http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/ar...d-atheist.html
Does this bother you?
There are lots of definitions of a "cult" but dictating what underwear you are allowed to wear is definitely one of the definitions of a cult.
Joseph Smith never associated garments with the endowment like we do today (JS did not place garments on people during the endowment during his lifetime, there were garments, but not like today)--It really was a Woodruff thing in St. George that was adopted by the Church later. And it doesn't make any sense in the Adam/Eve context. The leaves/apron cover the nakedness. Why the extra garments? Did God not want to see? Did Adam and Eve desire extra additional coverings and God gave skins to them as a favor? Was it just an early form of modesty being enforced (even though the only people around were Adam and Eve and they were married and had lived in the nude with each other for a long long time)? Our narrative doesn't make sense.
And we never actually covenant to wear garments in the Temple. We are given them and instructed, but there is no covenant.
Hebrew scholars say that the Genesis passage is understood wrongly today, that the original text said that God placed human flesh upon Adam and Eve--he made them subject to entropy and death, made them human as part of the fall. When cast out, animals were not killed and skinned and clothes sewn. But rather a skin was placed on Adam and Eve where before they were clothed in immortality. Now that makes sense.
Maybe our funny underwear is all a misguided Puritanical/Victorian modesty falsely dressed up in religious dogma.
Does this bother you?
There are lots of definitions of a "cult" but dictating what underwear you are allowed to wear is definitely one of the definitions of a cult.
Joseph Smith never associated garments with the endowment like we do today (JS did not place garments on people during the endowment during his lifetime, there were garments, but not like today)--It really was a Woodruff thing in St. George that was adopted by the Church later. And it doesn't make any sense in the Adam/Eve context. The leaves/apron cover the nakedness. Why the extra garments? Did God not want to see? Did Adam and Eve desire extra additional coverings and God gave skins to them as a favor? Was it just an early form of modesty being enforced (even though the only people around were Adam and Eve and they were married and had lived in the nude with each other for a long long time)? Our narrative doesn't make sense.
And we never actually covenant to wear garments in the Temple. We are given them and instructed, but there is no covenant.
Hebrew scholars say that the Genesis passage is understood wrongly today, that the original text said that God placed human flesh upon Adam and Eve--he made them subject to entropy and death, made them human as part of the fall. When cast out, animals were not killed and skinned and clothes sewn. But rather a skin was placed on Adam and Eve where before they were clothed in immortality. Now that makes sense.
Maybe our funny underwear is all a misguided Puritanical/Victorian modesty falsely dressed up in religious dogma.

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