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Colorado shooter had been baptized Mormon
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Reporters will do us a greater service when they print what medications he was on.
He had a hole in his life that he needed to fill, the missionaries taught him, he sensed something and filled his need, then stopped going and that hole got filled with anger and violence. With the kind of media today, that's easy to find. Sad.
So sad.
It's also too bad that anything and everything "Mormon" (even stuff that has nothing to do with it) has to be dredged up at the time we have a good candidate (who happens to be LDS) running for president. Will they be dredging up good stories of great accomplishments (or even mis-deeds) that were directly related to the Mormon faith??
Well, we will never know.....
But nobody should create false assumptions about this incident.
It only said some researchers funded by a pill manufacturer 'found' that Utah had fewer treatments places for people who might be depressed.
Keep twisting - Mike Huckabee needs your vote.
Only in Utah ...
are there professional baiters who spend their waking hours posting their sensational speculations, to keep many well-meaning LDS busy and defensive.
Most will just turn the other cheek and continue in their faith by doing good works.
I feel for the families and friends of the victims.
The "Mormon" religion does NOT teach what that guy did. I'm sure no other Christian religion does either.
People have problems and they do horrible things. They always will. If he is mentally ill, he should have gotten help. If he had something in his life that he was angry about, he should have gotten it resolved.
Thank goodness I am not going to be his judge. But we are all entitled to our opinions.
Peter AFRICA.
It always blows my mind when they mention that people are Mormon when they do something criminal. When was the last time you saw a headline such as--"Episcopalian Robs Bank"? Like, never?
We must be pretty upstanding citizens if it's so newsworthy when some member goes round the bend.
"When they refused to acknowledge God, he abandoned them to their evil minds and let them do things that should never be done."
It's a near certainty that none of these shooters had God in their life.
Clearly this guy was searching for God - but it is a fair conclusion that he never found Him.
I don't think people should be considering this Mountain Meadows II - though many will likely draw the analogy.
We should not be discussing this tragedy in terms of "who else can we blame for Matt Murray's sins", but instead try to learn from this deeply torn man's circumstances. We don't have to 'save' people to be a good friend, and I think this is a common mistake among all sects. We rush to baptize, convert, and say "OK, my job is done". But if we really care, we should try to get them help. A Mormon missionary friend of mine who went to Russia had an experience that put this into perspective. During a big ice storm, he was helping a neighborhood family rebuild their home that was partially collapsed. A news reporter asked if this provided a good opportunity for sharing his message. he said 'How can I even think about that when this family has a fallen tree in their kitchen".
It would seem that the LDS church is more interested in pushing numbers than helping people. Had this person been properly taught, fellowshipped, included, uplifted, and loved, perhaps this tragedy may have been avoided. Who knows?
He is accountable for his own actions - the LDS Church isn't responsible.
Yet, I can help but believe that had he done something wonderful, the LDS Church and its members would have held him up and pushed his story through the media. It can't have it both ways.
My question is do people do bad things? Do we paint everyone with the same brush because it fit's "our convience"?
Sometimes they try to straighten things out but don't quite make it.
Geeze, show some higher level thinking skills buddy.
For all they know he may well have had a testimony even as he shot those poor people. Doing horrible things does not mean that you don't believe in God, or don't have a testimony of the gospel.
Let us now say to these un-Christlike posters "all of the horrible things you have done in your life don't mean you never had a testimony but the one horrible thing Matt Murphy did meant he never had a testimony." After all they are so much better than Matt Murphy and have already attained perfection.
We should also accept what they say at face value as they get up and bear testimony and conclude that they have done horrible things and therefore they like Matt Murphy never had a testimony. Or we could be more Christlike and not do to them what they are now doing to Matt Murphy in death.
I can't help but think that LDS church leaders and members alike are sorry for what happened to this man and for those whose lives were taken or affected by his actions. And I can't help but believe that we'd all be better off if we could learn to give the benefit of a doubt instead of making stories in our own heads and calling them reality.
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