Originally posted by Walter Sobchak
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April 2020 General Conference - Global Pandemic Edition
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The scriptures speak of the need for leaders to practice extreme distancing from the perfection of Christ. I'm not arguing that they don't speak of their humble circumstances, nor do I find them out of touch, but of speaking in humility as vessels for the word of God, acknowledging their imperfections as messengers.Originally posted by tooblue View PostWho of the brethren grew up in homes with a single mother, or a father who was not a member? Which of the brethren have lost a spouse and remarried, or have lost adult children and grand children to illness; how about those that have lost a spouse and are now experiencing a terrible loneliness as they wait to join their companion in their eternal rest? How often do the brethren speak of their childhoods, or young adult years, or their failures as surgeons and as young fathers and husbands?
How much more public do you wish them to be with their imperfections? You are exercising a curious selective memory here in support of an idea that frankly is just not tenable.
Take John the Baptist, through the words of St. Thomas Aquinas
Or Nephi:He touches on the greatness of Christ’s superiority when he says, the strap of whose sandal I am not worthy to unfasten. As if to say: You must not suppose the he ranks ahead of me in dignity in the way that one man is placed ahead of another, rather he is ranked so far above me that I am nothing in comparison to him. And this is clear from the fact that it is he the strap of whose sandal I am not worthy to unfasten, which is the least service that can be done for men.
Or King Benjamin:17 Nevertheless, notwithstanding the great goodness of the Lord, in showing me his great and marvelous works, my heart exclaimeth: O wretched man that I am! Yea, my heart sorroweth because of my flesh; my soul grieveth because of mine iniquities.
18 I am encompassed about, because of the temptations and the sins which do so easily beset me.
They all make the very sincere and humble and possibly even exaggerated attempt to publicly acknowledge their potential lack of worthiness as vessels of divine communication. Very few conference talks open with this kind of humility, though some do. Nephi acknowledges that he may be in err.10 I have not commanded you to come up hither that ye should fear me, or that ye should think that I of myself am more than a mortal man.
11 But I am like as yourselves, subject to all manner of infirmities in body and mind; yet I have been chosen by this people, and consecrated by my father, and was suffered by the hand of the Lord that I should be a ruler and a king over this people; and have been kept and preserved by his matchless power, to serve you with all the might, mind and strength which the Lord hath granted unto me.
12 I say unto you that as I have been suffered to spend my days in your service, even up to this time, and have not sought gold nor silver nor any manner of riches of you;
I think we could use a little more of this in our time.Last edited by swampfrog; 04-07-2020, 03:41 PM.
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I wonder if this is just a different version of what you see on an individual level. When you go to church on Sunday, you see what appears to your eye to be a flock of true-blue believers, each of whom follows the Word of Wisdom, pays tithing, accepts the Book of Mormon as scripture and Joseph Smith as a prophet, doubts not, fears not, and, for the most part, errs not. Then you get to know them. And it turns out the reality could not be more different from the initial appearance.Originally posted by tooblue View PostWho of the brethren grew up in homes with a single mother, or a father who was not a member? Which of the brethren have lost a spouse and remarried, or have lost adult children and grand children to illness; how about those that have lost a spouse and are now experiencing a terrible loneliness as they wait to join their companion in their eternal rest? How often do the brethren speak of their childhoods, or young adult years, or their failures as surgeons and as young fathers and husbands?
How much more public do you wish them to be with their imperfections? You are exercising a curious selective memory here in support of an idea that frankly is just not tenable.
If I've learned anything from exposure to leaders of the Church outside of the usual channels, it is that they are people too. Very good ones, to be sure, and they set examples worth following. But they walk life's road same as the rest of us.τὸν ἥλιον ἀνατέλλοντα πλείονες ἢ δυόμενον προσκυνοῦσιν
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Been looking for my notes, but I think I left them at work. I remember he listed a bunch of things and really drive home the need to reach out to each them because you never know what they're going thru--especially those with gender issues. Anyway, he was far from out of touch with the problems they deal with, and showed just how much they (Q12) love and care about the young people.Originally posted by Brian View PostI'm curious now. What did he say?
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first, the profile of the typical non-q12 (and maybe 1q70) ga is pretty different from that of the q12 member. less tenure in a full time ecclesiastical role, more likely to have substantial and recent connections to non-full time church affiliates outside of their family circle, more likely to not be an old white male from the intermountain west, etc. second, my point is not that these are not brilliant, compassionate, salt-of-the-earth people--i think that's true, and i'd add sincerely committed to improving people's lives (in general). i don't think anybody is intentionally sticking their finger in the eyes of the younger generations.Originally posted by Jeff Lebowski View PostThere are two GA's that I know very well. One has an openly gay son and the other has some inactive/struggling kids. Brilliant, compassionate, salt-of-the-earth guys. This stereotype of stiff, out-of-touch bureaucrats is like most stereotypes - pretty much useless.
if you're saying that decisions like participation in prop 8, the lgbtq cudgel every conference, the gay parent baptism debacle, less than nuanced treatments of gender, etc., any of which the average <40 year old member could have told you would be an absolute cluster with no upside, come from something other than an innocent disconnect from the audience, that seems to me to be a far more ominous conclusion.Te Occidere Possunt Sed Te Edere Non Possunt Nefas Est.
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I think it is purely an issue of style and context. King Benjamin was more than a prophet, he was a King who wielded real power over the people he commanded to congregate before him firstly in his name, not Gods.Originally posted by swampfrog View PostThe scriptures speak of the need for leaders to practice extreme distancing from the perfection of Christ. I'm not arguing that they don't speak of their humble circumstances, nor do I find them out of touch, but of speaking in humility as vessels for the word of God, acknowledging their imperfections as messengers.
Take John the Baptist, through the words of St. Thomas Aquinas
Or Nephi:
Or King Benjamin:
They all make the very sincere and humble and possibly even exaggerated attempt to publicly acknowledge their potential lack of worthiness as vessels of divine communication. Very few conference talks open with this kind of humility, though some do. Nephi acknowledges that he may be in err.
I think we could use a little more of this in our time.
Regardless, I don't disagree we could use more humility in our time. And as it happens, we are all being humbled in some measure now due to this epidemic.
I really enjoyed conference. One of the reasons the announcement of the temple in Shanghai in particular moved me is because I personally know individuals who joined the church in the Toronto area and then re-patriated to China. Being able to even congregate together weekly let alone attend the temple has been a struggle. The announcement is miraculous.Last edited by tooblue; 04-07-2020, 05:48 PM.
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Agreed. It is a different version, but not by much. They have tempers, insecurities, failing bodies, as well as good days and bad days just like the rest of us.Originally posted by All-American View PostI wonder if this is just a different version of what you see on an individual level. When you go to church on Sunday, you see what appears to your eye to be a flock of true-blue believers, each of whom follows the Word of Wisdom, pays tithing, accepts the Book of Mormon as scripture and Joseph Smith as a prophet, doubts not, fears not, and, for the most part, errs not. Then you get to know them. And it turns out the reality could not be more different from the initial appearance.
If I've learned anything from exposure to leaders of the Church outside of the usual channels, it is that they are people too. Very good ones, to be sure, and they set examples worth following. But they walk life's road same as the rest of us.
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No mustache. No Cope.Originally posted by tooblue View PostAs an aside, I think I finally spotted Copelius:
[ATTACH]10129[/ATTACH]"Seriously, is there a bigger high on the whole face of the earth than eating a salad?"--SeattleUte
"The only Ute to cause even half the nationwide hysteria of Jimmermania was Ted Bundy."--TripletDaddy
This is a tough, NYC broad, a doctor who deals with bleeding organs, dying people and testicles on a regular basis without crying."--oxcoug
"I'm not impressed (and I'm even into choreography . . .)"--Donuthole
"I too was fortunate to leave with my same balls."--byu71
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One of these guys is an apostle.Originally posted by old_gregg View Postfirst, the profile of the typical non-q12 (and maybe 1q70) ga is pretty different from that of the q12 member. less tenure in a full time ecclesiastical role, more likely to have substantial and recent connections to non-full time church affiliates outside of their family circle, more likely to not be an old white male from the intermountain west, etc. second, my point is not that these are not brilliant, compassionate, salt-of-the-earth people--i think that's true, and i'd add sincerely committed to improving people's lives (in general). i don't think anybody is intentionally sticking their finger in the eyes of the younger generations.
if you're saying that decisions like participation in prop 8, the lgbtq cudgel every conference, the gay parent baptism debacle, less than nuanced treatments of gender, etc., any of which the average <40 year old member could have told you would be an absolute cluster with no upside, come from something other than an innocent disconnect from the audience, that seems to me to be a far more ominous conclusion."There is no creature more arrogant than a self-righteous libertarian on the web, am I right? Those folks are just intolerable."
"It's no secret that the great American pastime is no longer baseball. Now it's sanctimony." -- Guy Periwinkle, The Nix.
"Juilliardk N I ibuprofen Hyu I U unhurt u" - creekster
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I am more offended that upon initial glance you were placing me with the tenors than that you implied the dress. Really. A tenor. Have some respect.Originally posted by tooblue View PostAs an aside, I think I finally spotted Copelius:
[ATTACH]10129[/ATTACH]“Every player dreams of being a Yankee, and if they don’t it’s because they never got the chance.” Aroldis Chapman
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A soprano then?Originally posted by Copelius View PostI am more offended that upon initial glance you were placing me with the tenors than that you implied the dress. Really. A tenor. Have some respect."...you pointy-headed autopsy nerd. Do you think it's possible for you to post without using words like "hilarious," "absurd," "canard," and "truther"? Your bare assertions do not make it so. Maybe your reasoning is too stunted and your vocabulary is too limited to go without these epithets."
"You are an intemperate, unscientific poster who makes light of very serious matters.”
- SeattleUte
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