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New Harmony: Current focus concentrates on retaining LDS members
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How many of you have ever married another man's wife, or a 14 year old girl, behind your current wife's back? How many have been convicted of bank fraud? These are not MINOR imperfections! Why does the Church seem to gloss over them as if they were?
How do they expect to retain members when they do?
In the meantime, you will be hard pressed to find any religious organization of any size anywhere that even comes close to the activity rates of the LDS Church. In South America where I served my mission, the Catholic members use to laugh when we asked if they attended church. They were by and large "traditional" Catholics only. They attended a couple of times a year and at the baptism of their children.
With regard to the type of people you find in the various congregations of the LDS Church, I would say you can find almost anything you want to find. They are all there, good and bad.
The LDS religion is a powerful influence for spirituality and goodness in my life and the lives of those I love. I would desire that all have access to it, but I realize and respect that people will always do there best to find happiness in there own ways.
"Don't give up". The pursuit of happiness is a worthy goal.
Why is it that church historians and writers who bring up the mistakes of leaders are excommunicated? There is no open dialogue. Non at all. The church pretends the JS never did marry teenaged girls.
They pretend Brigham Young wasn't an enormous racist. They forget many false prophecies.
You are the one who's already made up your mind.
Have you lost your will?
Yes sir, yes sir,
For many reasons still.
One for the constant, benign rhetoric of boring, boring, BORING correlated lessons,
One for the erroneous 'check list' modality promulgated to become a spiritual person,
And one for the constant bad policies (not doctrines)
Which influence leaders and other members to marginalize out-of-the-box (many times due to circumstances beyond their control) members.
"Don't give up."
On what, or who are you saying this to?
Tell this to the local, yokel leadership, and narrow-minded, clique-oriented membership in so many wards and stakes.
Or is this just more of the same ol' 'blah, blah, blah' while "the caravan (continues to)march(es) on" in the same ol' way?
I hope not, but I would suspect that it is.
Okay, so let's look at the lives of those who have left the LDS Church, and since so many people who have left Mormonism have praised the Internet, the best place to start would be websites and blogs written by ex-Mormons.
For the most part, all I see on these sites is hate, hate and more hate. All I read is cuss words, cuss words and more cuss words. These people claim the LDS Church lies about its doctrine, but after doing a little research, I discover many of these same people aren't being honest themselves.
So, if leaving the LDS Church means I will find happiness by being bitter; if leaving Mormonism means that cuss words and nasty comments will become my daily vocabluary. Then I will stay LDS for the rest of my life.
From that perspective, ex-Mormon websites and blogs have convinced me how wonderful the LDS Church really is.
True.
But, isn't the church supposed to help make human beings better? Less fallible? More compassionate? More willing to help their fellow people?
If the people in the church are no better than the people outside of it, what is that point?
It was nothing but lusty old men looking and using God for the purpose of having more woman in in their lives. I wonder how God feels about these men using his name for their lusty practice. The more wives these guys had the better off you were in the church back then and higher in the church. Whoever cared about the feelings of woman? apparently they didn't matter. Please don't ever believe in this malarkey that it was just fine and dandy. There are diaries that prove different you fools!!!!!
Why can't they just allow people to exercise their free agency and mind their own business?
Some stay.
Some exercise their free agency and realizing it's not for them quit.
Why not just leave them alone?
Here's my new theory of how the church works. Those that serve well in their lower level callings receive higher callings that free them from having to sit in Primary for two hours or worse, Gospel Doctrine and EQ/RS. Underperform and you are relegated to two hours of HECK.
Attention spans have changed over the years. When will the church schedule?
The question, "Who is my neighbor?" was answered with the parable of the good Samaritan. After the Priest and Levite -- devote men, no doubt -- passed by the man beaten and robbed, the despised Samaritan gave of his time and substance to care for the man, saw that he was lodged, fed, his wounds nursed and bandaged. This isn't meant to be a factual account of an actual event, folks, it is meant as a metaphor.
Reasonable, rational, sincere, honest, loving, kind people sometimes question their faith. Those who lecture rather than listen, who judge rather than love, who return debate with debate, rather than apologizing and turning the other cheek are far, far from the spirit of the Savior.
Improve retention....what a joke!!!
I had a very similar experience some years ago. My father was dying, and I was being drained of physical, emotional, and spiritual strength, with little or no response from my Ward. When my father died, I contacted the Elder's Quorum President, my former councilor, and he told -- no one. Not one person from my ward showed up at my father's funeral.
Some months later I heard a talk by President Eyring, who looked me straight in the eye -- out of 200 people -- and said, "I want you to know whatever you are going through, the Savior went through that, and more, and He understands your pain, and what you are going through will help you understand and succor other people."
That was exactly right. My pain, the loneliness of neglect, has helped me recognize and reach out to others. I taught my ward how to reach out, too, and they did in subsequent circumstances.
I pray you will feel God's love, and I'm confident you will feel it -- abundantly -- as you forgive some and reach out to others.
What someone else posted awhile back on one of these blogs made sense to me? Why don�t members learn to mind their own business and not everyone elses business. Everyone else�s business is NOT YOUR business, so MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS! And please stay out of my business. It might be the answer.
The church is a vehicle whereby we assist each other towards perfection, of course we are not perfect, nor is any ward or stake. Neither does everyone have a testimony, even though the may have travel through the 'whole program'. Perfection is found in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We are making choices every day, choices that will finally terminate in the place we are most suited for. Thank you Jerry for your concern for the lost sheep.
In-active-member!
1. There is a great difference between the Church and the Gospel. The Gospel of Christ is true, the Church has it's own cultural oddities that do not always conform with how the Savior himself would act.
2. No matter what the idea, we shouldn't be swayed by the mistakes of others, but decide our own beliefs and then stand with them. If you believe something is true, stick to it, don't worry about what another 'believer' does. Are these principles true for you? You will find humans in every walk and belief of life. The Church has no monopoly on hypocrisy and weakness.
3. I thought what Jeff Kelly said had a great deal of truth in it. We are hindered in our service and outreach by needing an assignment and by having everything so formalized (a place for everything and everything in its place). Also, we do tend to think the world revolves around us and we have fear and mistrust of outsiders. All too true. Again, it comes back to the Gospel of Christ, not the Church . . .
Thank you, so much for sharing.
As Jesus said, 'the Truth will set you free.'
Actually, I really was wallowing in self pity. "Was" being the key word. Until I realized that if I wasn't part of the solution, than I was part of the problem.
And you are exactly right. People who leave the Church do not need anyone's pity, least of all their own self pity.
I stand by my earlier comment: people need to receive Christlike love. The way to do it is to live like Christ lived, and love like he loved, and not concern ourselves with how others may not be giving us that same love. Yes, I still have regrets that I cannot perfectly offer this in the way that you and others can receive it. I'm trying, though.
What gets me, is that like you, I used to have expectations of others to not treat me in this way or that way, and yet I didn't realize that I was holding them to a higher standard than I hold myself. What had I done to lift another? Why must others always lift me? Who is at the giving end, if we are all critics, waiting at the receiving end?
I can't understand why the LDS church tells its members that: 'the thinking has been done.'
Why, when it comes to a person's eternal soul are they not allowed to ask tough questions about everything and anything in Mormonism? I ask questions of everything I do, in fact, I question everything. And if my eternal soul is at stake I'd sure expect some answers from people who call themselves general authorities, and prophets, and that I don't ever have to worry about them because I'll never be led astray.
The LDS church has a lot of questions to answer if they ever want me to join. And they can start with coming clean on their history. That's All.
You are so correct! I am too busy for a church calling and my spouse is as well. What time we have we try to spend it together. I don't fine church callings keep a lot of it's members in a spiritual mood. However there are those who do well with them and need them. So be it! BUT NOT FOR ME!
I was raised in one church and joined another as a boy. when I was around seventeen years old, I started smoking. My pastor called me in and asked me if it were true that I had started smoking, I told him yes, he then asked me if I intended to stop, I told him no, he then informed me that I was no longer a member if that church.
about 25 years later, I met my wife and she invited me to go to church with her, I did go with her to The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) in the first Sunday School class, several questions I had had all my life were answered.
after studing the teachings of the LDS for 2 years I come to KNOW I had found what I was searching for.
Now it does not matter to me who does or does not fellowship me, I know the gospel is true.
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You have helped me understand the meaning of being a senior. Than you!!