
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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{{Epigraph|What we must do then, is shake the foundation of trust in the supposed prophets who hold sacred answers that cannot be revealed lest it thwart the plan of faith. What we need in order for this reformation or revolution are facts about the financial chicanery of the top LDS leaders. These are slowly coming forward. Without showing that they are personally, individually involved in scandalous behavior, there won't be much of a revolution. If we can show these men are plotting business men that take grand levels of benefit from the church for personal selfish pleasures, the members will begin to lose trust and then the questions they had shelved will be dusted off and they won't sleep until they know for themselves what the truth really is. Break their trust in the mythical integrity of infallible profits, and you will get your reformation. Many of us are working on just that. It's not easy, and it's not certain.<br>—David Twede (posting as "Jesus Smith"), posted on ''Recovery from Mormonism'', January 8, 2013. | |||
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
The website mormonthink.com is designed to lead Church members into questioning their beliefs in a non-threatening manner by claiming to be "objective" and "balanced." The site claims to be run by active members of the Church. In reality, however, they are "active" only in the sense that some of them still occasionally attend Church—they do ''not'' accept the Church's truth claims, and they have no interest in strengthening belief. Instead, the site portrays Church leaders as liars, Joseph Smith as a fraud and con-man, and the Church as "an oppressive empire building corporation." The site includes links to FAIR as a way of demonstrating their claimed "balance." | The website mormonthink.com is designed to lead Church members into questioning their beliefs in a non-threatening manner by claiming to be "objective" and "balanced." The site claims to be run by active members of the Church. In reality, however, they are "active" only in the sense that some of them still occasionally attend Church—they do ''not'' accept the Church's truth claims, and they have no interest in strengthening belief. Instead, the site portrays Church leaders as liars, Joseph Smith as a fraud and con-man, and the Church as "an oppressive empire building corporation." The site includes links to FAIR as a way of demonstrating their claimed "balance." |
A FAIR Analysis of: MormonThink A work by author: Anonymous
|
High Level Summary | |
---|---|
Title | MormonThink.com |
Type | Website |
Author(s) | Anonymous |
Affiliation | "Active" members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Ex-Mormons active on the Recovery from Mormonism message board. |
Accuracy | Conclusions drawn are predominantly negative toward the truth claims of the Church. |
Temple content | NOTE: Extremely detailed temple content is sometimes present on the site. |
I fantasize about a full-blown faith-destroying session. In real life, I did put the bishop in his place over polygamy. He kept saying I was wrong about Joseph having other wives and being illegal and such. I proved him wrong and he ate crow.
—MormonThink's founding editor, Feb. 21, 2012 [1]
So that is one of the reasons I remain in the church. It gives me greater credibility when I speak about my own religion instead of it being my former religion. We all know as soon as I leave it, I am labeled as someone who left because of morality, tithing or some other issue rather than the historical problems of the church....By subtly mentioning things in meetings I may raise some doubts...
—MormonThink's founding editor, Jan, 2012 [2]
If you would like to help further, please excommunicate the next editor at MormonThink. Have leaders of the [Strengthening Church Members Committee] stalk us. Even better, send in the Danites please. That should propel MormonThink popularity into orbit around Kolob.
—MormonThink managing editor David Twede, after emailing his resignation to the Church, October 19, 2012. [3]
What we must do then, is shake the foundation of trust in the supposed prophets who hold sacred answers that cannot be revealed lest it thwart the plan of faith. What we need in order for this reformation or revolution are facts about the financial chicanery of the top LDS leaders. These are slowly coming forward. Without showing that they are personally, individually involved in scandalous behavior, there won't be much of a revolution. If we can show these men are plotting business men that take grand levels of benefit from the church for personal selfish pleasures, the members will begin to lose trust and then the questions they had shelved will be dusted off and they won't sleep until they know for themselves what the truth really is. Break their trust in the mythical integrity of infallible profits, and you will get your reformation. Many of us are working on just that. It's not easy, and it's not certain.
—David Twede (posting as "Jesus Smith"), posted on Recovery from Mormonism, January 8, 2013.
The website mormonthink.com is designed to lead Church members into questioning their beliefs in a non-threatening manner by claiming to be "objective" and "balanced." The site claims to be run by active members of the Church. In reality, however, they are "active" only in the sense that some of them still occasionally attend Church—they do not accept the Church's truth claims, and they have no interest in strengthening belief. Instead, the site portrays Church leaders as liars, Joseph Smith as a fraud and con-man, and the Church as "an oppressive empire building corporation." The site includes links to FAIR as a way of demonstrating their claimed "balance."
Each page on MormonThink.com typically includes quotes from Church sources, large amounts of block text copied from websites critical of the Church, a few references to LDS apolgetics that are followed by mocking refutations by critics, an "Ending summary by critics," and an "Our Thoughts" section, which generally agrees with the critics. The bottom of each page contains links to critical sites, believers sites and to some sites which they consider neutral.
MormonThink has had a series of managing editors, all of whom retained membership in the Church during their tenure while simultaneously mocking the Church's truth claims in online ex-Mormon forums. The transfer of the editorial position appears to be triggered by the resignation from the Church of the previous editor. The founding editor, who remains anonymous, resigned in 2012 in order to avoid discipline after the Church apparently identified him. In his parting letter to his Stake President (posted on the MormonThink website), he states,
You said that [MormonThink] is 'anti-Mormon, anti-Joseph Smith and anti-LDS Leadership'. However, you never said it wasn’t true.[4]
The most publicly well known managing editor was David Twede. Shortly after taking over the site, Twede was approached by local Church leaders and scheduled for discipline. After creating a media spectacle regarding his scheduled discipline, Twede resigned publicly during an appearance at the open mike session at the 2012 Ex-Mormon Foundation Conference in Salt Lake City. After emailing his resignation letter, Twede publicly challenged the Church,
If you’d like to help further, please, by all means, excommunicate the next editor at MormonThink. Have leaders of the Strengthening Members Committee stalk us. Even better, send in the Danites, please, please. That should propel MormonThink popularity into orbit around Kolob. [5]
MormonThink's directors consider Church attempts to impose discipline on their editors as a beneficial way of increasing traffic and visibility of the website, thus making Church membership more aware of its existence.
Click on the links for detailed point-by-point discussion of specific content.
== Notes ==
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