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About faith crises

Wednesday,September 5th, 2012 Leave a comment

Last weekend I was asked whether I had ever had a crisis of faith. This wasn’t the first time, but I had to ask for some room to define, to interpret the question. I will write about my chain of thought about that.

About faith: I want to remind that faith is not about absolute knowledge Read more…

Destructive Nationalism in Support of Racism and Slavery (Nationalism Part 2)

Wednesday,August 8th, 2012 2 comments

I must confess that I calculated the headline to be provocative. I mean to provoke, but I also mean to clear my own thoughts a little.

I do not think that it is a far-fetched thought that Nationalist ideas have partly been constructed to support Racism and Slavery. From the multitudes of examples, I could bring up, e.g. Rudyard Kipling, and almost any book he wrote Read more…

Griping About Destructive Nationalism, Part 1

Tuesday,August 7th, 2012 Leave a comment

London has been on the news lately, with some good news for a change. Or at least feel-good, not rioting like last year. But let us not forget that the roots of the rioting are there, untouched, and with David Cameron publicly recounting his wet dream of more “welfare cuts” (i.e. cutting services that poor people need), and tax breaks for his rich friends. He is obviously already campaigning for the next General Election, and the Coalition does not figure in his plans. He wants a hard-core Tory government á la Mrs T.

That is naturally speculation on my part, but that is what it sounds like Read more…

Personhood, or Being a person

Friday,April 13th, 2012 4 comments

Some recent phenomena have prompted me to write this, in an attempt at a common sense-philosophical study of what the word person means, and how definitions of being a person–sometimes called personhood–have been expanded in recent centuries. I am doing it mostly for my own benefit, to organise my own thoughts, but in our time of sharing and over-sharing, why not share? :)

To begin with, I suppose we must check what the word here means. Without going into more complex things Read more…

They say I’m not Christian? I’m indifferent…

Monday,March 5th, 2012 2 comments

The headline here is revealing. So I’ve been reading yet another set of press articles, where “journalists” interview a Baptist pastor about the “Mormon” faith? (Deep breath.)

Anyhow, there have been about a billion blog posts, where Mormons argue that their church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is a Christian church Read more…

Is Critical History forbidden to Latter-day Saints?

Friday,March 2nd, 2012 Leave a comment

On another forum (in another language), we had some discussion about Critical History some while ago. In that discussion, I guess we all were very much for open history. The audience was somewhat self-selected for openness, as it is a site for airing “issues” in a polite, but open way. We should not, by any means, leave the Historiography of LDS restoration to those who do it to look for something unflattering for us. We’re much better off bringing as much as we can to light.

Our theory in principle is, that if we can research the Church history, as well as secular history, with an open mind and without blinding ourselves to contradictory Read more…

Gay marriage, another personal take

Sunday,February 12th, 2012 2 comments

As someone else already pointed out, marriage ceremony was always between one man and one woman in Judeo-Christian culture, although one man could end up with more than one living wife in several cultures in history (including The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) up to the turn of the 20th century).

The lurid ideas that some people seem to have Read more…

Nonviolence vs. Pacifism, or How to solve unsolveable problems?

Wednesday,February 1st, 2012 Leave a comment

How to countenance a situation that can’t be countenanced? I started thinking about that again as I was reading the updated biography of Nelson Mandela by Anthony Sampson (updated by John Battersby, pub. 2011). First of all, there is the kind of racism that, while stepping on your toes, isn’t about running you completely to the ground so as to avoid having to make concessions. Then there is the other kind that sees you as property and whipping you to work harder so as to squeeze every last bit out of you until you’re discarded as useless.

We are dealing with the latter kind here. When Mandela was born in Transkei, Eastern Cape in 1918 Read more…

Good and Evil — Thinking of Moral Philosophy

Thursday,January 5th, 2012 Leave a comment

I must stress my disclaimers here, especially: These thoughts are my own, if by nothing else, my adopting them because they make sense and sound right. Also, I am by no means an official representative of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Just a member with a few decades of experience on local/district (call it diocese or, stake, as we call it). Please feel free to comment, even if you haven’t read every single word here–this is, after all, 1,500 words. I love learning new stuff.

Also, if you run into any leftover spilling mistokes, please let me know and I’ll fix ‘em.

There are many, who struggle to understand good and evil from a post-modern perspective. Read more…

Rise (and fall) of rational Theology

Sunday,August 7th, 2011 4 comments

When I mentioned King James Bible in an earlier post, I deliberately left out the turmoil of Continental Europe. The 17th century brought on wars that have somewhat falsely been called religious wars, but are generally the 30 years war.

It was about formerly Catholic princes, king, dukes etc. pitting their forces against Read more…

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