Commentary on faith, culture, and society from a Latter-day Saint perspective.

Joined December 2024
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Hey @grok summarize the deathbed confessions of the three witnesses of the Book of Mormon
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Mr. Rogers wrote Dallin H. Oaks and told him: “My sense is that you are a man inspired of God.”
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Spent some time knocking on doors as Senator McCay’s junior companion. Smart guy. Good guy.
Apparently we’re doing endorsement videos now... While others are focused on collecting endorsements, I’m focused on solving problems. But here are some of mine if you care about them. #utpol
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There is nothing to really spin about Joseph Smith. He is one of the most studied humans in American history. The real challenge is spinning what his teachings teachings built. Outcomes like: - At the top in spiritual peace and overall well-being (Pew) - The highest rate of feeling loved by their mother and father growing up (Harvard) - Highest worship attendance of any major U.S. religious group (Pew) - The most prosocial people in America, volunteering at many times the national rate (University of Pennsylvania) - Most likely to be married, the lowest divorce rates, highest fertility of any major faith group (Pew) - The most likely to pray and read scripture with their children, around 80 percent (Pew) - One of the lowest rates of depression (Harvard) - The highest for being “highly happy” and for drawing comfort from their faith (Harvard) - Teens report stronger relationships with their parents than peers in any other tradition (Kenda Creasy Dean, Princeton) - Highest in Bible knowledge of any major U.S. Christian group (Pew)
Mormon apologists have the most difficult job in the world. Can you imagine trying to spin all of the crap Joseph Smith did?
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A good test of intelligence is how someone responds to the phrase “Mormons are good people.”
Say what you want about Mormon religion, but they’re good people. I don’t agree with their beliefs but I don’t have to in order to support the individual people. The hatred and harassment is evil.
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2 million views on this. Far more impactful than any other online conversation about Latter-day Saints in the past week.
Most of us endured worse goy babble every day for two years. We’ll be okay!
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Unless you get an emperor to convene a council, vote that the tail is a leg, write it into a creed, burn every book that says otherwise, and exile those who refuse to sign. Then it’s a leg.
Thomas Sowell, deep if you think about it
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“the whole decaying structure [of Mormonism] will rapidly fall to pieces.” Salt Lake Tribune - September 1877
“Thus ends Mormonism.” New York Weekly Herald - July 13, 1844
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Super interesting observation from Alex Bass: While political ideologies between young men and women are seeing a sharp divide across developed countries, US Latter-day Saints are an exception to the trend. There is no clear ideological gender gap among Latter-day Saints.
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You aren’t prepared for what happens when people actually visit a Mormon church instead of relying on a cartoon to teach them about it.

“You Mormans couldn’t possibly know your religion as well as I, the man who watched a cartoon about it one time”
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Everyone wants to “explain” Mormon beliefs. But nobody wants to “explain” these Mormon outcomes:
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About 9 in 10 Latter-day Saints with a college degree pray daily and attend worship regularly. These aren’t mindless trance victims.
Are Mormons in some kinda hypnotic trance or smth? I get a very unsettling vibe from them. They're so polite but when they talk about their religion they give off North Korean cheerleader energy
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"You aren't a Christian if you don't accept the Trinity." The history of that statement is quite shocking, and almost nobody who says it knows that acceptance of the doctrine of the Trinity was once enforced by exile, fire, and death. Here is what happened. For the first 300 years after Jesus, Christians did not agree on how He related to God the Father. They argued about it constantly. There was no official rule. That was just normal. Then a priest named Arius said the Son came from the Father and was beneath Him. Not equal. Not eternal. A lot of Christians agreed with him. A lot. This was not some fringe group. For stretches of the next century, his side was winning. Other Christians said the opposite. The Son was fully God, equal to the Father, no beginning. Two camps, same Bible, opposite conclusions. The fighting got bad. Riots. Mobs in the streets. Christians brawling over the nature of God. So the Roman emperor stepped in. Constantine. He had just won a civil war and he wanted his empire to stop fighting. He was not even baptized. He did not care about the theology. He cared about order. In the year 325 he called the bishops to a town called Nicaea. He paid for it. He ran the meeting himself. And they voted. They ruled that the Son was equal to the Father, fully God, one substance with Him. That ruling is the core of the Trinity. It got settled in that room, by that vote, on one word that is not even in the Bible. They wrote the ruling into an official statement of belief. A creed. Every bishop was expected to sign it. That is the part people think is the story. It isn't. The shocking part is how they made everyone accept it. Constantine made the bishops sign the creed. The few who refused, he banished. Then he ordered every book Arius ever wrote to be burned. Then he made a law. If you were caught hiding one of those books, you were put to death. Even after all of that, the Trinity did not win for good. A few years later Constantine changed his mind. He brought Arius back. And he exiled Athanasius, the bishop who had won the argument at Nicaea. That man got banished five separate times in his life for believing the thing the church now says you have to believe. For the next fifty years it flipped back and forth. One emperor said Trinity. The next said no. Whoever sat on the throne decided what was true. The official belief about God changed every time power changed hands. It finally got locked in by another emperor named Theodosius. He made the Trinity the law of the empire. Disagree, and you were a heretic. Not in some spiritual sense. By law. Backed by soldiers. A few years after that, the empire executed a bishop for his beliefs. The first time the state put a Christian to death over doctrine. It would not be the last. Then came the document that says it out loud. A creed written around the year 500. Almost five centuries after Jesus. They named it after Athanasius, that same bishop. He did not even write it. They put his name on it for the authority. It opens by declaring that anyone who does not hold the Trinity, whole and complete, will perish forever. Believe it or be damned. Put in writing, and made the test of who gets saved. So that is where the line comes from. Not from Jesus. Not from the apostles. From emperors and councils who needed a divided empire to fall in line. The Trinity did not become the rule because the argument was settled. It became the rule because the side that held it had the throne, the law, and the sword. The next time someone says you aren't a Christian unless you accept the Trinity, remember what it took to make that rule stick. Exile. Fire. And death.
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Reagan is probably a better choice. He had more Latter-day Saints on staff than any other president. He toured the Church welfare program and said the idea behind it “should be reborn nation-wide.” He gave the Tab Choir the nickname “America’s Choir.” And he said this:
Donald Trump might be the most pro Latter-day Saint president ever
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Good use case for the Latter-day Saints by Numbers Research Bot!
Mormons, sorry but I think you’re cooked.
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Ask your question: lds-by-numbers.vercel.app

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If you want to understand the religious right, this book is a great resource:
Again, I say this with love to my fellow Latter-day Saints: the sooner you give up trying to convince the religious right to validate your faith, the sooner you'll know peace. Are we real Christians? Only one opinion matters—and it's not Pete Hegseth's.
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Last night this Latter-day Saint won a Tony Award. His jazzy retelling of the Book of Mormon better be in the new hymnbook.
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