Are they hurdles? Are they things we try to find exceptions to? Do you view them in many cases as that nagging mother-in-law who knows what's best, but you don't want her spoiling your fun? Are you in love with the standards of the church? Do you see them as slavery? Are they just not realistic? Are they just something we give lipservice to? Do they really lead you to happiness? Are they like the occasional stopsign way out on a crossroads in the middle of nowhere--riddled with gunshots? Do you see them as with keeping with our modern society? Are they your best friend? Do they wake you up in the middle of the night with juicy bits of gossip? Do you take them with you to the public pool, and then push into the pool while they're not looking? Do you wish more people would take them seriously? Do you wish more people would not take them half so seriously? Do you think they'd make the world a better place if everyone lived them? Do you think they apply to pretty much everyone but you?
--Ray
-- Edited by rayb at 15:51, 2007-10-29
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I'm not slow; I'm special. (Don't take it personally, everyone finds me offensive. Yet somehow I manage to live with myself.)
The church standards are ideal. I'm imperfect, so the fact that I fall short of the standards occasionally doesn't say anything about the standards, but about me.
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If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen! - Samuel Adams
What Arbi says. I really hate it when people feel the need to "justify" not living up to the standards. No one is perfect, but we can all try to get there. I'm a firm believer that as long as we put as much effort into keeping the standards, Christ takes that partial credit and makes it whole. That means we should always be trying for full credit!
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Ordinary riches can be stolen, real riches cannot. In your soul are infinitely precious things that cannot be taken from you.
— Oscar Wilde
Sort of as attributes of God. Sometimes. Shouldn't be. No. That's just a weird question. No. No. Not "just" lipservice. Yes. No. Weird question - need to rephrase. Uh... noooo.... I don't think so. But in a way... this question's weird, too. No. Weirdo question. Yes. No. Yes. No.
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Life is tough but it's tougher if you're stupid. -John Wayne
I accept and appreciate the standards of the gospel.
I try to view them more as God saying "I am not just up here needing to boss people around for no intelligent reason. If you'll just do things My way, you'll be happier and better off, in every circumstance, I promise."
I accept the fact that the Church standards are provided by the Lord to protect my family and I. It doesn't mean I find them easy or that I don't fall short on occassion. What I cannot stand is when people try and justify deviation from those standards. My favorite are sisters and YW in the ward who flaunt the modesty standards and make up excuses that the standard is outdated, there are no options out there for clothes that fit the standard, or my personal favorite that the church doesn't specifically say this outfit or style is prohibited.
My personal favorite is the rationalizations people use for viewing innapropriate media or not waiting until 16 to start dating.
I guess I'm thinking more of "standards" that may vary from ward to ward or country to country... like, You must take out wet wipe and clean hands before the congregation before touching the sacrament. No, it's not that relevant but ho HO! try to change the system and see how relevant it really is!
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Life is tough but it's tougher if you're stupid. -John Wayne
I was thinking more in line with things in the Gospel Principles manual and For the Strength of Youth.
But I love this wet wipes thing. FWIW, I thought you were a chickster. Perhaps it wasn't the wet wipes they were concerned with when they tackled you at the sacrament table.
I was thinking more along the line of "For the Strength of Youth". The other stuff is just traditions that people get worked up about. The white shirt rule is another tradition. I personally hate wearing white shirts. They don't look as good on me as blue in my opinion. But I wear white on Sunday because it is the "rule". I prefer a nice light blue with a tie that has some burgandy in it when matched with a dark suit. My other personal tradition is basketball. I can't stand playing basketball and am looked at like a poriah in my ward. My brother doesn't play either. It's not that we can't play. We are both over 6 ft and athletic. We just don't like it. But we have so many transplants from Zion here that the elder's quorum members have weekly basketball at the church. I see basketball as a ghetto/gangster sport here because most kids who play anymore seem to be from inner cities. But folks that come from the Zion belt have a different view of it. So the weekly basketball continues and I lift weights or run and take the askew looks. I even had a couple bishopric members from the Zion belt actually wonder why basketball wasn't a bigger thing in our ward, as if something was wrong with us. I think scrapbooking is becoming one of those annoying traditions. Sisters in the ward are expected to love it. When a few don't then they are looked at as being somehow outside of the mainstream of the church in some cases.
Seeeeee? Those are all "Church" standards! Basketball, scrapbooking.... Don't you get it? They make you think it's part of the CHURCH. It's AT the ChURCH. It's part of a CHURCH activity. They announce it in CHURCH... Only CHURCH people are there...
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Life is tough but it's tougher if you're stupid. -John Wayne
Our old ward used to have non-member ringers on the basketball teams. This behavior was encouraged as "missionary work" but it was about winning really.
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"The promptings of the Holy Ghost will always be sufficient for our needs if we keep to the covenant path. Our path is uphill most days, but the help we receive for the climb is literally divine." --Elaine S. Dalton
Every Bishopric meeting I attended had at least someone in a non-white shirt.
We were widely known as having the highest percentage of bearded priesthood holders in the stake.
We never had scrapbooking RS events. We are having an RS dog training event.
The ward clerk went on some Christian fellowshipping brotherhood campout thing, the Exec Sec attended a few "are Mormons Christian" classes to see what the big whoop was, and several ward members do bible study with various Christian groups.
This stuff just doesn't seem to be very "church standards"-ish. More like "cultural norms".
LM (Honestly, I'm trying to get around to answer Ray's original questions)
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And I'd discuss the holy books with the learned men, seven hours every day. That would be the sweetest thing of all.
I think people are doing unauthorized Jello salad to keep that particular doctrine alive. In fact, I am sure that President Hinckley authorized that in secret to a select group.
You will need to issue another jello manifesto in a couple of years, but you'll still have to grandfather in the sureptitious salad makers, who will be quietly making jello salad in their homes for the next 40-50 years.
Upon their deaths, we will then insist that we haven't been doing jello salad for 117 years, or whatever, and those other salad makers are not part of the official church of coco.
Since I'm not of the Church of Coco splinter group, I can continue to make and eat green jello, as well as orange, lemon, strawberry, and any other color / flavor combination the lusts of the natural jello eater seeks. But, we do shun any sort of fruit or vegetable or dairy item incorporated into the jello. It must be pure jello of our own make to be kosher.
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It seems to me the only thing you've learned is that Caesar is a "salad dressing dude."
Cat! Stop this abomination NOW! There is only one pure color of jell-o! And there is no mixing of jell-o's or you know the consequences! Not that the church of coco approves of any of these 'fundamentalist' practices, of course. At least you could be more "quiet" about it!! Sheesh - flaunting it in our faces - trying to make the men jealous, or what?
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Life is tough but it's tougher if you're stupid. -John Wayne
Since I'm not of the Church of Coco splinter group, I can continue to make and eat green jello, as well as orange, lemon, strawberry, and any other color / flavor combination the lusts of the natural jello eater seeks. But, we do shun any sort of fruit or vegetable or dairy item incorporated into the jello. It must be pure jello of our own make to be kosher.
Hey, if you want to rub fry sauce on your body and belly, more power to ya!
We claim the privilege of eating french fries according to the dictates of our own hunger, and allow our children that same privilege... let them eat them when, where, and however they may.
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It seems to me the only thing you've learned is that Caesar is a "salad dressing dude."
the best use for jello: mix the powder with melted marshmallows and melted butter and popped popcorn (or rice crispie cereal if you're old-fashioned). MMM TASTY. And if you do a separate batch of grape (purple) and orange (orange) then it's HALLOWEENY!!
Well anyway, I did want to pay lip-service to the actual questions that started this thread, cuz I figure they're important.
If you define "standards of the church" as whatever direct, unequivocal council given us in the Strength of Youth pamphlet, conference talks, and scriptures:
I'm first and foremost a daddy, and can't help but answer all these as they relate to my kids and our home life.
Are you in love with the standards of the church? Very much so. It is so wonderful to be part of an organization that takes such a clear-cut stand on premarital sex, drugs, crime, violence, etc. I'm one of those people that will still go to church if I ever lose my testimony - because our youth program is a blessing and an aid to me as I try to raise good, healthy kids.
Do you see them as slavery? Part of the maturing process involves coming to an understanding that part of being human involves wanting something that is not good for you. We're protecting immature kidlings from themselves right now, as we don't allow them to punch each other or eat candy before breakfast, and we do make them go to church and exercize and do service to others.
Depending on the specific thing, my kids seem to be very accepting and enthusiastic about all this "we don't do that here" and "we do that because" stuff. Of course, they're 6 and 3. Come back in 9 years and ask me again, I may have a different answer.
Do they really lead you to happiness? Most assuredly. It can be argued that happiness can be found in lots of bad places. If Mrs. LM hadn't banned Family Guy, I'd watch it and be happy. But Mrs. LM is wise, and right.
Do you see them as with keeping with our modern society? Most certainly not, and that is their best point. Because modern society sucks.
Do you wish more people would take them seriously? Do you wish more people would not take them half so seriously? I don't care much for most people. But if I did, I'd probably answer yes to both.
LM
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And I'd discuss the holy books with the learned men, seven hours every day. That would be the sweetest thing of all.
You pharisees don't seem to like the phrase "or anything like unto it." He/she that is commanded in all things is SLOTHFUL and UNWISE! And worming your way around the "obvious" sins is a slippery slope! As in the "I didn't inhale" rationale.
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Life is tough but it's tougher if you're stupid. -John Wayne
Our old ward used to have non-member ringers on the basketball teams. This behavior was encouraged as "missionary work" but it was about winning really.
What, kind of like the movie Church Ball? Anyone seen that? It's kind of funny.
Personally, I don't believe the standards of the church are meant to be a hardship they are meant to provide guidance. But I have known people who "practice" the standards on Sunday, and then it turns into lip-service during the week. Aren't we all guilty of that sometimes?
You pharisees don't seem to like the phrase "or anything like unto it." He/she that is commanded in all things is SLOTHFUL and UNWISE! And worming your way around the "obvious" sins is a slippery slope! As in the "I didn't inhale" rationale.
Ya'll are crazy.
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It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
I just about fell off of the chair I'm sitting in, waiting for Trick or Treaters when I see that the woman who seldom if ever follows a posted link, links us to that famous heretic of the LDS faith, Eugene England. WOW! Splinter group indeed!!
M
(Just funnin)
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no unhallowed hand can stop the work from progressing... the truth of God will go forth till it has penetrated every website, sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be accomplished and the great Jehovah shall say the work is done
Janey, for many, many years, my mother would make jello for EVERY Sunday dinner... but not just any jello. Most frequently it was Green Jello with shredded carrotts and shredded cheese. Once in a while she would substitute Orange Jello... but it didn't taste the same. Just thinking about Green Jello w/ carrotts and cheese reminds me of my youth.
Church standard.
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no unhallowed hand can stop the work from progressing... the truth of God will go forth till it has penetrated every website, sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be accomplished and the great Jehovah shall say the work is done
I didn't even make it up, Janey! Got it from a recipe book from my SIL, and I realized it was just like rice krispy treats with the simple addition of jello powder, so now that's about the only thing I use jello powder for. Would probably work better if I followed the ratios from the original recipe, but I always guess on rice krispy treats so I guess on this too. Makes me wish I had some jello right now. mmmmm.
He was called on the carpet by Elder McConkie for England's stance that God (as in The Father) knew all things pertaining to our sphere of existence, and that He was learning new things pertaining to greater spheres of existence.
He had a lot of interesting ideas, theologically, some of which we would not consider entirely orthodox.
He did not finish his career at BYU (rather at UVSC), but his membership and fellowship in the church were never in doubt (as far as I know, but I have been wrong before on various and sundry topics).
One of his daughters-in-law was the instructor of one of my BYU english classes. She was hilarious. I've heard that he (England) was somewhat of an interesting character, and that perhaps his views sometimes got viewed by administrators and some leaders (all the way up to the Quorum of The Twelve) as somewhere between non-orthodox to something more.
Don't know myself, though. And, the man does not have a wikpedia article about him, so. I haven't found any of his writings I've read easy to digest.
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It seems to me the only thing you've learned is that Caesar is a "salad dressing dude."
I took the gist of "Why the church is as true as the gospel" to be:
The church is like a refiner's fire, an organization which has imperfections which MUST exist to refine us into the people we need to be.
I'll toss this in of my own mind:
Life is like a lathe, and we are a big block of wood. The world spins us round and round, but the church (and the members thereof) are like the knife that cuts into our side, knocking off the rough edges, until we are left as a beautiful fruit bowl fit to take our place on the dining table in the Mansion of God.