truthhurts wrote:This thread discusses the Content article: Documents raise questions about religious influence
"My best thinking often occurs in conversation where people feel comfortable in trying out new thoughts and challenging each other's ideas," Leavitt wrote. "We occasionally recorded them to free ourselves from note taking. These were private conversations among friends."
New thoughts and challenging each others ideas, huh? If that is what he wanted, he should have invited folks from other religions (or no religion) to his little study sessions and studied their material as well. I don't consider a bunch of Mormon politicians meeting to discuss the Book of Mormon and D&C as "trying out new thoughts and challenging each other's ideas."Perhaps not, but there are a couple things you might consider. One is that the article stated that "...the group reviewed stories from the Book of Mormon, exploring the scripture lessons and how they apply to modern government." That seems like a fairly new approach to me.
The other, of course, is that like them or not, Mormonism is founded almost entirely on ideas that to most others would seem "new."