This video talks about the secret Mormon ceremony known as the Second Anointing which is given to the top church leaders and other high-ranking members. Two of the interesting things to consider about the ceremony are the subservient role it places women in, and that according to Mormon theology those that have received the Second Anointing are essentially allowed to sin as much as they want without it counting.
Fists of Fury: Mormon Edition
A person visited a Mormon church and ended up getting into a fistfight with a missionary.
Mormon Charity
A few words on the charitable giving of the Mormon church from Nemo.
The Mormon Church Fears Intellectuals
In a 1993 talk then-president of the Mormon church Boyd K. Packer warned that the three greatest threats to the church were “feminists, homosexuals and intellectuals”.
The first two are pretty much what you would expect to hear from any conservative Christian-aligned church but the third, intellectuals, is especially interesting.
Essentially, the church doesn’t want members that think for themselves, or that research and study various topics like history. They only want members that listen to and obey whatever the church and church leaders say, as if the church leaders were the gods themselves.
Mormon Apostle Juice
Kircher and the Hieroglyphics
Athanasius Kircher and Egyptian Hieroglyphics
The name Athanasius Kircher might be familiar to those involved in Mormon historical scholarship because of his link to Joseph Smith and Joseph Smith’s description of the Liahona, though that’s a topic for another day.
It turns out Joseph Smith is also connected to Kircher through Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Athanasius Kircher was a Jesuit scholar active in the 1600s, long before the discovery of the Rosetta Stone and our ability to translate Egyptian hieroglyphics.
[Read More]Teotihuacan DNA
The DNA of the Teotihuacan People
In the Mormon church, the Book of Mormon claims the people of ancient America, the Indian and indigenous people, are the descendants of Jews that crossed the Atlantic ocean in ancient history. Multiple DNA studies have already shown this not to be true. However, until very recently the DNA of the Teotihuacan people was still a mystery.
This is an interesting little video explaining that we’ve finally been able to identify the DNA of the Teotihuacan people and guess what? They’re not from Israel either.
[Read More]A Pucker Faster Than Lightspeed
A Quick Pucker
It’s fairly well-known that most of Reddit is garbage. There’s a reason the stereotype of a Reddit mod exists. We seem to keep using it anyhow, for some reason.
Personally, I tend to use it as a way to check news headlines that might not show up elsewhere, though more and more I’m thinking it might be better to find an alternative way to find my news, perhaps curated through an RSS reader.
[Read More]Agreeing With Everything
Agreeing With Everything
One thing about the Mormon church is the church and the leaders expect the members to agree with everything they do and say. Even if a member doesn’t agree with everything, the church expects them to ignore all that and agree anyhow.
The reality is you’re never going to agree with everything an organization has to say, and that’s a good thing. That shows you’re still having some independent thought instead of simply going along with everything you’re told.
Echoes of Control
As mentioned on the About page, the Mormon leadership and the Mormon church in general is largely about control, and this behavior is often mirrored by some of the members and their endeavors.
For instance, on Reddit there are two groups dedicated specifically to people that are still active in church and they exemplify the Mormon need to control the narrative and the members of the group.
Among the groups based around those that either have questions about the church or have already left, it’s a well-known meme that saying anything in one of the active groups that’s even one slight iota off from the most strict and loyal line will not only get your post removed, it’ll get you banned from the group. What you say doesn’t even have to be offensive or controversial. It can be as simple as posting a question or comment about how the church is going to respond to a particular situation or handle evolving social or scientific issues, and you’re banned.
[Read More]