JLD wrote:Life Rocks wrote:
Dubbs wrote:
ThomasK wrote:
Life Rocks wrote:
As for being angry about this. You bet I'm angry. Anger in this instance is more than justified. I think God is angry too. The thought occurs to me that "God the Father", knowing how hard it is to be a parent, has a special place for devoted dads. A normal father who loves his kids should be angry at such a practice.
So you're really really really angry that the Church didn't allow you to go inside the temple at your daughters Sealing because you think the Church is a bunch of hooey. I got that.
So if one of your other 8 children, that you raised LDS, decides to join the Church of Satan and invites you to attend their wedding where you actually get to go inside. And they sacrifice an animal and drink its blood. You would be very very happy. Because witnessing that is very very important to you. I get it.
You're a great dad. 
You'd think he'd be happy they are actually doing something he couldn't, live up to their covenants and beliefs, without wavering to the whims of the world. His poor kids, there Dad hates the thing he taught them was truth.
We see certainly see things differently. If I were to talk about a Catholic Priest misusing young children, we could agree on that. It's wrong.
If we talk about the abuses in the FLDS faith, we probably will agree on that. That's wrong too!
But if we talk about something the LDS Church does that offends tens of thousands of people in something so basic as marriage being a family event...I guess that's to hard to address since it would mean looking at yourself. I shake my head in disgust. Shame on all of you.
I see this as thinking for myself for a change and taking a stand for what's right, something people who are obsessed with "following the rules" can't do.
It seems you're more concerned with "membership" and "being a good Mormon" rather than recognizing that what the Church is doing is wrong. And even if you could see it, because you've been so conditioned to "follow the brethren" you can't stand up for yourself. And by so doing, that makes you an accomplice.
Shame on us? For what, being reasonable? Honestly, not everyone is slamming on you, there are just as many posts offering advice, and not everyone cares about LDS membership standing...just because someone disagrees with your opinion on the issue doesn't make them LDS.
If you want to talk about church leaders misusing young children or other such abuses, I'm all for nodding my head in agreement. But I won't say that being excluded from a religious ceremony is even remotely the same thing.I agree concerning religions. It's their right to believe and practice what they want...to a limit. Given all the religious organizations around the world, it's really quite amazing at what things they can get people to do in the name of "honoring God".
My regret now is that I can see what's occurring and that I didn't think for myself all these years. I followed the Church naively, blindly believing that this was true. Now I can see the extent of control the Church (not just the LDS Church)has on it's members and my children.
I was trying to teach my children to think for themselves and to notice that wrong can occur even in the Church at all levels. And just because someone "in authority" says something is true doesn't make it right.
We've become so numbed to spiritual things.
We've come to think religion = spirituality. It's not so.
I used to watch people pray for "those who weren't at Church" and make no effort at all to visit them.
Or to pray for peace and safety...all the time. If this life is to prepare to meet God shouldn't we be praying for all the experiences that we need to have?
Or sitting week and after week (in exactly the same place) listening to lessons over and over and thinking that was spirituality?
To suggest that a physical building (ie a temple) has "the spirit" and has more importance than the people seems like what the Catholics do with their cathedrals. Seems to me that the Temples have become our new sacred cows, the new golden idols of worship.
Because you're in it, you're like a fish in water that can't see the water it's in. The Church tells you that any perspective outside the "safety" of the faith is of the devil and wrong. I'd wonder if one year the Priesthood manual didn't come with preprinted answers what the discussion would be.
Someone comes with an opinion different than yours and the other members gang up on him immediately telling him his opinion is wrong.
Couldn't be that something this guy has to say is valid. We're right you say. It's our right to have a belief that offends others. Apparently it is.
Please, if you would, tell me specifically what's so reasonable and caring and loving about excluding family members from the experience of attending the wedding of their children?
It's true. I'm angry for the moment. I'm feeling hurt. I didn't have a close family as a child. This isn't how I expected this occasion would turn out. I thought that close families did things together. If I had been an evil, or nasty and mistreated them, I'd agree...leave the bum out.
I'll get over this with time.
But I've been and am a good dad. The night before the wedding, my daughter and I stopped at a grocery store to get her some vitamins to stave of a cold she felt was coming on. We came out of the store and I noticed her headlight on her car was out. So there in the cold and snow, and in the dark I fiddled around to replace the bulb. That was my moment with my daughter.
Then showing up at the Temple the next day.
All the while you're believing I'm wrong, what you might want to think about too is what happened to your compassion as a human being when you follow a practice that disappoints and hurts so many and you feel good about it?