Friday, January 29, 2010

:)

January 18, 2010

Ahhhhh…I just looked at all the family Christmas pictures yall sent and it made me so happy to look at them. Our family produced the best surprised-faces ever. I was laughing really hard.

We gave Annette (who’s a catholic) and Jaime (who’s a less active Mormon and an active catholic) a Book of Mormon and invited them to read from it. They said they would and we’re hoping to see them to night to see how it went.

This week we tried to get in contact with families in the ward that are made up of members and non-members. Everyone is so nice. One of the families we met knew one of my sociology professors back at BYU really well so we talked a lot about that.

We taught Jeff, the youth pastor, this week also. He is really nice and open. His wife and kids are really sweet as well. He likes the dialogue between us, but has said he’s not interested in changing religions. We basically told him we’re here to help people be baptized so we decided we’d come over one more time after he read and prayed some more and we’re hoping that maybe he’ll be a teeny bit more open to switching religions…we’re hopeful, but it’s not our choice to make. People have a hard time understanding why we want them to switch religions when they are in a good religion…or, my bad, a good church (no one likes to claim a religion down here. It’s out of style. The “in” thing right now is to be non-denominational because people believe religion is too restricting and gets in the way of your relationship with God. The problem is objective reality is impossible. We are subjective and finite individuals who live in a finite and subjective world. God is full of truth without limitation and He’s infinite, so try as we might, we cannot understand Him objectively. It’s impossible. But I don’t really think objective-ism is our ultimate goal. Our ultimate goal is to live with God again and to be happy. He’s given to each of us a paradigm that we are constrained by, but also enlightened by. He sends prophets to our paradigm to speak to us in a way that we understand and He also sends us the Holy Spirit to help us connect with ultimate truth. We are not capable of objective-ism, but through God, we are capable of understanding ultimate truth. Non-denominationalism’s goal is promote peace within the religious turmoil of modern Christianity, and it does a really good job in my opinion. However, the truth still remains the same, the attempt is man-made and false ideas and concepts eventually creep in because the loving correction given by God through prophets is non-existent. Although Christ often does His work through man, and we learn the most when He works through us, if He is not present through direct revelation, then apostasy threatens truth. Without prophets, false ideas and concepts would infest the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as well. We are constantly given direction to keep us on the path. But even we as members of the Church falter and ignore the prophet’s counsel and personal apostasy creeps into our hearts and our homes. Paul wrote to church members, “I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel….But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ.” Paul was called of Christ to preach, so were the other apostles. We can hear their claim and then work it out in our minds and reason until we are satisfied with our own personal conclusions about who these prophets and apostles truly are, but we don’t have to rely on reason alone. We can tap into ultimate truth and receive direct revelation for ourselves through prayer and the Spirit.)Son Anyways, Jeff feels at peace with his beliefs and doesn’t understand why we would try and pull him away from his happy, Christian life. We showed him a picture of Christ and covered two thirds of the picture and explained that He should feel at peace with His beliefs about Christ, because the part of the picture he can see is true. We told him that we weren’t trying to get him to look at another picture, but the restoration is an uncovering of the rest of the picture of Christ...(or at least more of the picture). A simple object lesson we learned in primary, but it made sense to him.

We taught some other cool people this week too.
sj

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