In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
Nope. Wrong.
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
Suppose I said I had a devine ring. All you had to do is wear it, and no misfortune will befall you.
What would you call that? And please, be honest.
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
There have been 118 posts and seven days since AdMan made the post you are responding to. Please tell us why AdMan's post was so important out of all those posts that you selected it to respond to. After that I am sure you'll want to respond to Slowvehicle's question in 5323.In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
you needlessly harp on a simple misspelling. In other words, your contribution to the topic of this thread, namely "LDS" has been nonexistent.A devine ring, huh? Gosh, I wouldn't know what to call it.
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
For the record, I have no problem respecting people who come to different conclusions from me about all manner of things, provided they did so honestly.In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
I understand the conjecture. By forgoing earthly pleasures one prepares for spiritual truths through sacrifice. It's long been a staple of Eastern and Western philosophies. And it seems that there is some science behind it (it can result in visions or rather, delusions, hallucinations, and changes in physiology). It's often associated with meditation and for many is seen as requisite for the transforming benefits of meditation. At least that's what I remember.
She. And I don't think what I had to say was worth being sucked back into this thread for (though what RandFan and others have to say might be). The frustration factor is high in this one.(In fact, I only came in now because I saw on the New Posts page that Pixel42 had just posted in here, and I wanted to see what she had to say... or he?)
In other words, you have no respect for anyone who thinks differently than you do.
She. And I don't think what I had to say was worth being sucked back into this thread for (though what RandFan and others have to say might be). The frustration factor is high in this one.
Agreed.Yes, I checked out the last two pages, and as ever Randfan's observations are a refreshing perspective on it all. I have great respect for him as a person of integrity who extracted himself from the basket of lies he was raised in. He is a sign of hope that people can grow and change their minds even after the depth of indoctrination he had been subjected to growing up immersed in Mormon culture.
"abdication of mind" a very apt phrase.The antithesis to Janadele's abdication of mind.
Yep, There are those of a more thoughtful, enlightened nature, Mrs Pup being one.In fact, I salute all you patient people offering counters to the boring repetitive nothing coming from the LDS in here. (I mean the church when I say LDS... I'm aware that some members are less mindless than others, as (Mrs Pup?) showed many pages ago when I was last lurking here, many weeks ago.)
Don't undersell yourself. You are as good, or mature as anyone else.You are all more mature than I!![]()
Incredible! The "most perfect book on Earth", needs a little fixin' every now and then.
A devine ring, huh? Gosh, I wouldn't know what to call it.
A devine ring, huh? Gosh, I wouldn't know what to call it.
A devine ring, huh? Gosh, I wouldn't know what to call it.
Semantic games.Suppose I said I had a devine ring. All you had to do is wear it, and no misfortune will befall you.
What would you call that? And please, be honest.
A devine ring, huh? Gosh, I wouldn't know what to call it.
Merriam Webster said:Magic: an extraordinary power or influence seemingly from a supernatural source.
Merriam Webster said:Superstition: belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation
Hint "god" = supernatural source.Merriam Webster said:Divine: of, relating to, or proceeding directly from God or a god
Semantic games.