Thursday, June 19, 2014

BEING IN THE WORLD, BUT NOT OF IT

This hits home today with the bizarre splinter groups that are forming.  I love the sayings of President Benson.  He truly was an inspired man - a prophetic man:

( Ezra Taft Benson, Conference Report, April 1969, pp. 10-15) Let us consider some of the precepts of men that may and do cause some of the humble followers of Christ to err.
Christ taught that we should be in the world but not of it (John 17:11,14-16). Yet there are some in our midst who are not so much concerned about taking the gospel into the world as they are about bringing worldliness into the gospel. They want us to be in the world and of it. They want us to be popular with the worldly even though a prophet has said that this is impossible, for all hell would then want to join us.
Through their own reasoning and a few misapplied scriptures, they try to sell us the precepts and philosophies of men. They do not feel the Church is progressive enough—they say that it should embrace the social and socialist gospel of apostate Christendom.
They attack the Church for not being in the forefront of the so-called "civil rights movement." They are embarrassed over some Church doctrine, and as Lehi foretold, the scoffing of the world over this and other matters will cause some of them to be ashamed and they shall fall away (see 1 Ne. 8:28).
Publishing differences with Church
Unauthorized to receive revelation for the Church, but I fear still anxious to redirect the Church in the way they think it should go, some of them have taken to publishing their differences with the Church, in order to give their heretical views a broader and, they hope, a more respectable platform.
Along this line it would be well for all of us to remember these words of President George Q. Cannon:
"A friend . . . wished to know whether we . . . considered an honest difference of opinion between a member of the Church and the Authorities of the Church was apostasy. . . . We replied that we had not stated that an honest difference of opinion between a member of the Church and the Authorities constituted apostasy, for we could conceive of a man honestly differing in opinion from the Authorities of the Church and yet not be an apostate; but we could not conceive of a man publishing those differences of opinion and seeking by arguments, sophistry and special pleading to enforce them upon the people to produce division and strife and to place the acts and counsels of the Authorities of the Church, if possible, in a wrong light and not be an apostate, for such conduct was apostasy as we understood the term" (Deseret News, November 3, 1869).
http://scriptures.byu.edu/gettalk.php?ID=1669

1 comment:

  1. It's a shame that so many of the saints are afraid to speak honestly and openly about items of personal belief or position. The fear of being labeled a heretic or an apostate by the Pharisaical element is concerning to some. A healthy and robust discussion helps facilitate the learning process - our Bishopric meetings can sometimes get very impassioned. But conjuncture ends where clear doctrinal statements exist

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