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The Ethical Mormonism Project

The Ethical Mormonism Project

Auteur(s): EMP
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The Ethical Mormonism Project hopes to inspire change regarding problematic issues within the history, theology and culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly known as the Mormon Church or “Mormonism”). We intend to accomplish this by helping define and spotlight the problems and by respectfully calling upon leaders of the church to approach them more ethically -- with greater transparency, honesty and compassion. We acknowledge that the church already does good in the world and that it has had a positive effect on many lives. However, we also know through firsthand experience and by genuinely listening to many personal accounts that the church has been, and continues to be, a widespread cause of profound suffering and discrimination. The host of the Ethical Mormonism Project is a Xenial husband and father who conservatively estimates that he has invested at least 25,000 hours into studying and practicing Mormonism in his life so far, including a devoted two-year mission that concluded with surprising news from his mission president that he had baptized more people than anyone in the decades-long history of that mission. When asked, he told the president that he attributed this to his genuine love for people and to cultivating an ability to break down complex ideas in versatile ways that were easy to understand. This project is indebted to the exceptional work of many researchers, historians, writers, podcasters, activists and others who have gone before, both in and out of the church. Whether you are an active member, former member, or just someone interested in such topics, we welcome your participation and feedback on this journey, and hope we can do our small part to add to the knowledge, love, unity, hope and goodness in the world. Thanks for listening.© 2021 EMP Sciences sociales Spiritualité
Épisodes
  • Hope Without Prophets: Why We Don't Need Joseph Smith, Russell Nelson or the Church to Have Hope
    May 31 2021

    In 2015, I made a post on Facebook defending the Mormon Church against critics whom I accused of attempting to destroy people's hope without offering anything in return. The post ended up getting over 4,500 comments from dozens of different people, critics and believers alike. In making the post, I was thinking of people like my aunt and uncle who lost their son to a brain tumor at the age of five, and whose hope in eternal families was priceless to them. A couple years later, my testimony in Mormonism began to seriously splinter as I learned the full depth of the whitewashing and deception in the Mormon origin story as presented by the church. At some point I knew that no matter how much I wanted the church to be true, I could never again tell my children that Joseph Smith was a prophet. The impact of this change was fundamental and comprehensive, with a domino effect that touched everything in my universe.

    Since then, it's been a process of trying to scrub the deep childhood indoctrination from my mind, with good days and bad. As things have become more and more clear, one thing I've learned for certain is that we don't need the church to have hope. I haven't been in a hurry to reconstruct any definitive belief system about God or the afterlife, but there is absolutely nothing stopping me from believing that I can live after death with my loved ones if I so desire.

    The LDS Church is deeply invested in selling the idea that people need the church to have hope. This is a lie; but it is an effective lie that the church uses to keep members from exploring, learning too much, and leaving. Perhaps the single most important message we can share with our believing family and friends is that leaving the church doesn't have to mean leaving our hope. The church's discrimination and dogma causes tremendous division, trauma and suffering for many people. Discarding the idea that Joseph Smith was a prophet immediately opens doors that can immediately be walked through that make it possible to immediately become a better person. But it's not people's hope in an afterlife that is the problem. It's the other stuff. And we can leave the other stuff behind and keep the hope, which is ultimately the point of all religion.

    Concluding the episode is a first-name call to the "Top-15" leaders of the Mormon Church, speaking past their office to what is left of the normal humanity they had as boys, to be more ethical on this topic, to stop weaponizing hope, and to set the example toward a more loving, honest and accepting organization.

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    37 min

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