Archive for the 'Mormons' Category

Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam, Not for a Torturer

That was the title I suggested to my wife for her talk in sacrament meeting tomorrow. After reading that a graduate of BYU’s law school approved of the “torture memo”, it seems to me that we could benefit from being reminded that Jesus said to turn the other cheek.

What do you think? Should we change the words to the Primary song from “Jesus Wants me for a Sunbeam” to “Jesus Loves Waterboarding”? I don’t remember… was it in the Sermon on the Mount that Jesus approved of physical pain as long as it wasn’t “equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death.”

Sigh. What a world we live in.

Moving Forward: The LDS Polygamy Question

In today’s Salt Lake Tribune is an op-ed piece I wrote about polygamy, copied below. Some people will say I’m overstepping my bounds, and others will say I don’t go far enough. I simply hope it makes people think about the church’s connections to polygamy. The present policy - relying on the Associated Press and other news organizations to clarify who is and who is not Mormon - seems bound to fail, as the public doesn’t consult the AP Style Guide when they talk about such things.

Continue reading ‘Moving Forward: The LDS Polygamy Question’

Eckhart Tolle on Spirituality and Religion

In Eckhart Tolle’s book entitled: A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose, it says the following about Spirituality and Religion:

What is the role of the established religions in the arising of the new consciousness? Many people are already aware of the difference between spirituality and religion. They realize that having a belief system–a set of thoughts that you regard as the absolute truth-does not make you spiritual no matter what the nature of those beliefs is. In fact, the more you make your thoughts (beliefs) into your identity, the more cut off you are from the spiritual dimension within yourself. Many “religious” people are stuck at that level. They equate truth with thought, and as they are completely identified with thought (their mind), they claim to be in sole possession of the truth in an unconscious attempt to protect their identity. They don’t realize the limitations of thought. Unless you believe (think) exactly as they do, you are wrong in their eyes, and in the not-too distant past, they would have felt justified in killing you for that. And some still do, even now. Continue reading ‘Eckhart Tolle on Spirituality and Religion’

Fundamentalist Mormon : Mormon :: Mormon : Christian

Here’s an analogy for you to consider–

Fundamentalist Mormon : Mormon :: Mormon : Christian

Just as Fundamentalist Mormosn often consider themselves to be the ‘real’ Mormons, Mormons often consider themselves to be the ‘real’ Christians. And yet, both are viewed by the group to which they aspire as outdated, strange, and even oppressive.

Of course, analogies break down. Where does this one fall apart?

Is Life in the Borderlands Working For You?

The newest Borderlands article is out from Jeff Burton.  It is entitled: “Is Life in the Borderlands Working For You?”

As far as I’m concerned theculturalhall.com, New Order Mormon, and Jeff’s Burton’s “Borderlanders” are all identical.

Anyway, I really enjoy and highly recommend Jeff’s stuff.  In fact, I think Jeff Burton is the High Priest of this space (as long as we’re allowed to jointly annoint Ann Porter as the High Priestess, of course).  :)

Anyway, check it out.   And if you like (or dislike), please let Jeff  know what you think.

The Church and Dumbledore–Benevolent Secrecy

Dumbledore

The new Harry Potter book comes out July 21st, and I’ve been rereading the past volumes so I can remember all the details when I start Volume #7. I’ve just completed “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix,” which is the fifth in the series. Near the end of the book, Dumbledore, the kindly headmaster of the boarding school for young wizards, explains to Harry why he has been so distant the entire semester. He has been trying to protect his young charge. Then, in a passage that seemed to me strangely reminiscent of our Church, he tells Harry that he has been withholding the truth for many years. Notice Dumbledore’s motivations for so doing: Continue reading ‘The Church and Dumbledore–Benevolent Secrecy’

Krista Tippett’s Speaking of Faith: A “Cultural Hall” Book Club Book

OK, we’re not Oprah, but we can still have a book club, no? If so, I heartily recommend Krista Tippett’s Speaking of Faith as our first (a generous gift by a dear friend, I should add). :)

In my mind, it’s one thing for all of us to attempt to articulate the Mormon “Middle Way” experience. It’s an entirely different thing altogether to have a non-Mormon articulate our experience better than we can ourselves. For me, that’s what Krista Tippett does in this book. Allow me to illustrate:

As a journalist, I’m committed to drawing out the contours and depths of what I call “the vast middle” — left, right and center between the poles of competing answers that have hardened our cultural discourse. In the vast middle, faith is as much about questioning as it is about certainties. It is possible to be a believer and a listener at the same time, to be both fervent and searching, to nurture a vital identity and to wonder at the identities of others.

Continue reading ‘Krista Tippett’s Speaking of Faith: A “Cultural Hall” Book Club Book’

New Borderlands Article by Jeff Burton: “The Borderlander’s Gift”

Jeff Burton, of “For Those Who Wonder” fame, has published his latest Sunstone Borderlands article to the web.

You can find it here.

My guess is that some of you will really enjoy this article, and find it helpful, and that others will be angered by it. I still definitely think it’s worth the read. Jeff has been actively promoting the “Middle Way” longer than most of us, and he has helped a great deal of people. He’s also a great guy.

I’ll also invite Jeff to comment here as appropriate — but please show my friend Jeff the utmost respect if he happens to stop by.

“Middle Way” or NOMish Teachings During This General Conference?

For those of you CulturalHallItes listenting to General Conference (crickets chirping?)….it would be interested to hear if any of you detected some NOMish or “Middle Way”-teachings during conference this weekend.

Please comment if you hear any.

theculturalhall.com — We have friends after all!!!

Wow! We got 2nd place in the Best New Blog category of the niblets awards!!!

Thanks to all of you who voted. And most importantly, thanks to all the permabloggers here for your most excellents posts.

Let’s go for best big blog next year!!! :)

A Standard of Peace

Since calling for a Bloggernacle Fast for Peace, I’ve seen several different LDS responses to the political realities of international conflict. I believe that we all desire peace in our world, countries, neighborhoods, and families. We have diverse opinions as to how this may be achieved, or if it is even possible. But I believe that within each individual lie the seeds of peaceful resolution to conflict. I call upon you to join me tomorrow, Sunday, March 4th, in a vigil for world peace. I ask you to pray, fast, meditate, or send out positive thoughts regarding peace. As you do so, I hope you will be able to find more peace in your heart and your own little corner of the world.

In meditating this week upon my upcoming fast for peace, I read several articles that you may find of interest as you ponder upon peace. This Dialogue article makes a case for Mormon pacifism. Here is a more moderate piece about the complexities of Mormon thought on War and Peace. And this article is a discussion of Christian pacifism. I’d love to hear your comments about how this vigil for peace unfolded in your life.

Niblet Awards

Hey! The Cultural Hall was nominated in the Niblet Awards for best new blog. Kinda fun. Thanks to all our permabloggers and commenters for their participation.

If you are so inclined, check it out!

Moderation — A “Middle Way” Moment From Hallmark Magazine

Click twice on the object for a close-up.

Moderation

Mormon Stories # 051: Richard Bushman Part 5 — Final Thoughts (For now)

To keep this podcast alive, please consider donating to Mormon Stories by clicking on the “Make a Donation” button at the top right of this blog.

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In the 5th and final part of this multi-part interview with Dr. Richard Bushman, the world’s foremost scholar on Joseph Smith and early Mormonism and author of Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling, John Dehlin offers some final thoughts on his time with Brother Bushman, and Dr. Bushman himself provides some final musings on the challenges of dealing with tough Mormon issues. He then concludes with his testimony of Joseph Smith.

To access this interview, subscribe via iTunes, or click here to listen to the audio directly.

To provide direct feedback to me or to Dr. Bushman about this episode, please either email me directly at mormonstories@gmail.com, comment below.

For a discussion of this podcast, please visit one of the following sites:

  • For a somewhat liberal, multi-sided (yet still faithful) conversation about the series overall, please comment here.
  • To discuss Dr. Bushman’s comments about Sunstone, and the role it plays in dealing with tough historical and cultural issues within Mormonism, check out SunstoneBlog.com
  • For a “Robust but Thoughtful, Open to All Viewpoints, Raucous but Respectful, Virtually Uncensored” conversation, Including all types of Mormons (from apologists to ex-Mormons)–check out Equality Time.
  • For a somewhat conservative, faithful, mainstream conversation from the traditional Bloggernacle, check back here if/when one presents itself.

BYU Blondes

My daughter went off for her first semester at BYU and called me a week later, very upset. She couldn’t really articulate the cause of her agitation. The only explanation she had was that “all the girls here are blonde.”
“Surely,” I replied, “not all the girls are blonde.” Even when I was at BYU years ago there were different ethnicities represented at BYU.
“Yes,” she insisted, “everyone is blonde.”

I later learned that my daughter was reacting to the homogeneity of thought that one often encounters among large Mormon populations. This daughter had attended a very large high school with very few Mormon students. She had developed her own ideas, politics, and moral code while remaining true to LDS standards. When she went to BYU she discovered that it is difficult to be perceived as righteous if you are not wearing the “right” style of clothing, for example. Or if you don’t belong to the “right” political party. (pun intended)

These things that I believe are completely non-essential to being a believing Latter-Day Saint are emphasized to a greater or lesser extent within the stakes and wards of the Church. While still in a student ward, I had two children ages 1 and 2 and one on the way. I was perceived as being a thoroughly faithful TBM while others who were pursuing graduate degrees and had postponed their families were suspect. (little did they know I was clandestinely studying early Mormon history and post-Manifesto polygamy!)

For a while I believed this situation was improving in the Church. The word “diversity” was beginning to be mentioned in many Relief Society settings in a positive way. In a 1991 General RS meeting, for example, Chieko Okasaki, herself one of the few examples of racial diversity in the governing bodies of the Church said: look around the room you are in. Do you see women of different ages, races, or different backgrounds in the Church? Of different educational, marital, and professional experiences? Women with children? Women without children? Women of vigorous health and those who are limited by chronic illness or handicaps? Rejoice in the diversity of our sisterhood! At the time, my daughter was 6 years old. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s there were several strong voices celebrating diversity in the Church.

But there soon came a retrenchment in thought regarding diversity. In 1996 in a news article announcing that more than half of Church members now lived outside the United States, Dallin H. Oaks was quoted as saying that that the growing diversity among the members is simply a condition, not a Church goal. The real goal is unity, not diversity, he wrote.
Boyd K. Packer said in 2003: If they throw the word diversity at you, grab hold of it and say, “I am already diverse, and I intend to stay diverse.” If the word is tolerance, grab that one, too. After the turn of the century (2000), one is hard pressed to find a positive mention of the word diversity in talks by Church leaders. The sole example I could find (in an admittedly quick search) was by Gordon B. Hinckley in CR May 2006 where he emphasizes the need for greater kindness in “accommodating” diversity and specifically mentions racial diversity. However, in almost the same breath, he lambastes men who will not go to work and force their wives to have a career to support the family.

By the time my child went off to BYU, there was perhaps greater actual racial diversity than I encountered there in the early ‘80’s, but less tolerance for other areas of diversity. Thus her perception of all the BYU coeds as being blonde.

I appreciate the efforts of John Dehlin and the “NOM movement” to legitimize those who diverge in a wide range of areas. There are those who believe that diversity can strengthen the Church, and those who fear it, especially when it manifests itself in religious thought. I have come to no certain conclusions about the matter. I only hope that I and my daughter have a place in this Church, for we are both brunettes.

A “Middle Way” for Believing LDS Folk Regarding Their Homosexual Loved Ones

This podcast is literally one of the best I’ve ever heard. It reviews a new documentary (discussed below), and works very hard to say, “You can keep your faith and belief in scripture/revelation, and still embrace your homosexual loved ones .” A true middle way for spiritual folk caught in the crossfire between organized religion and homosexuality. And the interview is set in Utah, so it stands within the Mormon context. Please listen if you can.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT (2007-01-24) If you’ve listened to a debate about homosexuality, chances are you’ve heard the word “abomination” quoted from the Bible. It’s in Leviticus Chapter 20, right after Moses teaches that it’s an abomination to eat shrimp or a rabbit. In the Sundance documentary For the Bible Tells Me So, director Daniel Karslake follows five very normal, very Christian American families who all had to reconcile their religion with learning they had a gay child. Doug talks to Karslake about homosexuality, biology and scripture through the prism of the family.

  • You can see Sundance screenings of For the Bible Tells Me So Thursday, January 25th at 2:30 p.m. at the Library Center Theatre or Friday, January 26th at 11:30 p.m. at the Holiday Village Cinema II. For information on tickets, call 435-776-7878 or click here
  • For more information on Mary Lou Wallner’s work, visit Teach-Ministries.org

mormonblogs.org

I’ve been sitting on this domain for over a year now, and thanks to the help of a really swell new pal, I have decided to create a new portal/aggregator for Mormon-themed blogs called http://www.mormonblogs.org.

I know there are already a few aggregators out there, and they are cool cats. I guess that this one is a tad bit different in that we are categorizing blogs (at least for now) based on the conservative, moderate, and liberal labels (if you can think of better categories, let me know). Also, we’re gonna work to be as inclusive as we can. If you’ve been feeling a little bit “left out of the party” in the ‘nacle, maybe you will feel a bit more welcome here.

Anyway, if any of you are interested in signing up:

Cheers, and happy Mormon blogging!

Changes in Latitude, Changes in Attitude, Changes in Vocabulary

I joined the Church at age 19, and it took me no time to learn Mormon vocabulary. By the time I left on my mission, no one could tell I wasn’t born and raised in the Church. Recently, I’ve become interested in the reverse phenomenon. When a long-time member’s Church vocabulary slowly begins to change, what alterations in their lives does this portend? What does it mean when “I know that God lives” changes to “I deeply believe that the universe was created by a Divine Intelligence?” When “I know the Book of Mormon is true” changes to “I am convinced that living the principles taught in the Book of Mormon can lead to a fulfilling life?” When “I know the Church is true” changes to “I have found joy and happiness in participating in the Church organization?”

(Now, I haven’t read all of Fowler’s Stages, only a synopsis.) So some of you may enlighten me: Did Fowler include a change in vocabulary as signifying entry into a different stage of belief? I’m postulating that all those who examine their faith deeply will begin to express themselves rather differently than with the standard Mormon usage. This includes those who will deepen their faith in the principles of the restored gospel as well as those who will eventually leave or who will come to consider themselves NOM’s.

Mormon vocabulary is so distinctive it seems impossible to make much of a change without being noticed in the community. So I have some questions for the readers of this blog.

  1. As your beliefs shifted, did you struggle with your use of Mormon language?
  2. Did others notice a change in your vocabulary? Did this make you “suspect” in the eyes of traditional Mormons?
  3. Have you noticed other Mormons who have transformed their vocabulary away from “Mormonspeak?” Does this generally portend changes in their religious affiliation?
  4. What are some specific examples you’ve heard, read, or changed to? (For example, I no longer begin prayers with the phrase, “Dear Heavenly Father.”)

Blink and the Holy Ghost

I just read Blink, a book by Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point.

This is a fun, fascinating book. The central thesis- our minds can reach accurate conclusions about many things in a matter of seconds (most of the time). Making snap judgments is not a bad thing- we should rely on initial impressions and intuition more often.

Many of the impressions described in the book parallel testimony meeting experiences with the Holy Ghost.

Summarized from the intro chapter in Blink:
“The Getty museum was considering buying an ancient Greek sculpture. After 13 months of evaluation and testing by scientists and lawyers, they felt confident in their purchase of it for $10 million. Then they started bringing in Greek art/history experts. Each expert had a different feeling, such as repulsion or nausea when they looked at it. They knew it was a fake, literally within a second or two of looking at it. Additional clues were discovered that proved it was a forgery.”

Continue reading ‘Blink and the Holy Ghost’

“When Not Seeing Is Believing” — Andrew Sullivan and a Middle Way For Religious Folk

This is a really great article, and a perfect one to end the year on as middle-way Mormons/semi-religious folk.

“Andrew Sullivan on the rise of fundamentalism and why embracing spiritual doubt is the key to defusing the tension between East and West.”

Check it out, return, and report. :)

Mary, Did You Know?

I sat in choir practice this morning pondering how slightly odd it seemed for me to go to the trouble to wake myself and the children up so early, to get to the chapel by 8am, to rehearse for a Christmas choir program–in spite of the fact that I don’t even really consider myself to be a literal believer in the traditional view of the atonement/resurrection, or even in the anthropomorphic nature of God.
Notwithstanding, I was absolutely in love with the experience. Sitting up in the stands w/ fellow ward members. Joking between songs. Singing about God and the Savior’s love. Pondering the teachings of Jesus, and his example/sacrifice for me. Feeling a deep sense of love, peace, and joy.

Continue reading ‘Mary, Did You Know?’

Christmas Tips

Christmas time is upon us. It’s a time when we have to get together with folks who we might otherwise not spend time with: our relatives. I’m wondering how the holidays go for others with religious differences at home. At our house, I’m in the odd situation of being the “religious” one. (Odd, since at church, I’m sure I’m considered inactive, even though I attend at least one meeting almost every week– funny how that works in Mormonism, isn’t it?) I used to be kind of a Christmas freak and go all out decorating, baking, partying,etc, and even though I’m over that mostly, I still do want to have a big tree, with my ornament collection and my nativity sets out etc.
Continue reading ‘Christmas Tips’

I Believe in Divorce

I think divorce is a wonderful thing.

Almost twenty-three years ago, I married for the first time. I got married quickly. We separated after six years and divorced just shy of our seventh anniversary. We had one child together, and he had adopted my older child.

Divorcing my ex-husband was the single smartest thing I ever did. It was good for me and it was good for my kids. My sullen, frightened daughter became cheerful and optimistic. The chip that had been growing on my little boy’s shoulder shrank and eventually disappeared.

Continue reading ‘I Believe in Divorce’

Heritage with a Vengeance

Deep Mormon heritage is often listed as a significant reason why NOMs choose to stay involved in the church. It’s certainly a major factor for me. But every 24th of July, when we drive two hours South to celebrate the holiday with my in-laws in the tiny Mormon town of Kanosh, Utah, I’m reminded in no uncertain terms that in the Mormon world there’s heritage—and then there’s Heritage.

Continue reading ‘Heritage with a Vengeance’

“O Be Wise,” or Praise be to Elder Ballard

I believe that “O Be Wise,” by Elder M. Russell Ballard from the October 2006 LDS General Conference, will go down as one of the most important “modernizing” talks ever given by an LDS General Authority–if anyone actually pays attention.

This talk was absolutely groundbreaking to me. Please allow me to provide a few examples:

Continue reading ‘“O Be Wise,” or Praise be to Elder Ballard’