• _dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I reject your claim that Mormon was ever or is an epithet, and I reject that this is an explanation church leadership has ever attempted to use before RMN (and I’ve never heard his presidency trying to pass it off as such). Please present authoritative evidence of your claims (and not just rhetoric from apologists like FAIR, which do not have actual church endorsement).

    I understand that leaving the Church is an emotional experience and leaves most people very bitter, but do try to moderate your hatred.

    Who ever said I left the church?

    • BaldProphet@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It happened at least as far back as 1982. It certainly was used derogatorily during the genocide in Missouri in 1938.

      Who ever said I left the church?

      Your tone and combativeness feels very r/exmormon. In other words, you come across as a bitter disaffected former member.

      • _dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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        1 year ago

        What you’ve mistaken for anger is conviction. Conviction that the church should be held to the same standard of honesty that it holds the membership to.

        Not too long ago people were being excommunicated for challenging leadership to be honest and open about its history, or even asking questions about it. I think those challenges were partly responsible for the church finally fessing up to some of its problematic past (e.g., see the gospel topic essays, a huge step for them to publicly publish this).

        So perhaps that’s where you’ve judged me incorrectly too: most members aren’t used to leadership being openly challenged. In the past that’s been labeled as apostasy, even if our history has recorded that common consent should allow for a certain level of dissent; this has been mostly forgotten.