there were inhabitants on the moon, and Brigham Young taught there were inhabitants on the sun as well!
Was never "taught". You will not find this "teaching" in ANY authoritative works within the Mormon gospel.
Did J. Smith and Young believe in sun and moon inhabitants? Probably but so did a lot of others in the early 1800's. A pretty common belief back then.
I don't know of any writings by Smith that indicated such beliefs, but Brigham Young wrote that there were men on the moon who wore hats like Quakers. Anything Young wrote was considered "teaching" at the time and was accepted by the church as gospel. You won't find such a "teaching" in any modern day "authoritative works", as it is quite embarrassing to say the least.

Crazyirishman wrote:You can make fun of the mormons all you want (it's pretty fun and I've made more than my share or mormon jokes), but I grew up in a town near the utah border so there were many Mormons in my town, and those fuckers have good family structure. They will have family game night even when the kids are in there teens, and go knocking door to door in their suits whether it is -20 or 100 outside which take some dedication. i cant think of the last time I heard about a mormon kid getting in trouble. What they believe may be batshit crazy but in the grand scheme of things they have more positives than any trouble they cause
b.k. barunt wrote:Crazyirishman wrote:You can make fun of the mormons all you want (it's pretty fun and I've made more than my share or mormon jokes), but I grew up in a town near the utah border so there were many Mormons in my town, and those fuckers have good family structure. They will have family game night even when the kids are in there teens, and go knocking door to door in their suits whether it is -20 or 100 outside which take some dedication. i cant think of the last time I heard about a mormon kid getting in trouble. What they believe may be batshit crazy but in the grand scheme of things they have more positives than any trouble they cause
The problem is that if there is an afterlife and what decisions you make here will determine what happens to you there, then teachin people a fabrication instead of the truth is inexcusable - especially when it's batshit crazy.

demonfork wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:demonfork wrote:pimpdave wrote:22. Joseph Smith taught that there were inhabitants on the moon, and Brigham Young taught there were inhabitants on the sun as well!
Was never "taught". You will not find this "teaching" in ANY authoritative works within the Mormon gospel.
Did J. Smith and Young believe in sun and moon inhabitants? Probably but so did a lot of others in the early 1800's. A pretty common belief back then.
I don't know of any writings by Smith that indicated such beliefs, but Brigham Young wrote that there were men on the moon who wore hats like Quakers. Anything Young wrote was considered "teaching" at the time and was accepted by the church as gospel. You won't find such a "teaching" in any modern day "authoritative works", as it is quite embarrassing to say the least.
bullshit. Not everything Young wrote or personally believed was considered gospel, not by a long shot.
And what do you mean by "modern day" the method by which anything becomes official was spelled out in the D&C by J. Smith in the 1800's, and this method has never changed since.
Young s personal belief in Sun inhabitants was NEVER canonized and was never part of the Gospel.
demonfork wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:Crazyirishman wrote:You can make fun of the mormons all you want (it's pretty fun and I've made more than my share or mormon jokes), but I grew up in a town near the utah border so there were many Mormons in my town, and those fuckers have good family structure. They will have family game night even when the kids are in there teens, and go knocking door to door in their suits whether it is -20 or 100 outside which take some dedication. i cant think of the last time I heard about a mormon kid getting in trouble. What they believe may be batshit crazy but in the grand scheme of things they have more positives than any trouble they cause
The problem is that if there is an afterlife and what decisions you make here will determine what happens to you there, then teachin people a fabrication instead of the truth is inexcusable - especially when it's batshit crazy.
Batshit crazy according to you right?![]()
![]()
b.k. barunt wrote:demonfork wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:Crazyirishman wrote:You can make fun of the mormons all you want (it's pretty fun and I've made more than my share or mormon jokes), but I grew up in a town near the utah border so there were many Mormons in my town, and those fuckers have good family structure. They will have family game night even when the kids are in there teens, and go knocking door to door in their suits whether it is -20 or 100 outside which take some dedication. i cant think of the last time I heard about a mormon kid getting in trouble. What they believe may be batshit crazy but in the grand scheme of things they have more positives than any trouble they cause
The problem is that if there is an afterlife and what decisions you make here will determine what happens to you there, then teachin people a fabrication instead of the truth is inexcusable - especially when it's batshit crazy.
Batshit crazy according to you right?![]()
![]()
Wrong again - i was quoting crazyirishman.

b.k. barunt wrote:demonfork wrote:b.k. barunt wrote:demonfork wrote:pimpdave wrote:22. Joseph Smith taught that there were inhabitants on the moon, and Brigham Young taught there were inhabitants on the sun as well!
Was never "taught". You will not find this "teaching" in ANY authoritative works within the Mormon gospel.
Did J. Smith and Young believe in sun and moon inhabitants? Probably but so did a lot of others in the early 1800's. A pretty common belief back then.
I don't know of any writings by Smith that indicated such beliefs, but Brigham Young wrote that there were men on the moon who wore hats like Quakers. Anything Young wrote was considered "teaching" at the time and was accepted by the church as gospel. You won't find such a "teaching" in any modern day "authoritative works", as it is quite embarrassing to say the least.
bullshit. Not everything Young wrote or personally believed was considered gospel, not by a long shot.
And what do you mean by "modern day" the method by which anything becomes official was spelled out in the D&C by J. Smith in the 1800's, and this method has never changed since.
Young s personal belief in Sun inhabitants was NEVER canonized and was never part of the Gospel.
First of all, to disagree with anything that Young said was to invite excommunication. Any history of the LDS under his leadership (well maybe not one written by Mormons) will confirm that.
Secondly, by "modern" i refer to outright deletions and additions such as those in "Doctrines and Covenants". There are three copies of the original in existence - two are owned by the Mormons and you can't see them (big surprise that) and one is, if memory serves me correctly, in the Harvard or Yale library. Anyone can access that one on the internet and see if what i say is true. I took my copy and compared it to the original; everywhere mine was missing something that was in the original i wrote it in the margins and everywhere something in my copy wasn't in the original i drew a line through it in pencil. When i got finished my copy looked like a rough draft.
Thirdly, there were many things taught over the years in the LDS that are not canonized now - Polygamy for one. Both Smith and Young taught that you could not enter the Kingdom of God without multiple wives. Unless i'm mistaken that is no longer part of church teaching.

Juan_Bottom wrote:It's batshit crazy according to the scientific method. The question, gentlemen, as always - is "how the f*ck do you know that?" If your answer is "faith" then yes, you are batshit crazy and have no business teaching it to other people. Also, you're an automatic half-retard.

demonfork wrote:b.k. barunt]First of all, to disagree with anything that Young said was to invite excommunication. Any history of the LDS under his leadership (well maybe not one written by Mormons) will confirm that.
Secondly, by "modern" i refer to outright deletions and additions such as those in "Doctrines and Covenants". There are three copies of the original in existence - two are owned by the Mormons and you can't see them (big surprise that) and one is, if memory serves me correctly, in the Harvard or Yale library. Anyone can access that one on the internet and see if what i say is true. I took my copy and compared it to the original; everywhere mine was missing something that was in the original i wrote it in the margins and everywhere something in my copy wasn't in the original i drew a line through it in pencil. When i got finished my copy looked like a rough draft.
Thirdly, there were many things taught over the years in the LDS that are not canonized now - Polygamy for one. Both Smith and Young taught that you could not enter the Kingdom of God without multiple wives. Unless i'm mistaken that is no longer part of church teaching.[/quote]
[quote="demonfork wrote:Jesus Christ brah, you are wrong, wrong and more WRONG!
1. What does being excommunicated for publicly challenging the Profit have to do with whether or not everything that came out of Young's mouth was authoritative gospel? You keep goal post moving and its fucking irritating me.
2. Read this, (although you probably wont) http://en.fairmormon.org/Doctrine_and_Covenants/Textual_changes
3. When did I once say that once something was canonized that it couldn't be changed/amended? That's one of the reasons why Mormons have modern day Profits because there is a need for modern day revelation. Shit changes brah gotta keep up with the changing times!
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