thebigcheese wrote: We are assuming that everyone else has the same level of faith in the doctrine and the apostles. Which is almost never the case. You will find a broad spectrum of belief, even within the church. So to argue that "this is the only way that x-issue should be interpreted" will generally come across as hostile, even self-righteous.
While I quite agree with thebigcheese, I have been a little surprised at references akin to Marduk's (others' as well, I quoted M due to my assumption that he'd not take offence)Marduk wrote:...as TBC astutely pointed out, no two people have the same perspective even on a religion they share, EVEN one as dogmatized as the LDS church...
So here's my question: what elements of LDS faith do any of you see as dogmatic, or even creedal? (by this I mean an authoritative, systematic delineation of beliefs) The closest things I can think of would be the official declaration published in the Doctrine and Covenants, and to some degree the Articles of Faith. Even those aren't as creedal as they first seem, although published as scripture, further elaboration is practically non-existant. I really don't see the church coming out and saying "this is exactly what is meant by AoF #x..." With no concrete theology to appeal to, the LDS community is very much defined by the "teach them proper principles and let them govern themselves" mentality. Rare is the 'correct' answer to a theological question authoritatively set forth. If you feel that transitions between kingdoms is possible, you can find and argue your evidences, and those who disagree will find and argue theirs. But the kicker is, in my eyes: Neither side is wrong. People turn to the Apostles as archetypes to find support for their beliefs, but even they have differing personal views on such topics and their publications are almost universally prefaced with "herein are my individual thoughts and they in no way are meant to represent official doctrine of the church".
I am not claiming that discussion and debate are not fruitful, such enlargening of understanding can hardly help but be helpful, but it seems to me that if you find yourself thinking "I am right and here is why" when dealing with a LDS topic, you may discover less support than you had previously thought.