From Deseret News archives:

MormonSpeak: Day of defense

Published: Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2007 12:21 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
In high school I was into forensics.

Not the �CSI� kind — the public speaking kind.

I was a member of the debate team, but to tell the truth I wasn�t smart enough to actually be a debater. Debaters have a firm grasp of the facts, they have to be able to make their case dynamically and they need to be able to think on their feet. I tended to have only a vague familiarity with the facts, I was better at telling stories than thinking on my feet and I could never come up with the right thing to say until 30 minutes after the debate was over.

So Mr. B, our debate coach, made me an orator. I wasn�t much with facts and quick thinking, but give me a memorized speech and a captive audience and I was good to go.

Story continues below
All of which is probably why the first few weeks of my mission were frustrating for me — well, that and a cute high school junior named Becky, who I had left behind. I was called to serve in Southern California and my first area was Costa Mesa — at the time a hot bed of anti-Mormon propaganda. It seemed that every other block featured at least one home that was fully stocked with the latest in anti-Mormon literature, published right there in Costa Mesa. And the people who possessed this propaganda were usually ready and anxious to wage theological warfare:

� �Are you aware that in your Journal of Discourses Brigham Young says that Adam and Eve were actually talking toads?�

� �This couple from Utah — and they should know because once they actually inhaled air on the same block as a Mormon meetinghouse — they said that you pray to a chipmunk and dance the Hokey-Pokey in your temples.�

� �Your Book of Mormon says that Alma drove a Corvette. How is that possible since there is no scientific evidence of Corvettes in America until several centuries later?�

Every time we bumped into one of these folks my blood would boil. I knew there were answers to these questions — I just didn�t know what the answers were. Nine years of Primary, 15 years of Sunday School, three years of Seminary (including one during which I actually paid attention . . . sort of) and six days in the Mission Home in Salt Lake City had given me a lot of information but few answers. The debater in me — limited though he may have been — yearned to do some research and to arm myself with facts and figures. But mission rules required that I focus all of my study time on memorizing the discussions and the accompanying scriptures.

Recent comments

I had a similar experience in high school. I (LDS) argued a friend...

manaen | Dec. 11, 2007 at 8:45 p.m.

I should have read this 15 minutes ago. Well I really didn't bash...

Oops! | Dec. 11, 2007 at 4:00 p.m.

Thank you for sharring that. It is a message that is needed, and one...

Arlin | Dec. 11, 2007 at 1:03 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Religion in politics is tiresome

"Religion is quickly wearing out its welcome in the public forums. I would...

It is time for a change. Bennett a nice person but we need someone in...

Editorial: The case for Afghanistan

I liked about 97% of the talk to war, I did not like the part about a full...

The problem with polls, rankings, and formulas instead of a playoff, is that...

Utahns growing tired of Bennett

I think it is time to layoff the question mark key & try to figure out how to...

Utes prepare to go bowling

"Best of luck to a team coached by a bunch of BYU grads!" What you forgot...

Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan

I do believe, we own that color. :) And it is so nice of you to have a crush...

GOP may dump primaries

Once again the Republican party does not disappoint and acts as a good...

You are entering the land of no return with a victory, unless you call...

NFL locals watch

what the Utah defense could have accomplished this year if Kruger and Smith...

Advertisements