How do we determine if Mormonism is true?
We have made a quiet mistake so deep that we no longer feel it as a mistake.
We have decided that religion must prove itself the way science proves itself, with measurements and experiments and hard repeatable tests, and when faith will not fit under that lens we call it false.
But faith was never made for this. You cannot weigh a song. You cannot put a mother’s love under a microscope, or measure grief in numbers, or prove a sunset the way you prove a mathematical formula.
faith begins not in a feeling but in wonder, in a kind of awe before a world too vast and too holy to be seized. The moment we treat existence as only a problem to be solved, we have already gone deaf to the music it was singing.
Religious truth does not live where scientific truth lives. It lives where music and love and beauty and grief live, in meaning, not measurement.
There is one test beneath all the others, the one you cannot fake and cannot argue your way around, the one that comes for everyone. Sooner or later the existential floor gives way. A loved one is lowered into the ground. A relationship you built your life on ends. The doctor stops talking and the room goes quiet.
Something you were standing on simply drops, and you are falling, and there is nothing underneath but the dark. In that hour no argument will save you. No clever proof has ever once caught a falling soul.
What catches you, if anything does, is not a theory you could defend on paper but something you can stand on when everything else is gone, a faith that takes your full weight at the worst moment of your life and does not break.
That is the only proof that finally matters. Not whether you can win the intellectual debate on a comfortable afternoon, but whether the thing holds you at three in the morning when you have nothing left.
A hundred clever objections will not weigh as much as one grieving soul held above the abyss, discovering in the dark that what it trusted its whole life was real, and caught it, and would not let it fall.
Mormonism is true for many by this standard.
Bishop Hitz, this one is for you.
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