Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

For discussion of liberty, freedom, government and politics.
Post Reply
freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

zionminded wrote:I need to chime in here a bit.

My profession is a mental health counselor. So I know a bit about this subject.

MOST masturbation (MB) habits are normal, for teens or adults. Nearly all men have or will, and nearly all women do. Nearly 40 percent or so of aging adults do it (over 70).

Having said that, SOME of the time there is a problem. It can be problematic if the behavior interferes with your life, your relationships or your health. But there are situations where the rhetoric around it is worse. For example, MB causes you to be gay or MB leads to more sexual exploration in unhealthy ways. Both are proven false, many times over.

The problem comes in our church where sexuality is so taboo. It comes when we simply DO NOT talk about it at all. We only talk about the bad things and not the healthy things. The "don't touch it" message is not helpful. It is important for people to beable explore their own sexuality (in a healthy way). Your bishop may or may not be objective, and he likely has ZERO idea to identify MB habits related to anxiety, depression, social issues, sexual problems, and a LONG list of things that they will not understand.

I'm NOT saying, people should create habits that replace normal behaviors. Comorbid problems such as compulsive porn use can cause a great deal of harm in relationships and more.

Additionally, there are some HUGE HUGE spiritual things sexual replacements (such as MB), and INCLUDING many hetronormative sexual behaviors will LIMIT your spiritual growth if you don't address them. (Big topic here on that one).

Please PM me if you have question offline, or please, find a mental heath counselor to help you. (Note your bishop can and should counsel you on your spiritual journey in the church, but not your sexual journey or questions anymore than your Bishop would address physical health issues like blood pressure or financial issues like retirement investment)
And I'm sure you learned all this from books in College and other studies except scripture. Since when does school studies supersede scriptural truth? To say that just because almost every person in society masturbates, it is considered normal. Do you see how ludicrous this sounds? This is like saying that inhaling water is normal. Most people die.
Why do people say they follow Christ, yet still normalize sin. The precepts of men say go ahead, it is normal. God says to be pure in heart, in mind and in action, to have virtue garnish our thoughts. Which one of these choices will bring us closer to God?
Is it school based concepts taught by mans own carnal nature, rather than God's word that will save mankind?

The goal is perfection, just what does this mean to you? There's a big difference between working to overcome a bad habit with lots of repentance along the way...and saying this habit is normal, not to worry about it. Ya, right!
Is it correct to not be addicted to some sin, and then tell others it is okay, just normal. Normal for whom?

User avatar
TrueIntent
captain of 100
Posts: 974

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by TrueIntent »

freedomforall wrote:
TrueIntent wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
TrueIntent wrote:
Babies do it in the womb! Little children do it...then become teenagers and adults and still do it. You tell me....is it a sin? And if it is....what is the consequence and what should be their punishment? Also, to the "lust" part, who on the face of the planet hasn't lusted??????? Cast the first stone. I think a better question is, Robinhood, have you ever masterbated?
Maybe Robinhood won a spelling bee. :)) :)) :))

The goal set before us is to abhor sin, abhor evil, to seek to be pure in heart and mind, to have virtue garnish our thoughts unceasingly. Those who are not are still in the natural man category. There is a difference between someone striving to be perfect and those who don't give it much thought. Those who list to follow the spirit, and those that do not. Those who lust and repent, make further mistakes, yet repent again and do their best...and those that say:

2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God.

BTW, babies and little children are not under the law, therefore, their activities as a point for immoral behavior is irrelevant. Good grief!


Right....u make my point. GOd will not justify in committing a little sin...which means we all must repent of our unworthiness...we all suck and fall short. Submitting the youth to these questions without acknowledgeing that the vast majority of members in the congregation have masturbated, and Lusted is hypocrisy,...we should reveal our own sins, and then show mercy, guidance, and love. No one gets saved without repenting and accessing grace....and alas, even murders and whores will be saved. The Savior said, u less we exceed the righteousness of the Pharisee we will not enter the kingdom of heaven. The Pharisee were the ones asking questions about whether or not someone masterbated, and they were the accusers who claimed that masturbation would keep someone out of Heaven.....NOT coming to Christ keeps you out of the kingdom of God.

Also, you view the scripture, "eat drink and be merry" through the lens of Mormonism as it was taught you. Actually, I know what I know by reading the Book of Mormon 21 times so far. After all, aren't we told to feast upon the word? The savior ate, drank, and socialized with the sinners......the difference was the attitude...the attitude that I can sin and cause myself pain and others and then not change my heart. It's not the outward man, it's the inward man....this time we are in is a time to prepare to meet god....to prepare the inward man. Nothing outward saves us. So when we also judge others, we condemn others for things outwardly when we don't really know their heart.

Btw, the word virtue does not mean what we teach it to mean at church. We are obsessed with sex and control in Mormonism. Study the word virtue in the dictionary, and then study every passage of scripture that contains the word "virtue" across all books of scripture. Virtue is an all encompassing quality...like the word integrity.....it's associated with a state of "being" that has to do with MANY different God-like qualities...which can include chastity, but is in no way ONLY about chasity. Our church has grossly misrepresented the word. They have also done this with the word "pure" and "purity". If you will look at lds.org and do a search of the word "virture" you will find nearly every single talk equates it with SEXUAL PURITY. It is a distortion of the scriptures and meaning. We should be ashamed of how we have distorted the divine beauty of sex in our culture. Look up Chastity in the topical guide as well....we have included scriptures in this section that have absolutely nothing to do with what god defines as virtuous and pure and used them to equate all meaning with chastity. We are obsessed as a culture with controlling sex, and how we view others through outward "appearance". It's why Elizabeth smart made her recent comments in the press. The church tries to pretend they haven't taught this culture, however, the way we define scripture and teach from conference talks clearly says otherwise.
Virtue
https://www.lds.org/scriptures/tg/virtu ... g&letter=v" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

D&C 121:45
45 Let thy bowels also be full of charity towards all men, and to the household of faith, and let virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly; then shall thy confidence wax strong in the presence of God; and the doctrine of the priesthood shall distil upon thy soul as the dews from heaven.

Pure
https://www.lds.org/scriptures/tg/virtu ... g&letter=v" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Matthew 5:8
8 Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.

Eat, Drink and be merry TG Procrastination.

Isa. 22:13
13 And behold joy and gladness, slaying oxen, and killing sheep, eating flesh, and drinking wine: let us eat and drink; for to morrow we shall die.

This next verse is self explanatory as to what eat, drink and be merry refers to:

2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God.

How many members of the church try to justify committing a little sin and thinking God is okay with this?

Spotless
Here it looks like many words are synonymous with being as to what God expects...and that is to be perfect.

3 Nephi 12:48
48 Therefore I would that ye should be perfect even as I, or your Father who is in heaven is perfect.

Mormon 9:6
6 O then ye unbelieving, turn ye unto the Lord; cry mightily unto the Father in the name of Jesus, that perhaps ye may be found spotless, pure, fair, and white, having been cleansed by the blood of the Lamb, at that great and last day.
Yeah virtue, spotless and pure do not mean what you think they mean. They have to do with all encompassing qualities. Read your scriptures....as long as you use the topical guide and lds.org as a shortcut you will always be ignorant of true meaning. Your choice.

User avatar
Rachael
Captain of whatever
Posts: 2410

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Rachael »

freedomforall wrote:
Obrien wrote:Listen, I do not condone or encourage people to sin. The whole key is to become a saint by accepting the atonement of Christ. I choose to focus on that concept, and you choose to focus on genitalia. Now you are reaching... :-?
The atonement is a great thing to focus on, true.
May a person focus on the atonement and expect salvation without repentance?
Is Christ okay with doing all the work while a person skates along with no real commitment?
Isn't by accepting the atonement one has to do all in their power to have it stay functional for them? Can one say they accept the atonement and still be happy to favor their favorite sin, whatever that may be...in general?
Honestly can one sit in a bar, get drunk and make a scene, watch half naked women dance around and still think they are saved because they accept the atonement, without repentance?

In other words, what does a person have to do, other than merely acknowledging the atonement, to cause the atonement to take affect in their life?

Here is a hint:
Doctrine and Covenants 1:31
31 For I the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance;

I am not making up this stuff. It's in the book!

You pit grace against works. Like pitting the book of James against the Pauline epistles. No one can attain perfection in this fleshly life, but by focusing on that only, thinking you can, can make one self righteous and phariseical. We have to rely on the Atonement and claim the righteousness of God. Even our best works are but filthy rags before God. So we bring Him our dirty laundry, because He is the only one that can wash them in His holy blood to become clean. That's what claiming the Righteousness of God means. Claiming it means you have faith in the Atonement, yet you will become so glad to receive this gift, you'll want to become a disciple of Christ.

Being meek, humble, unjudgemental, charitable, and asking forgiveness for our daily trespasses is the focus. Good works will naturally happen with that attitude.

You can busy yourself to exhaustion like Martha, or sit at the feet of Jesus which is the good part.
Luke 10:

Bible > KJV > Luke 10

◄ Luke 10 ►
38Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. 39And she had a sister called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. 40But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? bid her therefore that she help me. 41And Jesus answered and said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: 42But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her."

Mormon Kid, don't let anyone take that good part away from you.
Last edited by Rachael on November 10th, 2016, 10:11 pm, edited 2 times in total.

User avatar
TrueIntent
captain of 100
Posts: 974

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by TrueIntent »

TrueIntent wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
TrueIntent wrote:
freedomforall wrote: Maybe Robinhood won a spelling bee. :)) :)) :))

The goal set before us is to abhor sin, abhor evil, to seek to be pure in heart and mind, to have virtue garnish our thoughts unceasingly. Those who are not are still in the natural man category. There is a difference between someone striving to be perfect and those who don't give it much thought. Those who list to follow the spirit, and those that do not. Those who lust and repent, make further mistakes, yet repent again and do their best...and those that say:

2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God.

BTW, babies and little children are not under the law, therefore, their activities as a point for immoral behavior is irrelevant. Good grief!


Right....u make my point. GOd will not justify in committing a little sin...which means we all must repent of our unworthiness...we all suck and fall short. Submitting the youth to these questions without acknowledgeing that the vast majority of members in the congregation have masturbated, and Lusted is hypocrisy,...we should reveal our own sins, and then show mercy, guidance, and love. No one gets saved without repenting and accessing grace....and alas, even murders and whores will be saved. The Savior said, u less we exceed the righteousness of the Pharisee we will not enter the kingdom of heaven. The Pharisee were the ones asking questions about whether or not someone masterbated, and they were the accusers who claimed that masturbation would keep someone out of Heaven.....NOT coming to Christ keeps you out of the kingdom of God.

Also, you view the scripture, "eat drink and be merry" through the lens of Mormonism as it was taught you. Actually, I know what I know by reading the Book of Mormon 21 times so far. After all, aren't we told to feast upon the word? Yeah, I'm not impressed cuz when you compare it across all books of scripture, the way you teach it contradicts other books. But you would only know that if you got off lds.org and read them as a little child. You are the blind leading the blind. the Book of Mormon is another witness of Jesus Christ...but not the way you teach and that's peopbably because like most Mormons, you don't know who Jesus is (I'm speaking from my own personal experience...I used to be like you.) The savior ate, drank, and socialized with the sinners......the difference was the attitude...the attitude that I can sin and cause myself pain and others and then not change my heart. It's not the outward man, it's the inward man....this time we are in is a time to prepare to meet god....to prepare the inward man. Nothing outward saves us. So when we also judge others, we condemn others for things outwardly when we don't really know their heart.

Btw, the word virtue does not mean what we teach it to mean at church. We are obsessed with sex and control in Mormonism. Study the word virtue in the dictionary, and then study every passage of scripture that contains the word "virtue" across all books of scripture. Virtue is an all encompassing quality...like the word integrity.....it's associated with a state of "being" that has to do with MANY different God-like qualities...which can include chastity, but is in no way ONLY about chasity. Our church has grossly misrepresented the word. They have also done this with the word "pure" and "purity". If you will look at lds.org and do a search of the word "virture" you will find nearly every single talk equates it with SEXUAL PURITY. It is a distortion of the scriptures and meaning. We should be ashamed of how we have distorted the divine beauty of sex in our culture. Look up Chastity in the topical guide as well....we have included scriptures in this section that have absolutely nothing to do with what god defines as virtuous and pure and used them to equate all meaning with chastity. We are obsessed as a culture with controlling sex, and how we view others through outward "appearance". It's why Elizabeth smart made her recent comments in the press. The church tries to pretend they haven't taught this culture, however, the way we define scripture and teach from conference talks clearly says otherwise.
Virtue
https://www.lds.org/scriptures/tg/virtu ... g&letter=v" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

D&C 121:45
45 Let thy bowels also be full of charity towards all men, and to the household of faith, and let virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly; then shall thy confidence wax strong in the presence of God; and the doctrine of the priesthood shall distil upon thy soul as the dews from heaven.

Pure
https://www.lds.org/scriptures/tg/virtu ... g&letter=v" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Matthew 5:8
8 Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.

Eat, Drink and be merry TG Procrastination.

Isa. 22:13
13 And behold joy and gladness, slaying oxen, and killing sheep, eating flesh, and drinking wine: let us eat and drink; for to morrow we shall die.

This next verse is self explanatory as to what eat, drink and be merry refers to:

2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God.

How many members of the church try to justify committing a little sin and thinking God is okay with this?

Spotless
Here it looks like many words are synonymous with being as to what God expects...and that is to be perfect.

3 Nephi 12:48
48 Therefore I would that ye should be perfect even as I, or your Father who is in heaven is perfect.

Mormon 9:6
6 O then ye unbelieving, turn ye unto the Lord; cry mightily unto the Father in the name of Jesus, that perhaps ye may be found spotless, pure, fair, and white, having been cleansed by the blood of the Lamb, at that great and last day.
Yeah virtue, spotless and pure do not mean what you think they mean. They have to do with all encompassing qualities. Read your scriptures....as long as you use the topical guide and lds.org as a shortcut you will always be ignorant of true meaning. Your choice.

User avatar
TrueIntent
captain of 100
Posts: 974

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by TrueIntent »

Let me add....chastity is not the same thing as virtue or being pure in heart. Chastity can be included under the definition of these words, however they do not mean chastity. The church uses the term virtue and purity to define chastity.....this is inaccurate. You will have to study all books of scripture to comprehend this. When virtue went out of Christ when he healed the women with the issue of blood.....it wasn't his sexual purity.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

TrueIntent wrote:Yeah virtue, spotless and pure do not mean what you think they mean. They have to do with all encompassing qualities. Read your scriptures....as long as you use the topical guide and lds.org as a shortcut you will always be ignorant of true meaning. Your choice.
This, of course, is your own opinion. Read your scriptures and find out for yourself what the meanings are. The key to understanding scripture ...is to not wrest them.
Now that you have come out so boldly and insinuated that I am dumber than a bag of rocks, please enlighten us with you knowledge and wisdom. What are your sources for such claims. Are you even LDS?
What I have posted is true, no matter what you say against it. I have read the Book of Mormon at least 21 times. I think by now I know what I say.

So far, all you've been good at is trying to make yourself smarter than others, and no substance behind it. Do you know the old saying...put your money where your mouth is?

So please, guess again on your conclusions.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

Rachael wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
Obrien wrote:Listen, I do not condone or encourage people to sin. The whole key is to become a saint by accepting the atonement of Christ. I choose to focus on that concept, and you choose to focus on genitalia. Now you are reaching... :-?
The atonement is a great thing to focus on, true.
May a person focus on the atonement and expect salvation without repentance?
Is Christ okay with doing all the work while a person skates along with no real commitment?
Isn't by accepting the atonement one has to do all in their power to have it stay functional for them? Can one say they accept the atonement and still be happy to favor their favorite sin, whatever that may be...in general?
Honestly can one sit in a bar, get drunk and make a scene, watch half naked women dance around and still think they are saved because they accept the atonement, without repentance?

In other words, what does a person have to do, other than merely acknowledging the atonement, to cause the atonement to take affect in their life?

Here is a hint:
Doctrine and Covenants 1:31
31 For I the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance;

I am not making up this stuff. It's in the book!

You pit grace against works. Like pitting the book of James against the Pauline epistles. No one can attain perfection in this fleshly life, but by focusing on that only, thinking you can, can make one self righteous and phariseical. We have to rely on the Atonement and claim the righteousness of God. Even our best works are but filthy rags before God. So we bring Him our dirty laundry, because He is the only one that can wash them in His holy blood to become clean. That's what claiming the Righteousness of God means. Claiming it means you have faith in the Atonement, yet you will become so glad to receive this gift, you'll want to become a disciple of Christ.

Being meek, humble, unjudgemental, charitable, and asking forgiveness for our daily trespasses is the focus. Good works will naturally happen with that attitude.

You can busy yourself to exhaustion like Martha, or sit at the feet of Jesus which is the good part.
Luke 10:

Bible > KJV > Luke 10

◄ Luke 10 ►
38Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. 39And she had a sister called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. 40But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? bid her therefore that she help me. 41And Jesus answered and said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: 42But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her."

Mormon Kid, don't let anyone take that good part away from you.
Ah, Rachael, Rachael, I have posted this scripture ad nauseam: Moroni 10:32,33

This is how we can become perfect in this life. We can become perfect IN CHRIST. We repent and commit ourselves to serving him and keeping his commandments...and in return he takes our sins upon him, rendering us perfect...in him! Rather simple, isn't it? I guess I merely post that scripture just to see how many times I can post it. Just like scripture in general. very few read them, let alone understand their meaning.

Would you be so bold as to call Christ a liar? After all, it was a prophet of God that was instructed to write this little tidbit on the plates. Isn't it time to realize this fact? Or are they all just the arm of flesh, huh?

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

zionminded wrote:
BYULAWGUY wrote:
Serragon wrote:If you have truly forsaken the sin and confessed to the Lord, you don't need to confess to the Bishop.

If you are struggling and unable to forsake the sin, confession to the Bishop is probably necessary.
This is so wrong on so many levels.

To the kid that posted this, I have been a bishop. Most of the boys masturbate but most don't repent for it. Of all the sins that the youth confessed to me, I never once told their parents.
Repent for it?

Nobody is keeping score. Nobody but the person who is in guilt and shame cycles.

Real repentance is identifying the limiting belief or false belief and learning new and better ways of thinking and becoming like God.
Can a person who sins and does not forsake them become like God? This is a rather simple question.

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:I need to chime in here a bit.

My profession is a mental health counselor. So I know a bit about this subject.

MOST masturbation (MB) habits are normal, for teens or adults. Nearly all men have or will, and nearly all women do. Nearly 40 percent or so of aging adults do it (over 70).

Having said that, SOME of the time there is a problem. It can be problematic if the behavior interferes with your life, your relationships or your health. But there are situations where the rhetoric around it is worse. For example, MB causes you to be gay or MB leads to more sexual exploration in unhealthy ways. Both are proven false, many times over.

The problem comes in our church where sexuality is so taboo. It comes when we simply DO NOT talk about it at all. We only talk about the bad things and not the healthy things. The "don't touch it" message is not helpful. It is important for people to beable explore their own sexuality (in a healthy way). Your bishop may or may not be objective, and he likely has ZERO idea to identify MB habits related to anxiety, depression, social issues, sexual problems, and a LONG list of things that they will not understand.

I'm NOT saying, people should create habits that replace normal behaviors. Comorbid problems such as compulsive porn use can cause a great deal of harm in relationships and more.

Additionally, there are some HUGE HUGE spiritual things sexual replacements (such as MB), and INCLUDING many hetronormative sexual behaviors will LIMIT your spiritual growth if you don't address them. (Big topic here on that one).

Please PM me if you have question offline, or please, find a mental heath counselor to help you. (Note your bishop can and should counsel you on your spiritual journey in the church, but not your sexual journey or questions anymore than your Bishop would address physical health issues like blood pressure or financial issues like retirement investment)
And I'm sure you learned all this from books in College and other studies except scripture. Since when does school studies supersede scriptural truth? To say that just because almost every person in society masturbates, it is considered normal. Do you see how ludicrous this sounds? This is like saying that inhaling water is normal. Most people die.
Why do people say they follow Christ, yet still normalize sin. The precepts of men say go ahead, it is normal. God says to be pure in heart, in mind and in action, to have virtue garnish our thoughts. Which one of these choices will bring us closer to God?
Is it school based concepts taught by mans own carnal nature, rather than God's word that will save mankind?

The goal is perfection, just what does this mean to you? There's a big difference between working to overcome a bad habit with lots of repentance along the way...and saying this habit is normal, not to worry about it. Ya, right!
Is it correct to not be addicted to some sin, and then tell others it is okay, just normal. Normal for whom?
You have a nice idea here and you are not wrong in that we need to be pure and strive for perfection etc.

Is a person who is depressed in sin because they don't allow God to heal them?

A woman with PTSD...is she in sin because she lacks faith to be set free from her fears and trauma?

The gospel is wonderful and God wants us to be perfect. There is also room for mental health professionals to speak truth too. There is so much that happens in this life that we need help with and understanding of. That is what the gospel doesnt do. It just says that we will be tried and tested and have challenges and weakneses, then it says to simply go to God and repent and he will make you whole.

The gospel doesn't help in areas that lots of people need help in. It's comforting to hear that something is normal, then you don't have to hate yourself over it and can improve. Many people kill themselves because of problems they feel lost and hopeless about. Mental health professionals and other professionals can and do help many people. (Bishops refer many members to counselors) There is room for both and if done correctly one can lead to the other and produce a pretty good healthy individual.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

TrueIntent wrote:
braingrunt wrote:@TrueIntent
So, to get you to clarify the real thrust of your point, I will descend into the ridiculous:
So, are you saying that a person who has had cause to repent cannot recommend repentance?
Nope I am not saying that. I believe in repentance--- it's how we come to Christ. In fact, I would argue that many of the ways we are taught to "repent" in the church may keep us from coming to Christ. Sometimes we go beyond the mark. We should follow the spirit. The Pharisee held their children to standards and laws they were never able to keep themselves...instead of making it part of questions for a worthiness interview (and being hypocrites ourselves) we should just teach from the scriptures, focus on whether or not the behavior brings good fruits or bad fruits (which shame and guilt for something that infants do in the womb) is a bad fruit. Rather, is it an addictive behavior? We should teach that....let's not be hypocrites....seriously if we all had to put a scarlet letter on for the sins we committed and wore them around the sacrament building, we would be a lot more humble about whether or not the sin is as damning as we portray it. I actually believe we do more harm by casting judgements, rather than saying...oh probably 85 percent of the ward has touched themselves inapproprsitely or masturbated at some point....remember...if Christ is the perfect role model, if he is the way, sin, as defined under the law (rules of the Pharisees) is not always sin...look at Christ's apostles, and look at the Pharisees, the Pharisees were the religious elite who "claimed to follow the whole law" but inwardly we were vipers. Look at this way. What do you think Christ would say to this boy if he were to confess this sin to him? What would a Pharisee say to the boy? You have to come to know Christ to understand he wasn't as worried about the perceived sinners as he was about those who claimed to be the religious elite. It's the religious elite who never come to Christ because outwardly they keep the "commandments of men" but inwardly they were judgemental, liars, and hypocrites...they were the furthest from Christ, not the prostitutes, whores, and murders....The apostle Paul used to kill christians. Think about that.
Twissttedd. No one other than Christ has the job of allowing or disallowing sin. Who cares what the Pharisees did. They were not Jesus. Another point, they were under the law of Moses...a law that was fulfilled by Christ years ago. What they did or didn't do is a moot point. Sin is sin and Christ does not give it allowance in the least degree. Think about that.

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

God said be ye therefore perfect (knowing that we couldn't be) because it sure sounds better and more inspiring than be ye therfore mediocre.

To put the burden of perfection on imperfect flesh is tough. We need to be human and learn how to be human before we can ever become like a God.

Masturbation is normal and part of being HUMAN. Just because it's normal doesn't mean we should excuse it or say it's okay though. But to scold a young person for messing up and being "normal" Isint right either. We cannot expect a 13 year old boy or girl to have the maturity or intelligence of a grown married adult. They haven't learned the same things yet and are just starting to learn about sexuality and their body and how it functions etc.

We want to protect our kids and help them to be better than we were and there is nothing wrong in that desire but we cannot expect more of our children than they are capable of for the state they are in. They must learn for themselves.

You can't expect your 13 year old to think of sex like you do if you've been having it for at least as old as he is.

Just teach correct principles and give tons of love because they will mess up as they try to figure out how to be human.

Side note:

If this was a 13 year old girl, would our conversations change at all? Would we still recommend her to talk to her bishop? I'm not sure that is appropriate. Ahh, this brings up the thought that I wish bishop was a joint calling with his wife!

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

freedomforall wrote:
TrueIntent wrote:
braingrunt wrote:@TrueIntent
So, to get you to clarify the real thrust of your point, I will descend into the ridiculous:
So, are you saying that a person who has had cause to repent cannot recommend repentance?
Nope I am not saying that. I believe in repentance--- it's how we come to Christ. In fact, I would argue that many of the ways we are taught to "repent" in the church may keep us from coming to Christ. Sometimes we go beyond the mark. We should follow the spirit. The Pharisee held their children to standards and laws they were never able to keep themselves...instead of making it part of questions for a worthiness interview (and being hypocrites ourselves) we should just teach from the scriptures, focus on whether or not the behavior brings good fruits or bad fruits (which shame and guilt for something that infants do in the womb) is a bad fruit. Rather, is it an addictive behavior? We should teach that....let's not be hypocrites....seriously if we all had to put a scarlet letter on for the sins we committed and wore them around the sacrament building, we would be a lot more humble about whether or not the sin is as damning as we portray it. I actually believe we do more harm by casting judgements, rather than saying...oh probably 85 percent of the ward has touched themselves inapproprsitely or masturbated at some point....remember...if Christ is the perfect role model, if he is the way, sin, as defined under the law (rules of the Pharisees) is not always sin...look at Christ's apostles, and look at the Pharisees, the Pharisees were the religious elite who "claimed to follow the whole law" but inwardly we were vipers. Look at this way. What do you think Christ would say to this boy if he were to confess this sin to him? What would a Pharisee say to the boy? You have to come to know Christ to understand he wasn't as worried about the perceived sinners as he was about those who claimed to be the religious elite. It's the religious elite who never come to Christ because outwardly they keep the "commandments of men" but inwardly they were judgemental, liars, and hypocrites...they were the furthest from Christ, not the prostitutes, whores, and murders....The apostle Paul used to kill christians. Think about that.
Twissttedd. No one other than Christ has the job of allowing or disallowing sin. Who cares what the Pharisees did. They were not Jesus. Another point, they were under the law of Moses...a law that was fulfilled by Christ years ago. What they did or didn't do is a moot point. Sin is sin and Christ does not give it allowance in the least degree. Think about that.
I'm starting to think you are pretty harsh!

No one is debating whether or not we should become as righteous as we can.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

Melissa wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:I need to chime in here a bit.

My profession is a mental health counselor. So I know a bit about this subject.

MOST masturbation (MB) habits are normal, for teens or adults. Nearly all men have or will, and nearly all women do. Nearly 40 percent or so of aging adults do it (over 70).

Having said that, SOME of the time there is a problem. It can be problematic if the behavior interferes with your life, your relationships or your health. But there are situations where the rhetoric around it is worse. For example, MB causes you to be gay or MB leads to more sexual exploration in unhealthy ways. Both are proven false, many times over.

The problem comes in our church where sexuality is so taboo. It comes when we simply DO NOT talk about it at all. We only talk about the bad things and not the healthy things. The "don't touch it" message is not helpful. It is important for people to beable explore their own sexuality (in a healthy way). Your bishop may or may not be objective, and he likely has ZERO idea to identify MB habits related to anxiety, depression, social issues, sexual problems, and a LONG list of things that they will not understand.

I'm NOT saying, people should create habits that replace normal behaviors. Comorbid problems such as compulsive porn use can cause a great deal of harm in relationships and more.

Additionally, there are some HUGE HUGE spiritual things sexual replacements (such as MB), and INCLUDING many hetronormative sexual behaviors will LIMIT your spiritual growth if you don't address them. (Big topic here on that one).

Please PM me if you have question offline, or please, find a mental heath counselor to help you. (Note your bishop can and should counsel you on your spiritual journey in the church, but not your sexual journey or questions anymore than your Bishop would address physical health issues like blood pressure or financial issues like retirement investment)
And I'm sure you learned all this from books in College and other studies except scripture. Since when does school studies supersede scriptural truth? To say that just because almost every person in society masturbates, it is considered normal. Do you see how ludicrous this sounds? This is like saying that inhaling water is normal. Most people die.
Why do people say they follow Christ, yet still normalize sin. The precepts of men say go ahead, it is normal. God says to be pure in heart, in mind and in action, to have virtue garnish our thoughts. Which one of these choices will bring us closer to God?
Is it school based concepts taught by mans own carnal nature, rather than God's word that will save mankind?

The goal is perfection, just what does this mean to you? There's a big difference between working to overcome a bad habit with lots of repentance along the way...and saying this habit is normal, not to worry about it. Ya, right!
Is it correct to not be addicted to some sin, and then tell others it is okay, just normal. Normal for whom?
You have a nice idea here and you are not wrong in that we need to be pure and strive for perfection etc.

Is a person who is depressed in sin because they don't allow God to heal them? Yes! A person, any person, no matter their state of mind...speaking of those who have all their faculties...can lend some humility, sincerity and contriteness and implore God for forgiveness. God being merciful can accept the slightest effort of repentance as long as it is with real intent and full purpose of heart as written.

A woman with PTSD...is she in sin because she lacks faith to be set free from her fears and trauma? Answered above.

The gospel is wonderful and God wants us to be perfect. There is also room for mental health professionals to speak truth too. There is so much that happens in this life that we need help with and understanding of. That is what the gospel doesnt do. This is one reason we're told to feast upon the word. Mere membership in the church does not save anyone, but is the beginning, a guidance, toward a path, even Christ in order to be saved. The key here is that we must participate in that path, there are no free rides. It just says that we will be tried and tested and have challenges and weakneses, then it says to simply go to God and repent and he will make you whole.

The gospel doesn't help in areas that lots of people need help in. The gospel is not the church, it is the scriptures, it is the "good news" by which we must learn through reading the scriptures. How many members go to church as a social gathering, giving no thought to reaching out to the Savior? It's comforting to hear that something is normal, then you don't have to hate yourself over it and can improve. Many people kill themselves because of problems they feel lost and hopeless about. Mental health professionals and other professionals can and do help many people. (Bishops refer many members to counselors) There is room for both and if done correctly one can lead to the other and produce a pretty good healthy individual.
A person going to a counselor that tells them masturbation is normal and okay...better run the opposite direction. Being told sin is okay is a good way to keep someone from repenting. A heck, everybody does it, it must be okay mentality.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

Melissa wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
TrueIntent wrote:
braingrunt wrote:@TrueIntent
So, to get you to clarify the real thrust of your point, I will descend into the ridiculous:
So, are you saying that a person who has had cause to repent cannot recommend repentance?
Nope I am not saying that. I believe in repentance--- it's how we come to Christ. In fact, I would argue that many of the ways we are taught to "repent" in the church may keep us from coming to Christ. Sometimes we go beyond the mark. We should follow the spirit. The Pharisee held their children to standards and laws they were never able to keep themselves...instead of making it part of questions for a worthiness interview (and being hypocrites ourselves) we should just teach from the scriptures, focus on whether or not the behavior brings good fruits or bad fruits (which shame and guilt for something that infants do in the womb) is a bad fruit. Rather, is it an addictive behavior? We should teach that....let's not be hypocrites....seriously if we all had to put a scarlet letter on for the sins we committed and wore them around the sacrament building, we would be a lot more humble about whether or not the sin is as damning as we portray it. I actually believe we do more harm by casting judgements, rather than saying...oh probably 85 percent of the ward has touched themselves inapproprsitely or masturbated at some point....remember...if Christ is the perfect role model, if he is the way, sin, as defined under the law (rules of the Pharisees) is not always sin...look at Christ's apostles, and look at the Pharisees, the Pharisees were the religious elite who "claimed to follow the whole law" but inwardly we were vipers. Look at this way. What do you think Christ would say to this boy if he were to confess this sin to him? What would a Pharisee say to the boy? You have to come to know Christ to understand he wasn't as worried about the perceived sinners as he was about those who claimed to be the religious elite. It's the religious elite who never come to Christ because outwardly they keep the "commandments of men" but inwardly they were judgemental, liars, and hypocrites...they were the furthest from Christ, not the prostitutes, whores, and murders....The apostle Paul used to kill christians. Think about that.
Twissttedd. No one other than Christ has the job of allowing or disallowing sin. Who cares what the Pharisees did. They were not Jesus. Another point, they were under the law of Moses...a law that was fulfilled by Christ years ago. What they did or didn't do is a moot point. Sin is sin and Christ does not give it allowance in the least degree. Think about that.
I'm starting to think you are pretty harsh!

No one is debating whether or not we should become as righteous as we can.
And I am getting fed up with people saying I do not know my scriptures. I know people sin and struggle to overcome, this is a fact of life for all humans wanting to change for the better.
However, it is sin to justify sin, to say it is okay. Scriptures are very plain in this regard. And for those that say we do not have to confess to those who preside over us is not based on scripture.

The good news is this:

Mosiah 26:29,30
29 Therefore I say unto you, Go; and whosoever transgresseth against me, him shall ye judge according to the sins which he has committed; and if he confess his sins before thee and me, and repenteth in the sincerity of his heart, him shall ye forgive, and I will forgive him also.
30 Yea, and as often as my people repent will I forgive them their trespasses against me.

And here is some good and bad news:

Helaman 13:11
11 But if ye will repent and return unto the Lord your God I will turn away mine anger, saith the Lord; yea, thus saith the Lord, blessed are they who will repent and turn unto me, but wo unto him that repenteth not.

There are plenty other scriptures but these are a beginning.

According to the statements in red above, do you still think I'm harsh...I mean really look at the philosophy behind the wording and see for yourself. If you concur with those statements, what can I say, huh?

zionminded
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1438

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by zionminded »

freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:
BYULAWGUY wrote:
Serragon wrote:If you have truly forsaken the sin and confessed to the Lord, you don't need to confess to the Bishop.

If you are struggling and unable to forsake the sin, confession to the Bishop is probably necessary.
This is so wrong on so many levels.

To the kid that posted this, I have been a bishop. Most of the boys masturbate but most don't repent for it. Of all the sins that the youth confessed to me, I never once told their parents.
Repent for it?

Nobody is keeping score. Nobody but the person who is in guilt and shame cycles.

Real repentance is identifying the limiting belief or false belief and learning new and better ways of thinking and becoming like God.
Can a person who sins and does not forsake them become like God? This is a rather simple question.
Depends on what you consider sin. Some sins we make up, other are very important.

freedomforall
Gnolaum ∞
Posts: 16479
Location: WEST OF THE NEW JERUSALEM

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by freedomforall »

zionminded wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:
BYULAWGUY wrote:
This is so wrong on so many levels.

To the kid that posted this, I have been a bishop. Most of the boys masturbate but most don't repent for it. Of all the sins that the youth confessed to me, I never once told their parents.
Repent for it?

Nobody is keeping score. Nobody but the person who is in guilt and shame cycles.

Real repentance is identifying the limiting belief or false belief and learning new and better ways of thinking and becoming like God.
Can a person who sins and does not forsake them become like God? This is a rather simple question.
Depends on what you consider sin. Some sins we make up, other are very important.
Mosiah 4:29,30
29 And finally, I cannot tell you all the things whereby ye may commit sin; for there are divers ways and means, even so many that I cannot number them.
30 But this much I can tell you, that if ye do not watch yourselves, and your thoughts, and your words, and your deeds, and observe the commandments of God, and continue in the faith of what ye have heard concerning the coming of our Lord, even unto the end of your lives, ye must perish. And now, O man, remember, and perish not.

User avatar
Rachael
Captain of whatever
Posts: 2410

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Rachael »

freedomforall wrote:
Rachael wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
Obrien wrote:Listen, I do not condone or encourage people to sin. The whole key is to become a saint by accepting the atonement of Christ. I choose to focus on that concept, and you choose to focus on genitalia. Now you are reaching... :-?
The atonement is a great thing to focus on, true.
May a person focus on the atonement and expect salvation without repentance?
Is Christ okay with doing all the work while a person skates along with no real commitment?
Isn't by accepting the atonement one has to do all in their power to have it stay functional for them? Can one say they accept the atonement and still be happy to favor their favorite sin, whatever that may be...in general?
Honestly can one sit in a bar, get drunk and make a scene, watch half naked women dance around and still think they are saved because they accept the atonement, without repentance?

In other words, what does a person have to do, other than merely acknowledging the atonement, to cause the atonement to take affect in their life?

Here is a hint:
Doctrine and Covenants 1:31
31 For I the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance;

I am not making up this stuff. It's in the book!

You pit grace against works. Like pitting the book of James against the Pauline epistles. No one can attain perfection in this fleshly life, but by focusing on that only, thinking you can, can make one self righteous and phariseical. We have to rely on the Atonement and claim the righteousness of God. Even our best works are but filthy rags before God. So we bring Him our dirty laundry, because He is the only one that can wash them in His holy blood to become clean. That's what claiming the Righteousness of God means. Claiming it means you have faith in the Atonement, yet you will become so glad to receive this gift, you'll want to become a disciple of Christ.

Being meek, humble, unjudgemental, charitable, and asking forgiveness for our daily trespasses is the focus. Good works will naturally happen with that attitude.

You can busy yourself to exhaustion like Martha, or sit at the feet of Jesus which is the good part.
Luke 10:

Bible > KJV > Luke 10

◄ Luke 10 ►
38Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. 39And she had a sister called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. 40But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? bid her therefore that she help me. 41And Jesus answered and said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: 42But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her."

Mormon Kid, don't let anyone take that good part away from you.
Ah, Rachael, Rachael, I have posted this scripture ad nauseam: Moroni 10:32,33

This is how we can become perfect in this life. We can become perfect IN CHRIST. We repent and commit ourselves to serving him and keeping his commandments...and in return he takes our sins upon him, rendering us perfect...in him! Rather simple, isn't it? I guess I merely post that scripture just to see how many times I can post it. Just like scripture in general. very few read them, let alone understand their meaning.

Would you be so bold as to call Christ a liar? After all, it was a prophet of God that was instructed to write this little tidbit on the plates. Isn't it time to realize this fact? Or are they all just the arm of flesh, huh?
Ok FFA, you got the letter of the law down pat. I hope you get the spirit of the law too one day.

You post scriptures all the live long day, but I doubt you'll find anything specific on masturbation. Unless you mingle it with the doctrine of men.

I like part of one of your posts when you said this:
"
freedomforall wrote:"...The goal set before us is to abhor sin, abhor evil, to seek to be pure in heart and mind, to have virtue garnish our thoughts unceasingly. Those who are not are still in the natural man category. There is a difference between someone striving to be perfect and those who don't give it much thought. Those who list to follow the spirit, and those that do not. Those who lust and repent, make further mistakes, yet repent again and do their best...and those that say:..

But then you apply this scripture?
freedomforall wrote:[/i]2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God."[/i]
Mormon Kid isn't like that. He wouldn't have come here seeking advice about it if he was. he clearly abhors the habit, but the flesh is weak. He is very young. Both of us are older, so resisting the temptation is pretty easy now. I'd rather take a nap. But making a mountain out of a molehill about something 99℅ of us has done at least one or more times during pubescence or as young adults is ridiculous and harmful. So you applying 2Nephi 28:8 to him is wrong.

There may be real public consequences for Mormon Kid by confessing this very private transgression that may be way out of proportion of what he's done. Its between him and God.

User avatar
TrueIntent
captain of 100
Posts: 974

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by TrueIntent »

freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:
Repent for it?

Nobody is keeping score. Nobody but the person who is in guilt and shame cycles.

Real repentance is identifying the limiting belief or false belief and learning new and better ways of thinking and becoming like God.
Can a person who sins and does not forsake them become like God? This is a rather simple question.
Depends on what you consider sin. Some sins we make up, other are very important.
Mosiah 4:29,30
29 And finally, I cannot tell you all the things whereby ye may commit sin; for there are divers ways and means, even so many that I cannot number them.
30 But this much I can tell you, that if ye do not watch yourselves, and your thoughts, and your words, and your deeds, and observe the commandments of God, and continue in the faith of what ye have heard concerning the coming of our Lord, even unto the end of your lives, ye must perish. And now, O man, remember, and perish not.
I could take this same scripture and apply it to your pride--and your pride is the greater sin. This is why we shouldn't apply meaning to anything unless the scripture is specifically talking about masturbation. This is what the church does. It's wrong. You'll be judged with the same judgement you judge others. So I GUESS WE CAN apply this scripture to your pride.

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

freedomforall wrote:
Melissa wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
zionminded wrote:I need to chime in here a bit.

My profession is a mental health counselor. So I know a bit about this subject.

MOST masturbation (MB) habits are normal, for teens or adults. Nearly all men have or will, and nearly all women do. Nearly 40 percent or so of aging adults do it (over 70).

Having said that, SOME of the time there is a problem. It can be problematic if the behavior interferes with your life, your relationships or your health. But there are situations where the rhetoric around it is worse. For example, MB causes you to be gay or MB leads to more sexual exploration in unhealthy ways. Both are proven false, many times over.

The problem comes in our church where sexuality is so taboo. It comes when we simply DO NOT talk about it at all. We only talk about the bad things and not the healthy things. The "don't touch it" message is not helpful. It is important for people to beable explore their own sexuality (in a healthy way). Your bishop may or may not be objective, and he likely has ZERO idea to identify MB habits related to anxiety, depression, social issues, sexual problems, and a LONG list of things that they will not understand.

I'm NOT saying, people should create habits that replace normal behaviors. Comorbid problems such as compulsive porn use can cause a great deal of harm in relationships and more.

Additionally, there are some HUGE HUGE spiritual things sexual replacements (such as MB), and INCLUDING many hetronormative sexual behaviors will LIMIT your spiritual growth if you don't address them. (Big topic here on that one).

Please PM me if you have question offline, or please, find a mental heath counselor to help you. (Note your bishop can and should counsel you on your spiritual journey in the church, but not your sexual journey or questions anymore than your Bishop would address physical health issues like blood pressure or financial issues like retirement investment)
And I'm sure you learned all this from books in College and other studies except scripture. Since when does school studies supersede scriptural truth? To say that just because almost every person in society masturbates, it is considered normal. Do you see how ludicrous this sounds? This is like saying that inhaling water is normal. Most people die.
Why do people say they follow Christ, yet still normalize sin. The precepts of men say go ahead, it is normal. God says to be pure in heart, in mind and in action, to have virtue garnish our thoughts. Which one of these choices will bring us closer to God?
Is it school based concepts taught by mans own carnal nature, rather than God's word that will save mankind?

The goal is perfection, just what does this mean to you? There's a big difference between working to overcome a bad habit with lots of repentance along the way...and saying this habit is normal, not to worry about it. Ya, right!
Is it correct to not be addicted to some sin, and then tell others it is okay, just normal. Normal for whom?
You have a nice idea here and you are not wrong in that we need to be pure and strive for perfection etc.

Is a person who is depressed in sin because they don't allow God to heal them? Yes! A person, any person, no matter their state of mind...speaking of those who have all their faculties...can lend some humility, sincerity and contriteness and implore God for forgiveness. God being merciful can accept the slightest effort of repentance as long as it is with real intent and full purpose of heart as written.

A woman with PTSD...is she in sin because she lacks faith to be set free from her fears and trauma? Answered above.

The gospel is wonderful and God wants us to be perfect. There is also room for mental health professionals to speak truth too. There is so much that happens in this life that we need help with and understanding of. That is what the gospel doesnt do. This is one reason we're told to feast upon the word. Mere membership in the church does not save anyone, but is the beginning, a guidance, toward a path, even Christ in order to be saved. The key here is that we must participate in that path, there are no free rides. It just says that we will be tried and tested and have challenges and weakneses, then it says to simply go to God and repent and he will make you whole.

The gospel doesn't help in areas that lots of people need help in. The gospel is not the church, it is the scriptures, it is the "good news" by which we must learn through reading the scriptures. How many members go to church as a social gathering, giving no thought to reaching out to the Savior? It's comforting to hear that something is normal, then you don't have to hate yourself over it and can improve. Many people kill themselves because of problems they feel lost and hopeless about. Mental health professionals and other professionals can and do help many people. (Bishops refer many members to counselors) There is room for both and if done correctly one can lead to the other and produce a pretty good healthy individual.
A person going to a counselor that tells them masturbation is normal and okay...better run the opposite direction. Being told sin is okay is a good way to keep someone from repenting. A heck, everybody does it, it must be okay mentality.
Answer this question:
Why have apostles stated, "do you have the faith to not be healed"?

I know the difference between the church and the gospel, i said gospel - no need to slam the whole churchy thing when I meant as I said - gospel.

You stated that a depressed individual is in sin and needs to repent. The state of depression has many factors, more than stating one needs to have some humility. Have you ever been depressed? Someone gets seriously I'll and has to be on a month round of antibiotics, or has to take some nasty iv drugs after giving birth, this person then has their gut flora all screwed up (which has been linked to depression), does this person repent for getting sick? Repent for having a baby, Or repent for the lack of a balanced flora, or simply repent that they are subject to things outside their control?

Have you ever experienced PTSD?

To tell a person who experienced something traumatic enough that they are in sin if they experience symptoms of fear or have flashbacks that disable them...is very harsh.

So a woman abused as a child grows up to have some issues needs to repent for something she didn't do? Something that was done to her? Or can she be told that it's not her fault and have a compassionate person help her through the pain and issues without being stigmatized and judged?

I feel that you lend to the scriptures as a pedestal for your own benefit. I'm glad you have a strict adherence to the gospel, that is a good thing. But do you know how truly compassionate the Father is?

Do you know that Love is a governing force in life and in the eternities? We must understand humans and we must understand the gospel and who Christ is.

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

Rachael wrote:
freedomforall wrote:
Rachael wrote:
freedomforall wrote: The atonement is a great thing to focus on, true.
May a person focus on the atonement and expect salvation without repentance?
Is Christ okay with doing all the work while a person skates along with no real commitment?
Isn't by accepting the atonement one has to do all in their power to have it stay functional for them? Can one say they accept the atonement and still be happy to favor their favorite sin, whatever that may be...in general?
Honestly can one sit in a bar, get drunk and make a scene, watch half naked women dance around and still think they are saved because they accept the atonement, without repentance?

In other words, what does a person have to do, other than merely acknowledging the atonement, to cause the atonement to take affect in their life?

Here is a hint:
Doctrine and Covenants 1:31
31 For I the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance;

I am not making up this stuff. It's in the book!

You pit grace against works. Like pitting the book of James against the Pauline epistles. No one can attain perfection in this fleshly life, but by focusing on that only, thinking you can, can make one self righteous and phariseical. We have to rely on the Atonement and claim the righteousness of God. Even our best works are but filthy rags before God. So we bring Him our dirty laundry, because He is the only one that can wash them in His holy blood to become clean. That's what claiming the Righteousness of God means. Claiming it means you have faith in the Atonement, yet you will become so glad to receive this gift, you'll want to become a disciple of Christ.

Being meek, humble, unjudgemental, charitable, and asking forgiveness for our daily trespasses is the focus. Good works will naturally happen with that attitude.

You can busy yourself to exhaustion like Martha, or sit at the feet of Jesus which is the good part.
Luke 10:

Bible > KJV > Luke 10

◄ Luke 10 ►
38Now it came to pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. 39And she had a sister called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. 40But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? bid her therefore that she help me. 41And Jesus answered and said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: 42But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her."

Mormon Kid, don't let anyone take that good part away from you.
Ah, Rachael, Rachael, I have posted this scripture ad nauseam: Moroni 10:32,33

This is how we can become perfect in this life. We can become perfect IN CHRIST. We repent and commit ourselves to serving him and keeping his commandments...and in return he takes our sins upon him, rendering us perfect...in him! Rather simple, isn't it? I guess I merely post that scripture just to see how many times I can post it. Just like scripture in general. very few read them, let alone understand their meaning.

Would you be so bold as to call Christ a liar? After all, it was a prophet of God that was instructed to write this little tidbit on the plates. Isn't it time to realize this fact? Or are they all just the arm of flesh, huh?
Ok FFA, you got the letter of the law down pat. I hope you get the spirit of the law too one day.

You post scriptures all the live long day, but I doubt you'll find anything specific on masturbation. Unless you mingle it with the doctrine of men.

I like part of one of your posts when you said this:
"
freedomforall wrote:"...The goal set before us is to abhor sin, abhor evil, to seek to be pure in heart and mind, to have virtue garnish our thoughts unceasingly. Those who are not are still in the natural man category. There is a difference between someone striving to be perfect and those who don't give it much thought. Those who list to follow the spirit, and those that do not. Those who lust and repent, make further mistakes, yet repent again and do their best...and those that say:..

But then you apply this scripture?
freedomforall wrote:[/i]2 Nephi 28:8
8 And there shall also be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry; nevertheless, fear God—he will justify in committing a little sin; yea, lie a little, take the advantage of one because of his words, dig a pit for thy neighbor; there is no harm in this; and do all these things, for tomorrow we die; and if it so be that we are guilty, God will beat us with a few stripes, and at last we shall be saved in the kingdom of God."[/i]
Mormon Kid isn't like that. He wouldn't have come here seeking advice about it if he was. he clearly abhors the habit, but the flesh is weak. He is very young. Both of us are older, so resisting the temptation is pretty easy now. I'd rather take a nap. But making a mountain out of a molehill about something 99℅ of us has done at least one or more times during pubescence or as young adults is ridiculous and harmful. So you applying 2Nephi 28:8 to him is wrong.

There may be real public consequences for Mormon Kid by confessing this very private transgression that may be way out of proportion of what he's done. Its between him and God.
I agree that he could face some unwanted consequences for divulging this to his bishop. As the other bishop stated earlier, he would then continue to monitor the issue with the child. That means he would continue to ask him about masturbation through out his youth and that itself would be damaging. He would constantly be reminded of it.
You should only go to the bishop if you have a very serious problem that needs years of monitoring. It's unlikely he does since he has already stopped. It's not a compulsion.

I believe that the Mormon kid wants to reach out to the bishop to be righteous and receive a level of care that he is searching for. Maybe he has other problems and that is the only way he knows how to tell someone or to get someone to notice him and pay attention. I wouldn't be suprised if there were deeper issues at play. Not saying there is, I just wouldn't be suprised.

User avatar
Robin Hood
Level 34 Illuminated
Posts: 13112
Location: England

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Robin Hood »

Melissa wrote:
I agree that he could face some unwanted consequences for divulging this to his bishop. As the other bishop stated earlier, he would then continue to monitor the issue with the child. That means he would continue to ask him about masturbation through out his youth and that itself would be damaging. He would constantly be reminded of it.
You should only go to the bishop if you have a very serious problem that needs years of monitoring.
You misrepresent me.
I said nothing about years of monitoring.
Once the initial period is over I would never mention it again. I would never ask him if he was free of the practice because, knowing he sought me out initially, I would have every confidence he would raise it with me himself if it ever became an issue again.
You must think we bishops are some kind of unfeeling monsters.

User avatar
Rachael
Captain of whatever
Posts: 2410

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Rachael »

Melissa wrote: I believe that the Mormon kid wants to reach out to the bishop to be righteous and receive a level of care that he is searching for. Maybe he has other problems and that is the only way he knows how to tell someone or to get someone to notice him and pay attention. I wouldn't be suprised if there were deeper issues at play. Not saying there is, I just wouldn't be suprised.
I wouldn't be surprised if they're deeper issues also.

I also wouldn't be surprised if justamormonguy is an adult that has been lurking for a while and wanted to see our reactions since there has been some controversy stirred up lately on another recent thread about this topic.

But in case he is who he said he is, I advise him to seek care from Christ, and not get attention from the bishop.

User avatar
Melissa
captain of 1,000
Posts: 1697

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Melissa »

Robin Hood wrote:
Melissa wrote:
I agree that he could face some unwanted consequences for divulging this to his bishop. As the other bishop stated earlier, he would then continue to monitor the issue with the child. That means he would continue to ask him about masturbation through out his youth and that itself would be damaging. He would constantly be reminded of it.
You should only go to the bishop if you have a very serious problem that needs years of monitoring.
You misrepresent me.
I said nothing about years of monitoring.
Once the initial period is over I would never mention it again. I would never ask him if he was free of the practice because, knowing he sought me out initially, I would have every confidence he would raise it with me himself if it ever became an issue again.
You must think we bishops are some kind of unfeeling monsters.
I'm sorry to misrepresent you. No need to attack in return if you are indeed a bishop. I don't think bishops are monsters and are unfeeling. I know bishops have an immense responsibility and I respect them for their love and service at the, often time, sacrifice of their own family time.

I would assume, as I have witnessed in my own life, that the bishop would inquire -all though it may not be direct questioning.

Again, I have respect for bishops. I'm not a hater.

User avatar
Robin Hood
Level 34 Illuminated
Posts: 13112
Location: England

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Robin Hood »

Melissa wrote:
Robin Hood wrote:
Melissa wrote:
I agree that he could face some unwanted consequences for divulging this to his bishop. As the other bishop stated earlier, he would then continue to monitor the issue with the child. That means he would continue to ask him about masturbation through out his youth and that itself would be damaging. He would constantly be reminded of it.
You should only go to the bishop if you have a very serious problem that needs years of monitoring.
You misrepresent me.
I said nothing about years of monitoring.
Once the initial period is over I would never mention it again. I would never ask him if he was free of the practice because, knowing he sought me out initially, I would have every confidence he would raise it with me himself if it ever became an issue again.
You must think we bishops are some kind of unfeeling monsters.
I'm sorry to misrepresent you. No need to attack in return if you are indeed a bishop. I don't think bishops are monsters and are unfeeling. I know bishops have an immense responsibility and I respect them for their love and service at the, often time, sacrifice of their own family time.

I would assume, as I have witnessed in my own life, that the bishop would inquire -all though it may not be direct questioning.

Again, I have respect for bishops. I'm not a hater.
Thank you.
Been serving for five and a half years now. Batteries are running low but I'll carry on until someone tells me to stop.

Serragon
captain of 1,000
Posts: 3444

Re: Will my Bishop Tell My Parents

Post by Serragon »

From reading his posts and ideas for a while, I would suspect that Robin Hood is an excellent Bishop and that those he serves love him very much.

Post Reply