I know maybe 15 or so excommunicated. That's not my point, though.
My point is that living in Utah I see way too many stressed out (including bishops and stake presidents, mission presidents, etc) over measuring up to the standards expected of them. Does God expect much? I don't claim to know His level of expectation. But what I do feel is a spiritual sorrow for those that have not just been excommunicated, but for those that are active but feel like they're drowning in appointed responsibilities.
I'm sure this post will come off as a pandering toward grace is greater than works (it's not the meaning, though I do believe that to be true), but my intention is more pure. I simply witness, on a daily basis, very good people so tired and struggling to keep up that they have little time to rest and have fellowship with their Lord and Savior. Am I bashing the LDS church? Please.. no. I just believe it, like others before it, has gotten out of hand and it is slowly replacing God Himself in the lives of the average member. I'm not being cute, at all, when I say that mourns my spirit.
alright. . . .
Paul seemed to think the original commandment regarding women. . . . Eve being told she would be subject to her husband's leadership. . . . was not a bad thing. He even put it in a positive light, comparing the role of a man to that of Jesus, imploring men to love their wives as Jesus loves His Church, and to serve them the same way. . . .
men and women are not "equal" in the sense of being "equivalent" or identical. Practically every cell in the human body is impacted with the instructions inherent in the hormonal levels of estrogen and testosterone, with their manifold cascading biochemical ramifications. Men and women are different, that's the long and the short of it.
The male brain is different, and it suits having a different role in an interdependent schema. A woman who wants to "be equal" is actually devaluing herself, because it is her differing qualities and capacities that enhance her value. Similarly, a man who wants to be "effeminate" is devaluing himself by not caring to live out the role which maleness is better suited for. . . . .
and, btw, we really need to address our societal practices, and our commercial practices, of flooding our environment with chemicals that mess up our biological signal systems. . . . like plastics with estrogen mimic "plasticizers". . . .
Mormons grew out of the protestant and particularly "Baptist" line of theological thought, and have become a sort of "Neo-Catholic" Church. I am surprised at the resistance being seen today against the GLBT agenda, considering so many of the LDS leaders over the past hundred years have been drawn into the progressive camp, at least privately. I have thought they would make the jump when the courts rule GLBT rights into law, droning on about their mantra "We believe in obeying the Law". I have thought the Mormons would ordain women as well to the Priesthood, and continue their theology of conforming to the trends of society. Mormons never cease to amaze me.
You know, PKM, human beings are hardly ever what they think they are. We all live in some kind of idealized bubble, following a course we can hardly acknowledge as the fact of our existence, the truth of our actions, the problem of our thoughts. . . . .
God does not give us unconditional love. Among the conditions He requires are faith, and choices consistent with His virtues and designs. He might be willing to let us choose, as He is willing to let us learn, but His judgment will rest on our fundamental choice to love Him and value Him over the things/persons that are contrary to Him. The idea of grace only applies as a consequence of that choice, when we make it, for Him.