Friday, April 3, 2026

The unborn children story

 


Hillel Fuld
@HilzFuld
You may have heard this before. I have. But I loved reading it again. In a mother's womb, there are two babies and one turns to the other and says, “Do you believe in life after delivery?” The other replies, “Of course there has to be something after delivery. Maybe we're here to prepare ourselves for what will be later. This can’t be the end.” “Nonsense”, says the first baby, “There's no life after delivery. We are here to enjoy ourselves. That’s it. Life after delivery? What kind of life would that be?” “I don't know”, said the second, “but maybe there'll be more light than here. Maybe we'll walk with our legs and eat with our mouths. Maybe we'll have other senses we can't understand now. Maybe it’s beyond our comprehension.” “That’s ridiculous. Walking is impossible and eating with our mouths? That's absurd. The umbilical cord is what scientifically supplies nutrition and all that we need, but it's far too short. Life after delivery is to be logically excluded.” The other baby says, “What if it's just different than it is here? Maybe we don't need that physical cord anymore.” The first replies, “Okay, if there were life after delivery, then tell me, why has no one ever come back from there? Delivery is the end of life. And in the after delivery is nothing but darkness and silence and oblivion. It takes us nowhere.” The second says, “But certainly we'll meet mother and she'll take care of us. She loves us. She made us.” The first says, “You actually believe in mother? If mother exists, where is she now?” “She's all around us. We are of her. It is in her that we live. Without her, this world would not and could not exist.” “I don't see her. It's only logical that she's not here.” “Sometimes when you're in silence and you really listen, you can perceive her presence. You can hear her loving voice calling down from above.” Love it. So good. So spot on.





Thursday, April 2, 2026

LDS podcasters - Intellectual balkanization

This is for subscribers to the Salt Lake Tribune.

https://www.sltrib.com/religion/2025/11/28/how-pro-lds-content-creators-are/

There are several important points made in this article.

Overall, the solution to the problems mentioned, such as balkanization, is the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding instead of pursuing adherence to one particular point of view on every issue. Church leaders talk about "unity in diversity." 

At one point, the article suggests that "Many (although certainly not all) [podcasts] show little deference to expert scholarship (a point of chagrin for some trained historians, including Ben Spackman). Instead, they place a great deal of faith in members’ ability to “do their own research” and unlock for themselves the mysteries of the scriptures, history and signs of the end times."

In my view, members have always been encouraged to do their own research. That's why we "seek learning even by study, and also by faith" (Doctrine and Covenants 109:14) and "study and learn, and become acquainted with all good books, and with languages, tongues, and people." (Doctrine and Covenants 90:15)

In many cases, trained historians have ruined their own reputation by promoting their own favored narratives instead of collecting, preserving, and presenting accurate historical research. That's how we ended up with the SITH and M2C narratives.

My comments in red.

How pro-LDS podcasts defend — and divide — the faith and the faithful

Their growing influence could lead to an “intellectual balkanization” of the global church.

(Illustration by Christopher Cherrington  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)

(Illustration by Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

In 2014, Latter-day Saint apostle David A. Bednar rose in front of a packed Marriott Center at Brigham Young University and issued a call for church members to embrace social media as a tool for spreading the faith’s teachings everywhere an internet connection can be found.

“Beginning this day,” Bednar said, “I exhort you to sweep the Earth with messages filled with righteousness and truth — messages that are authentic, edifying and praiseworthy — and literally to sweep the Earth as with a flood.”

These 3 adjectives - "authentic, edifying and praiseworthy" - guide most faithful LDS social media. 

More than a decade later, it’s fair to say that members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have delivered, leveraging existing accounts and launching new ones to share their testimonies and go post-for-post with naysayers about their beliefs and practices.

But Bednar may have gotten more than he bargained for.

Seems like Elder Bednar's request to "sweep the Earth as with a flood" remains aspirational. LDS podcasts are found mainly in the US and in English.

As the ecosystem of Latter-day Saint content creators has exploded in recent years, so has its clout, with some influencers reaching levels of stardom previously experienced only by top church leaders.

People used to quote Hugh Nibley more than most church leaders.

“They get quoted in Sunday school,” Latter-day Saint historian Ben Spackman said, “and referenced by seminary teachers.”

Teachers have always quoted popular authors and speakers, not only church leaders.

This may be especially true for podcasters and YouTubers (the line between the two is increasingly blurry in today’s video-driven world), who have taken advantage of the longer format of those mediums to go beyond responding to outside criticism. Whether interpreting scripture, weighing in on culture wars or critiquing fellow members, these creators are defining what it means to be an upstanding Latter-day Saint.

That's a good point, if only because these podcasters are modeling how Latter-day Saints can behave and speak. But the variety of perspectives the article discusses contradicts the idea of "defining" what it means to be LDS.

Those definitions, however, don’t always align.

“Podcasts,” Spackman said, “...represent an unveiling of the intellectual balkanization of the church.”

"Unveiling" is a good term for this because LDS have always had a variety of opinions. It's unlikely that any two LDS agree on everything. Whether "balkanization" is a good term is more debatable because by giving voice to a variety of views, the podcasters expose LDS to more diversity, which cures balkanization.

(Ben Spackman) Scholar Ben Spackman notes that Latter-day Saint podcasters and YouTubers now find themselves being quoted in church meetings.

(Ben Spackman) Scholar Ben Spackman notes that Latter-day Saint podcasters and YouTubers now find themselves being quoted in church meetings.

The church’s own official YouTube channel, meanwhile, has become just one of many voices. And while still influential, with 2.5 million subscribers, it is, as Purdue digital humanities scholar Spencer Stewart observed, “no longer the central place where the main conversations are taking place.”

Good point, because conversations can't really happen on that channel.

The growth of ‘#proLDS’ content creation

When “Keystone” podcaster David Snell first fired up his mic in 2017, he felt a bit like a lone voice in the wilderness.

“There were not a lot of Latter-day Saint creators out there,” said Snell, who got his start on the hugely successful “Saints Unscripted.” “It was somewhat lonely for a while.”

Good point. I started my first blog around 2016. It took a long time to get my first 1 million page views. Now there are over 4 million.

Not anymore.

Exactly how many shows defending the faith have emerged is hard to say. New names enter the arena all the time, announcing themselves with the hashtag #proLDS. Stewart estimates the number of church-friendly YouTube channels jumped from just under 100 in 2010-2014 to nearly 200 in 2015-2019 and more than 430 in 2020-2025.

(Christopher Cherrington  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)

(Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

Add in the number of critical platforms, and the overall tally of these channels dedicated “solely to Mormon-themed content” rises to more than 700 during his research period.

There are more all the time, too.

Many of these shows, he noted, are “obscure,” boasting only a handful of subscribers. But growing numbers have amassed followings in the tens, even hundreds of thousands.

“The COVID-19 and post-COVID era,” Stewart said, “has seen an explosion of Mormon and LDS content creators…[focused on] an LDS audience.”

There is an explosion of all types of content creators, of course.

A top-down church embraces bottom-up medium

There’s a clear underlying tension to all of this.

The church is, as Stewart put it, “accustomed to controlling its message.” Even when it seeks to collaborate with (and pay) influencers, the church’s sophisticated and expansive public relations apparatus takes control of the resulting content, posting it on its own channels. YouTube and podcasting, in contrast, are, Stewart added, “chaotic.”

Another great point, although "chaotic" seems more judgmental than descriptive. The channels are diverse but generally in the mainstream.

Oklahoma State University’s Rosemary Avance, author of “Mediated Mormons: Shifting Religious Identities in the Digital Age,” stressed this point.

“The practice of podcasting…[is a way] for everyday Mormons to define Mormon identity,” she said, and to do so within a church “that has long been a very hierarchical, bureaucratic, top-down organization.”

There is evidence, though, that the institution, with its uniform hymnalsmanuals and even meetinghouse art, is learning to live with, and perhaps even embrace, this democratic medium.

Elder Bednar's original message is not often repeated. Instead, we hear more warnings about the Internet.

In the beginning of the surge of Latter-day Saint content creators, Snell said, he got the feeling that leaders were wary of their grassroots efforts to brand the faith but believes that discomfort is wearing off.

“Broadly speaking,” he said, “the institution of the church is starting to realize that there is a community here that is eager to speak about faith and to teach about faith…and the power that can come along with that.”

Rather than viewing one another as competition, Snell perceives online apologists as a united front eager to support one another’s successes and weather the criticisms hurled their way.

After all, he said, “we’ve all got the same goal, and that is to bring people to Jesus Christ.”

The role of influencers in a prophet-led church

(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Top church leaders at the October General Conference. Tikla Fife, co-host of the popular “Ward Radio,” sees guidance of from the male leaders as a godsend.

(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Top church leaders at the October General Conference. Tikla Fife, co-host of the popular “Ward Radio,” sees guidance of from the male leaders as a godsend.

Asked if he perceived a possible tension with the elevation of individual content creators in a church led by a prophet, Snell said it depends on the types of messages being promoted.

“If people are pointing at creators who are pointing at Jesus, then I don’t have a problem with that at all,” he said. “But if they’re pointing at creators who are peddling their own personal speculation or being a little bit careless in the way that they talk about things, I could see that as being problematic.”

Podcasters and other influencers are meant, he said, to be the “water boys” and “cheerleaders,” supporting whatever calls the coaching staff — i.e., top church leaders — feel inspired to make.

Tikla Fife, co-host of the popular “Ward Radio,” a rowdy roundtable production in the style of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” agreed. She noted that, while the church has always had popular speakers and writers, the “unregulated” world of social media means some have been elevated that she believes shouldn’t be (Fife specifically cited “therapist voices,” whom she accused of using church membership “as a way to build trust and then lead their audiences away from the principles of the gospel”).

But Fife, an ardent defender of the church’s patriarchal structure, described the presence of a prophet not as a tension for Latter-day Saint content creators but as a helpful guardrail.

This is an important point that non-LDS Christians overlook.

“Because our general leadership is so structured and so clear, we have an easy touchpoint to check in on [regarding] the things we are learning in other places,” she said. “That is incredibly unifying. I feel for Christians who have no prophet.”

Disagreement within the #proLDS media ecosystem

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Even today, members sometimes debate which teachings originated with church founder Joseph Smith, left, and which came from Brigham Young, his immediate successor.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Even today, members sometimes debate which teachings originated with church founder Joseph Smith, left, and which came from Brigham Young, his immediate successor.

Still, debates have crept into the community of content creators supportive of the church.

To the alarm of many, some have grown skeptical in recent years that faith founder Joseph Smith, despite overwhelming evidence, practiced polygamy or introduced the temple liturgy, instead ascribing them to his successor Brigham Young. Heated exchanges have erupted over what constitutes reliable scholarship. And some have grown distressed over the criticism lobbed by others at “the brethren.”

Even more telling may be the growing self-selection by audiences into various camps, a phenomenon Spencer Stewart, the Purdue humanities scholar, recently uncovered as part of a nearly decadelong observation of Latter-day Saint podcasting.

Church leaders have spoken about "unity in diversity." 

Curious to know what shows shared listeners, the researcher cross-analyzed which YouTube users were commenting on which channels — a proxy for who is viewing them, since subscriber lists are private. The results, based on millions of comments, suggested that a once largely uniform audience has started to split into separate communities gathered around two types of shows.

It would be useful to see the data to support the idea that the audience for all these podcasts was once "largely uniform" but no longer is.

The ‘faithful core’ vs. ‘faithful alternative’

One shortcut for understanding these two subgroups of YouTube channels, what Stewart has labeled the “faithful core” and “faithful alternative,” is zeroing in the shows in each camp that “anchor” them — that is to say, generate the most discussion in their comment sections.

The Faithful Core

The official LDS channel

• YouTube subscribers: 2.51 million.

• Description: “Discover inspiring messages, uplifting music, and enlightening teachings centered around the gospel of Jesus Christ.”

• Most viral video: “The Peace and Hope of Easter | President Russell M. Nelson Palm Sunday Invitation” (33 million views).

• Average number of comments per video: 22.

Scripture Central

• YouTube subscribers: 288,000.

• Description: “We build enduring faith in Jesus Christ by illuminating the Book of Mormon and other restoration scripture.”

• Most viral video: “When Lehi’s Party Arrived in Lehi, Did They Find Horses There?” (1.9 million views).

• Average number of comments per video: 43.

Saints Unscripted

• YouTube subscribers: 93,000.

• Description: “‘Saints Unscripted’ strives to faithfully discuss Latter-day Saint current events, doctrine and culture to help you feel accepted and motivated in your faith journey.”

• Most viral video: “God’s word, flat-earth and inerrancy; What is the Bible allowed to get wrong?” (432,000 views).

• Average number of comments per video: 60.

The Salt Lake Tribune

The Salt Lake Tribune

These are the giants within a world of some 260 channels, per Stewart’s count, whose overlapping audiences gravitate to their (generally) mainstream topics and voices. Those include faith-promoting conversion stories, Sunday school lessons that hew closely to church publications and church history deep dives taught by professors of church-owned BYU — and sometimes church leaders themselves.

These topics and people aren’t wholly absent from the “faithful alternative” podcasts, of which Stewart identified 175 in all. But while these voices perceive themselves to be faithful and orthodox, they are more willing to critique the church on cultural issues. Past friction points include the church’s COVID-19 response and support for the vaccine, its ongoing collaboration with the United Nations and the 2024 hiring of a new public relations boss deemed too liberal.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Then-church President Russell M. Nelson receives the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in 2021. Vaccination, which the church not only supported but also advocated, remains a sticking point for some members.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Then-church President Russell M. Nelson receives the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in 2021. Vaccination, which the church not only supported but also advocated, remains a sticking point for some members.

At the same time, many in the “faithful alternative” space take strong stands on questions in which the church itself remains officially neutral — like the location of civilizations described in the faith’s foundational scripture, the Book of Mormon, and partisan politics.

The Faithful Alternative

Stick of Joseph

• YouTube subscribers: 71,000.

• Description: “[We seek] to make the Book of Mormon accessible to all ages by making engaging, entertaining and informative content.”

• Most viral video: “The Hidden Hebrew Wedding Ritual and the Temple” (346,000 views).

• Average number of comments per video: 255.

A Thoughtful Faith

• YouTube subscribers: 62,000.

• Description: “A channel and forum discussing faith, spirituality and philosophy through the lens of reason.”

• Most viral video: “MIC DROP: The Prophet Explains Why Latter-day Saints (Mormons) CANNOT Support Abortion” (244,000 views).

• Average number of comments per video: 558.

Ward Radio

• YouTube subscribers: 60,000.

• Description: “We delight in truth. We denounce deception. We have fun.”

• Most viral video: “Donald Trump and the Book of Mormon in Public Schools!” (133,000).

• Average number of comments per video: 189.

The Salt Lake Tribune

The Salt Lake Tribune

Another major player in this “faithful alternative” space is “Cwic Media,” the platform of anti-woke crusader Greg Matsen, who in the past criticized BYU for being too liberal.

Running headlong into culture wars is common in this space. So, too, is disdain for the “elites.” Many (although certainly not all) show little deference to expert scholarship (a point of chagrin for some trained historians, including Ben Spackman). Instead, they place a great deal of faith in members’ ability to “do their own research” and unlock for themselves the mysteries of the scriptures, history and signs of the end times.

Members have always been encouraged to do their own research. In many cases, trained historians have ruined their own reputation by promoting their own favored narratives instead of focusing on accurate historical research. 

A Latter-day Saint reformation

Rosemary Avance, the media studies scholar, pointed out that religious individuals are always “internalizing and interpreting” their own versions of their faith tradition. That part, she said, is not new.

What is new is the public nature of it all. By choosing a show agenda, selecting guests and setting the tone of an episode, Latter-day Saint podcasters and YouTubers are amplifying their version of the faith with which anyone can engage.

This may lead to LDS becoming "of one heart" as they pursue clarity, charity and understanding instead of a dogmatic catechism.

Avance compared the current energy behind this ever-growing landscape to the Protestant Reformation, when the printing press exponentially expanded who was able to contribute to the marketplace of ideas surrounding Christianity.

“Now we have the internet,” Avance said, “and people are able to do that in the case of Mormonism. …It’s definitely an uncorrelated world.”

The question, then, is the degree to which these different versions continue to diverge over time.

Given the trajectory of the groups to date, Stewart believes it may be only a matter of time before the “faithful core” and “faithful alternative” find themselves more and more isolated from one another, a Venn diagram that ultimately splits into two different circles as their overlapping audiences disappear.

This is why the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding is fundamental.

And that, he said, may just be the beginning.

Note to readers • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.


"Multiple working hypotheses" at work

Apart from ignoring Eastern Orthodox interpretations, this is a good application of the FAITH model.

_____

Many Christians are baffled that Latter-day Saints can study the same Bible they do, and often know the Bible better than they do (Pew Research, 2010), yet hold such a "radically" different theology. This is the "fish don't know they're in water" principle. Here's a great case study: "'Mormons' believe in a Great Apostasy. Jesus said in Matthew 16 that His Church would never fall away. They must think Jesus lied!" Let's unpack that. When someone looks at the same text I do and comes away with a different conclusion than I did, it is tempting to assume the other person is evil, brainwashed, deceived, or just an idiot. That is very rarely the case. Instead, it's better to presume the other party is also logical and turn my accusation inward, asking myself: "What differences in lenses, assumptions, and interpretations do we have that cause us to reach different conclusions? What premises am I taking for granted in my logic?" Let's start with the text of the verse is referencing-- the words of Jesus to Simon Peter: "Upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." His interpretation, which seems understandably obvious to him, is that Jesus promised that there would be no Great Apostasy. Therefore, Mormons are wrong, case closed. Let's ask, what assumptions does this interpretation rest on that a Latter-day Saint does not share? 1. Biblical Inerrancy Jesus likely spoke that text in Aramaic. The author remembered those words to the best of his ability when he wrote his Gospel several decades later. His original Gospel was likely written in Hebrew, so even if he could remember the Aramaic, he had to translate it to Hebrew. Then the manuscript was copied over and over again by hand, and eventually translated to Greek by a third party, then copied over and over again. Matthew's account is the only Gospel to record those words. So the best source we have of Jesus's words is a copy of a copy of a copy of a translation of a copy of a copy of another translation of a copy of a copy of yet another translation of a decades-old memory attributed to (but not definitively from) someone who observed the event. So we have the first assumption: biblical inerrancy. Many Christians adopt that premise because they think the Bible implies it; Latter-day Saints don't see any such implication, and therefore don't rest their faith on that. If we found Dead Sea Scrolls part 2 and it had an original Aramaic version of Matthew without that verse, that's fine. Or if it had that verse and it matched exactly, that's fine, too. No sleep loss for me. 2. Interpretation But let's assume it really was a perfect translation to English. Well, even then we have a problem because English isn't precise, and each person reads it differently based on his or her biases and lenses. We all acknowledge there is some wordplay around "rock" and different-sized stones and Peter's new name. But beyond that, there are several questions the reader needs to answer to understand this verse: * What is the rock Jesus speaks of? * What is the church? * What is the "it" that the gates of hell cannot prevail against? * What are the gates of hell? * What does it mean to prevail? This is where hermeneutics comes in. Different readers with different worldviews will answer these questions in different ways. For example: The Catholic reading is to interpret the rock as Peter, the church as the authorized institution with priesthood authority, the "it" as that priesthood institution, the gates of hell as all forces aligned against that institution, and prevail as the cessation of that authoritative line. The Catholic translation, then, is: "Upon you, Peter, I will establish the institution of the priesthood and no evil force will interrupt that institutional priesthood line." Many Protestants, by contrast, interpret the rock to be the act of confessing Jesus's Lordship as Peter did, the church as the general body of believers (Origen took this view), the "it" meaning Christianity as a whole, the gates of hell as Satan, and prevail meaning a spiritual win. A Protestant translation, then, is: "Christianity is based on confessions of faith and Satan cannot spiritually win the souls of those who come to such faith." There are hundreds of variations on this theme: * Could prevail mean only a permanent victory? Could the gates of Hades/hell have a political/military meaning? * Could the promise be for the souls' welfare, not for the destiny of the church itself? * Could the rock maybe even refer to Jesus Himself (as Augustine believed)? * etc All good questions. Here is one potential interpretation you might find your Latter-day Saint friends hold: Jesus is commending Peter for seeking personal revelation from God. That divine, confirming witness is the foundation of a testimony and the bedrock of anyone who would follow Christ (the informal church). The gates of Hades, being a place of horrific pagan sinfulness, may be a symbol of outside forces from which Christians will be safe as long as they seek that personal witness from God. And persecution from outside forces did not prevail against the institutional Church-- the Church rotted away from the inside due to "itching ears" syndrome. Or perhaps the church mentioned by Jesus really is the institutional Church and the word "prevail" means only a permanent victory? In which case an 1800-year period is but a small blip on the eternal scale-- certainly within the definition of "quickly" and "soon" the Lord used to describe His Second Coming. Do you see the complexity of this problem? The Bible is ambiguous—there are dozens of potential interpretations of that verse. Context from surrounding verses, the early manuscripts, etc., all help clarify, but do not definitively answer. 3. Prooftexting We Christians often treat Bible verses like Pokémon cards-- we assemble our favorites to form a formidable team. And that's good-- it's the scriptures together that help to cut through much of that ambiguity I talked about. But then we make a little Pokemon army and line them up against the cards our neighbor has. Remember, if you're going to assemble six verses that (to you) suggest there can't be an apostasy, your opponent can just as easily assemble six verses that (to him) suggest an apostasy wasn't just possible, but predicted in advance. For example: * Acts 20:29–30 * 2 Thessalonians 2:3 * 1 Timothy 4:1–3 * 2 Timothy 4:3–4 * 2 Peter 2:1–3 * Amos 8:12 * And many more We could go through the same exercise together of dissecting each verse and battling them, only to find that there are legions of possible interpretations to these verses, and we each bring assumptions and lenses to the text that influence how we choose to interpret it. That's why, ultimately, Joseph Smith went to the woods to pray. He took the same verse of scripture to a handful of preachers, and none could agree on what it meant. So he went to the One with all the answers. And that's what we invite everyone to do today: Consider that the verses our critics love to shout at us ad nauseam may not mean exactly what they claim they mean. Consider the lenses you're unknowingly reading the Bible through. Consider the possibility that God has answered much of this ambiguity through more of His word. Study it. Then take it to Him and ask Him directly if it's true. Or you can keep playing with your Holy Bible Pokémon cards, I guess. But don't overestimate the HP on your Galatians 1:8 and Revelation 22:18 cards-- everyone overplays them stronger than they actually are. 😉


Responding to:

* On the topic of The Great Apostasy: If it were true that the Church that Christ built had fallen into apostasy that would mean two things: 1) that Jesus is a liar & 2) if Jesus is a liar and his prophecy failed this means he is not God. Even if he was mortal and just a messenger of God, this would mean his message did not come from God.    What I am referring to is Matthew 16:18 "And I say also unto thee, that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."   You deal with the issue of, if God says the Church will not fall to Hades then why did the Church need to be reformed in the 1830s after centuries of corruption? At what time did the corruption manifest and take hold?    This doesn't mean that corrupt forces cant infiltrate the church, but it does mean it will never fall down into total corruption. It will never teach doctrines contrary to God. If the great apostasy happened like the Mormon church claims, then how can you trust Christ? How can you trust your church? I do not believe the Church ever fell. Anytime there was heresy infesting Christendom the Church would convene at an ecumenical council to stamp out there heresy, this does not mean new teachings were established or new beliefs put in place but rather what has already been revealed is firmly reiterated as dogma for the Church. Many protestants believe the assumption of Mary is a new belief that started by Pope Pius XII in 1950, but this is rather just making a belief that had already existed since the first century firmly set as doctrine to ensure believers can take faith in the truth. I would agree that people can use religion with the intent of evil and harming others. We see this even in the Bible itself. We see this daily in our world in any branch of faith or religion. However the great apostasy needs to be focused to a specific time. Or at least even a time period within a few decades, and this hasn't been shown at least not in my findings so far.    I'm in complete agreement with the Mormon church that God's church does require an apostolic priesthood with authority bestowed by God and that the protestant reformation lead and will continue to lead many astray. Sadly though I must say the Mormon Church does not meet this requirement of a true apostolic priesthood either. I would be severely immoral if I were to ignore this and not warn you that even if unintentionally, you are being lead astray. If you can not trace a priestly lineage back to the time of the apostles, and can not prove that Jesus instituted a new divine priesthood, then there should be questions raised on the authority of the Mormon church. In my view simply stating that Jesus appeared before Joseph Smith and gave him authority and set up a priesthood is not in itself evidence. In my view, believers of all faiths have a duty to be skeptical and not easily swayed by statements, this is how the Devil can deceive us. If we just simply believe the first bit of information that we either believes holds authority and or makes us feel comfortable we do a disservice to God and to ourselves, we must be analytical and search for evidence. God teaches us to test the spirits and to look at what fruit something bears. I understand why you might be questioning me on my Catholic faith right now and you should. I will address this in comparison a bit later.

I read your post, but I'll focus just on the first paragraph because everything you say after than hinges on that first paragraph being objectively correct... and it's not. You can't say "Assume A" and then build a large case on that then expect me to agree with your conclusion if I don't agree with the premise. If I agreed with that premise, I'd be a Catholic already 😉

You won’t be able to prove the apostasy occurred or didn’t occur with the Bible alone Catholics will readily admit they had a string of “greatly apostate” popes




The unborn children story

  Hillel Fuld @HilzFuld Subscribe You may have heard this before. I have. But I loved reading it again. In a mother's womb, there are...