I’ve done a lot
of thinking about my mission in recent months. That happens when you are
writing a memoir. I figured forty years should give me enough perspective to
take a serious stab at it. One somewhat surprising insight that has come from
reminiscing and reading old journals and letters is just how adversarial that
mission experience was. We were very much in the “us vs. them” mode. I know
that’s ungrammatical. It should be we vs. them, but nobody says that, so I’ll
stick with the wounded grammar. It seemed that we battling everyone, but mostly
other Christian churches. They were the enemy.
I read a fair
quantity of Church history both at work and in my spare time, and it is quite
easy to see where this us vs. them posture comes from. Mormons have had
“enemies” from the beginning, and most often those enemies were other
Christians. Unfortunately, this is an attitude that is very difficult to shed.
I’ve heard speakers in general conference in just the past few years refer to
“our enemies.”
But things seem
to be changing. I’ve seen a concerted effort among Church spokespeople and,
especially, LDS scholars to defuse the antagonism. Two or three very
significant efforts along these lines came last week at the 2016 FairMormon
conference.
On Thursday and
Friday, I spent part of each day at the Utah Valley Convention Center in Provo.
BYU Studies is a sponsor of the conference and sells books at the event. So
most of the time I sat at our table, but I did manage to listen to a few of the
presentations. I was encouraged by what I heard. FairMormon seems to be acknowledging
that the old-style apologetics that I haven’t been a big fan of is not very
effective in the twenty-first century. The polemical us vs. them mentality is
taking some serious body blows. A couple of the presentations in particular
were very impressive, and, in my mind, very needed.
Grant Hardy on
Friday morning and Patrick Mason later that afternoon gave conference attendees
a great deal to think about. Grant discussed “A More Effective Apologetics,”
and he gave specific suggestions for four very different types of
conversations:
1. with academics
(What do you believe and why?)
2. with critics
(How can you believe that?)
3. with believers
(Aren’t our beliefs great?)
4. with wavering
Mormons (What do I believe? or Can I believe?)
The overall
message from the first type of conversation is that Mormons are generally
unprepared to participate in theological or scriptural conversations with
non-LDS scholars. We need to do our homework before we can really contribute to
this sort of conversation.
In speaking with
critics, Grant suggested that being on the defensive is not an effective
strategy anymore. He mentioned that sports or warfare metaphors, where the
focus is on winning and losing, are probably inappropriate. What we want is
understanding, not contention.
With believers,
it is easy to slip into unhealthy partisanship, where we tend to gloss over
inconvenient details, cherry-pick evidence, resort to eisegesis, distort the
positions of critics, and stretch evidence to support our preconceived conclusions.
Grant brought up the Gospel Topics essays, which present a faithful perspective
while admitting there are difficult areas and sometimes no easy answers.
In dealing with wavering
Mormons, Grant suggested that it may not be productive to talk about crises of
faith. Crises of expectations may hit nearer the mark. Some members of the
Church have grown up with rigid notions of scriptural inerrancy and prophetic
infallibility that create unrealistic expectations, which, in the real world,
will certainly be challenged sooner or later. When these challenges come, faith
can become fragile, and Grant stressed that if the people we’re talking to do
not feel loved, we’re doing it wrong.
For all of these
conversations, the Golden Rule is appropriate. And listening is probably much
more important than speaking.
Patrick Mason
addressed the topic “The Courage of Our Convictions: Embracing Mormonism in a
Secular Age.” He began by mentioning how many people had contacted him since
the publication of his book Planted:
Belief and Belonging in an Age of Doubt. He asked the audience by show of
hand how many of them had a friend or family member who has recently gone
inactive or even left the Church over doctrinal, historical, or cultural
issues. I wasn’t in the room but was listening from our table, so I couldn’t
see the response, but it must have been impressive.
Patrick suggested
that one source of this trend is that we have loaded too much in our “truth
cart.” We’ve insisted on more certainty than we had a right to. Over the years,
we’ve refused to yield even an inch of territory, defending barren outposts
that were never worth defending. It’s an all-or-nothing approach to faith that
is places unrealistic demands on not just apologists but everyday members too.
He mentioned a
work colleague who, with her husband, has been searching for a church. They’d
been attending an LDS ward and loved it enough to consider getting baptized.
But one day the colleague made a perceptive comment. She couldn’t understand
why Mormons were so defensive. Patrick’s observation was that circling the
wagons may have worked for pioneers but is probably not a very effective tactic
in the twenty-first century. One of his recommendations was that we need to explore
what it means to sustain fallible prophets. This is difficult for some of us
who simply assume that everything about Mormonism is true and defensible. But
careful study of our history and doctrine reveals too many trouble spots and
inconsistencies. We need a more realistic approach.
I don’t know when
the FairMormon volunteers will get around to posting these presentations on
their website, but when they do, you really need to watch them.
Another
presentation that you should watch is Ally Isom’s. I plan to. I wasn’t there when
she spoke, but I read the Deseret News recap of it. Ally is with Church Public
Affairs and talked about how we need more charity in our relationships with
those who disagree with us. No more us vs. them. The Church seems to be serious
about defusing the adversarial stance it encouraged for so many decades. It’s
an approach that doesn’t work well in the twenty-first century. Actually,
looking back forty years, it didn’t work very well in the 1970s either.
Ally's and Patrick's transcripts are here with more to come as fast as volunteers can manage. http://www.fairmormon.org/perspectives/fair-conferences/2016-fairmormon-conference
ReplyDeletePatrick's video was posted for free: http://blog.fairmormon.org/