Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Who Am I?

A simple question with infinite meaning can often times be ignored
Because the question one thinks is simple is often not simply answered

Which came first: the egg or the bird? We often have asked ourselves
And strangely no answer can come from the question upon which our mind may dwell

“Who am I” I ask, a question so simple but with no answer of which I’m aware
So how easy a question so simple and honest can be something deeper I’ll share

I often was taught that I came from a God who loves me and shows me he cares
Later at school I learned that a person is the clothes that he or she wears

Nature and nurture determine the person which we will one day become
Some traits are genetic, some traits come from parents, and those traits make up the grand sum

There’s Moses and Jesus and Darwin and Freud, and others with grand explanations
But can their answers be taken for truth without having further citations?

My feelings, my thoughts, my words, and my acts aren’t always unique to me
But ALL of my feelings, my thoughts, and my words in nobody else you will see

Some tell me of heaven and what I’ll become the minute right after I die
Some tell me that death is the end of this life, and you’ll never come back if you try

So often I wonder: does my existence have existence far beyond this small earth?
Can my existence exist on forever, and did I exist before birth?

Some give me answers without telling how, others the “hows” without “whys”
But no one can answer what happens hereafter until that same person dies

Some say we are one, just a different projection of who “we” really are
I’d say that’s an answer, but in my own answer I wouldn’t go quite that far

My answer is this, I know who I am, because who I am is me
And this person I am, or who I become is exactly who I want to be

I might not know all of the answers, like where I’ll go when I die
Or whether or not we lived before birth, or if God watches down from the sky

But the answer I know is who I am now, and knowing that sets me free
To do the things I feel I should do, and to be who I want to be

Some people may say I am lost or confused, or maybe I just lost my way
Because I choose not to believe, or to do, or to say the things that they say

You’ll never be me and I’ll never be you, so how can you know who I am?
Some tell me I’m this, some tell me I’m that, so how can I tell what’s the scam?

So I will decide what’s best for me, and you must decide for you
Because I am one, cause if I were we, then we would have to be two

So questions of who we become after death or what we were before birth
Don’t have to be all of or part of the answer of who we are when we live on this earth

I do things and says things that others find odd, but also I find others strange

But if we can just accept who we are, then acceptance requires no change

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

On Repentance

A friend of mine recently was wondering what my thoughts are on repentance. This is a tough question for me because I don’t really believe in sin anymore. So I am going to approach this in the viewpoint I had when I did believe in sin. I will attempt to use the scriptures that I had growing up in the LDS church to explain my reasoning. There are some scriptures which I was not happy with (namely some of the scriptures in the D&C [Doctrine and Covenants]) because I did not feel that they fell in line with the teachings that should be prominent in Christianity.

First I will say that sin is one of my biggest qualms with religion. People will refer to the Ten Commandments as their moral code. Others will refer to the Bible as a whole for their moral code. I don’t understand how either of these can be used to create a moral code. The Bible (namely the Old Testament, but parts of the New Testament) can be used to justify incest, slavery, polygamy, and one could even argue that it justifies genocide. Most people who defend the Bible as the word of God will claim that polygamy and murder of women and children are very evil deeds. It only takes one read through and you will find countless examples of both (All links are to the KJV that the LDS church has online):

-Killing: 1 Samuel 15:2-3, Jeremiah 48:10, Joshua 8:1-29, Joshua 6:20-21, Judges 20:48, and countless other examples

-Incest: Genesis 19:30-38, Genesis 38, Exodus 6:20, Genesis 20:12 (there may be a consideration that Sarah is actually Abraham’s niece, there are a few other examples of both “holy” men and unholy men which committed incest

-Polygamy: Genesis 16:1-11, Genesis 29:21-28, 2 Samuel 2:1-2, Countless other prophets and kings with their wives and concubines

I give these only as a few examples. The LDS church has an official explanation for the polygamy thing and as to why Joseph Smith practiced polygamy and several other LDS prophets after him until the official declaration was released, and later added to LDS cannon. I just want to make the point that the Bible is full of things that are not considered by modern society as moral things, but yet modern Christianity has set the Bible as its source of righteous standards and morals.

Why we have Ten Commandments in front of courthouses I do not know, but I’m not upset about it. I just think that it is more of a symbol than actually standing for a moral code. After all things like worshiping other gods, lying (when not in cases of perjury or fraud), saying the name of God in vain, committing adultery, not honoring your parents, coveting, making graven images, and not honoring the Sabbath day are all perfectly legal. If we count bearing false witness as in the case of perjury or fraud then there are in fact only three out of the ten that are illegal within the US.

Whether you agree with me on this or not, I don’t really care. I just have come to the conclusion that morality and ethics are determined by society and individuals. What “God has said” can change, and very well has changed over time and between religions. For some drinking is a sin; yet Jesus himself drank wine as it was the custom for his time. Some say that only being a drunkard is a sin, but if you read Noah the prophet got quite drunk one night and it is argued that Ham sodomized his father. When Lot’s daughters seduced him he was also too drunk to tell they were his own daughters suggesting that he also did his fair share of heavy drinking.

So as I was growing up I was told by the church what was and what wasn’t a sin. This was a long list of do’s: go to church, read scriptures daily, say prayers daily, pay tithing, serve in the church, etc… as well as a list of do nots: no sexual acts of any kind before marriage, don’t rebel against the church or your parents, don’t drink/smoke/drink coffee or tea/do drugs, don’t work/shop/do “worldly” things on Sunday, don’t lie/cheat/steal, etc… This is all along with a list of cultural do not’s and do’s which are not official commandments according to the church, but are implied either by being taught by a prophet of the church or just a cultural thing or “suggestions”. These include: not watching sports on Sunday (Kimball The Miracle of Forgiveness), not watching rated R movies (there are several talks on this, I only linked one), not dating until you’re 16 (For the Strength of Youth), no caffeine or sometimes just coca-cola, other taboo things like sleeping with someone of the opposite sex even if there are no sexual acts performed.

I was a confused young man in a world or so many do’s and do not’s that I felt like I had lost sight of what was really important. Jesus often criticized the Pharisees for their strict obedience to the law as opposed to following a higher law or the most important commandment which was to love God and to love your neighbor. So why is it that we put so much emphasis on the laws and commandments which Jesus is not found preaching in the New Testament, and instead focus on things that are only covered by a few verses in the entire Bible? I had often struggled with this, and therefore struggled with the idea of repentance. If forsaking sin is a stipulation for repentance then how am I ever supposed to repent if I have to worry about doing so many things all the time? I don’t think I ever fully grasped the idea of repentance because I was always stuck on feeling horrible about myself, instead of focusing on making myself a better person.
If church is for sinners just like a hospital is for sick people, then how come we focus so much on the sins in church? It’s like going to a hospital to receive chemo for your lung cancer, and instead receiving a long lecture series on how smoking causes cancer. I feel that we (or I felt that we) focused way too much energy as  religious people in condemning and defining sin that we lose the big picture or becoming better people. I feel that one of the biggest reasons that pornography is such a “huge problem” in the LDS church is because you talk so much about it. Guaranteed that a normal 13 year old boy that hears someone talking about the stuff he saw the other day on the internet is going to go home with only more desire to look at it.

But I digress; the whole point of this is to talk about repentance and my thoughts on it. The LDS church defines repentance as:

“A change of mind and heart that brings a fresh attitude toward God, oneself, and life in general. Repentance implies that a person turns away from evil and turns his heart and will to God, submitting to God’s commandments and desires and forsaking sin. True repentance comes from a love for God and a sincere desire to obey his commandments. All accountable persons have sinned and must repent in order to progress toward salvation. Only through the atonement of Jesus Christ can our repentance become effective and accepted by God.”

I think that repentance is about a change of heart (and LDS doctrine agrees) more than a change of behavior. A change of heart is not something that is given by a list of commandments or things that one must do to repent. If you don’t feel bad for doing something you cannot by definition repent. If you feel bad for doing something you’ve already started to repent automatically. One can’t just have a “change of heart” because they hear a talk in church or their bishop/priest tells them to. If you tell someone who is gay that they “must have a change of heart” or they’ll go to hell is like walking up to a democrat and telling them they must vote republican or when they die they’ll lose all their estate to the government (I use the term is like, there are obvious differences I’m just making a quick analogy). You’re asking someone who feels good about what they are doing (because that is what their natural inclination is) to stop doing what they feel they want to do.
It’s true that one could argue that almost no one is repentant because almost everyone feels good doing some kind of sin. I’m not trying to say that, I’m trying to say that if you feel BETTER keeping a commandment that you feel comes from God than sinning, that would indicated true repentance because you had a “change of heart”.

Feeling guilty for doing something is very different than feeling guilty for doing something you feel is bad. There is a difference between doing something that is wrong and worried about it affecting your salvation/church status/condemnation and feeling sad that you did something innately evil/upset God. Some people go to church because they fear hell; I’d argue that that person with that attitude wouldn’t make it into heaven because they feared God not loved him. The same could be said about the repentance process we have in churches, we fear the shame/punishment more than we feel upset for doing something wrong.
I sometimes hurt other’s feelings with the things I say. I genuinely feel bad because I hurt their feelings, but it would do no good to feel bad if it was just because I feared the social/economic repercussions of offending someone. Just like the brown-nosers are really annoying in a corporate world, I’m sure that Jesus would feel the same about those in the religious or spiritual world. The crazy thing about most people’s beliefs in modern Christianity is that God knows the intentions or your heart as well as your actions. In my opinion merely “going through the motions” isn’t repentance, it’s just trying to brown-nose God. So that’s probably why step one in repentance is having a change of heart because you can’t really do the rest properly without that part.

So how can one truly feel this “change of heart”? Well according to LDS doctrine everyone receives what is referred to as the light of Christ which the Book of Mormon prophet Moroni teaches is basically our conscience. So God gave us this inherent gift to know what is right and wrong. Once you are baptized into the LDS church, you are given a further gift: the gift of the Holy Ghost which is like the light of Christ on cocaine (or whatever your stimulant or choice is). This often confused me because I was told that people that live in remote areas and aren’t taught Christian values are treated as innocent in the eyes of God. This as an answer to my question if you don’t believe in pre-destination and God is a fair God then what about people who aren’t taught about the truth and are evil (cannibalistic tribes, warlords, etc…). I was told they would still have a chance (and according to Mormon doctrine it will be in the spirit world in the life hereafter) to accept the truth. Other Christians have told me that they will be judged on what knowledge they were given. But according to LDS doctrine everyone is given the light of Christ which will help us determine what is good and what isn’t good. So then how come there are so many different opinions on righteousness and sin? I still have that question, and am waiting for a good response (if you think you have a good response, I’ve probably already heard it and don’t find it convincing).

So we’ve got the point now that we have to have a change of heart, and that magically comes from God through our conscience, the light of Christ, or whatever you want to call it. So after that what are the steps? Well Jesus taught a pretty good lesson when he said “Go and sin no more”. Obviously not doing the sin again is a very good measure of how repentant one is. But does that mean if we commit the sin again we aren’t repentant? The truth is I don’t know. I don’t believe that any man is at liberty to speak or to judge. Romans 14:13 expresses my best feelings on the topic, don’t judge but only work towards helping others towards their goals of righteousness. After all Paul argues earlier in the chapter that we will all stand accountable to God at the last day for our own actions, so why should we be concerned with others?

It is exactly this topic that I want to bring up another step in the repentance process: confession. In 1 John 1:9 we read that confession leads to forgiveness from God. I agree with this, because it is part of being honest with ourselves. If God knows everything, then denying something to God means that we don’t accept that we ourselves have done something. I view confession to God as something more for us to accept what we have done rather that the need of God to hear our confession. After all if God is all powerful and all knowing why would he need to hear a confession from us? But confession is brought up typically in a sense of confessing to God, so why do Catholics confess to a priest and why do Mormons confess to a Bishop?
Well James 5:16 seems to be the only evidence that one should confess publicly within the Bible. So as to the Catholic belief in confession I cannot speak to as I am neither Catholic nor did I grow up Catholic. Therefore I have no opinion on that matter. The LDS idea of confession does hold some scriptural value if you believe in the LDS cannon of the Book of Mormon and the Doctrine and Covenants. The high priest Alma was given the commandment from God to go and basically demand repentance of those in the church who had “been deceived” into sinning. In this case he basically was given authority to excommunicate from the church those members who would not confess of their sins and show a repentant attitude. D&C 59:12 refers to the same type of thing as James 5:16 that we should confess our sins to other members of the church. So of all the mountain of scriptural verses, only three clearly state you need a public confession (I lied, it’s actually four. There’s another story just like the Alma story above). But the point being why is it required for repentance if it is only stated four times in LDS scripture. On top of all that, the two from the Book of Mormon point more towards serious and open sinning rather than sin that is not open and more discrete.

It is my opinion (and kind of was as a believing member of the church) that sins are not required to be confessed to a Bishop because it really doesn’t have any doctrinally sound base. If the LDS church would actually be open about what they accept as doctrine and those things which are “the opinions of men” within the church leadership then it would be much easier to accept it as doctrine (although if the church accepted what all church leaders taught/implemented it would also open up a Pandora’s box). In fact confession to the bishop is in the LDS leadership handbook without a reason other than “someone along the line was inspired to put it in there”. The official stance of when to confess is very blurry, and the handbook contains information on what is required to confess to the bishop. Instead of going into detail I’ll just say it’s mostly “serious” sins such as anything sexual in nature or more serious word of wisdom problems (drinking, smoking, etc…). This article gives a really wishy washy explanation of when confession is required. Basically it says if you feel bad about it you need to confess.

Also this article gives the reason for confession: it is to relieve you of the burden of the sin. I have heard countless stories from bishops and in conferences about how much better everyone feels after confessing to the bishop. I can admit I have felt better after confession to the bishop. But why did I feel better? It’s because I was TAUGHT that in order to be forgiven I had to confess. Honestly I felt like God and I were good and that there was no need to confess to the bishop other than “that’s what you do”. I don’t feel that it’s necessary for anyone to confess to a bishop, if it really scarred you it’s much better for you and more appropriate to talk to a therapist. OK some people might feel better getting the sin off their chest by telling a bishop, but I think the number of people who “need” to feel that relief have the “burden” because they’re taught that they won’t even be forgiven until it happens. Some people feel the need to confess little things to their bishop and are told that confession of a sin of that nature is “not required” for repentance. They obviously felt bad enough about it to confess so drawing a blurry line of what’s required and what’s not required for repentance is ridiculous.

So let’s say you do confess to the bishop. What happens then? Well pretty much anything actually. The bishop has free reign of how to discipline you, and if he doesn’t feel comfortable about something he refers to the higher authority a stake president. Well even if I feel repentant the stake president can tell me I can’t give talks in church or attend the temple for a year if he feels it’s necessary. So even if you received revelation from God that he forgave you, a person in authority in the church can receive revelation contrary to your feelings and discipline you. So you say “it’s ok, he’ll be judged for that in the afterlife and he knows his responsibility”. Well then what was the point of you praying and receiving revelation for yourself if someone else is just going to override it? That’s the problem with this confession system; it takes away your ability to finish the repentance process on your own, and puts it into the hands of a “Judge in Israel”.

Another problem I see in the system is in the case of missionaries and students at church-owned schools. If a missionary at a young age had sex before his mission once, repented of it (all but confessed), and was a year and eleven months into his mission he could be sent home by the mission president for being unworthy. So he did all that work, and you praised him for having the spirit and being a great missionary all that time only to send him home because he had missed the confession part. What if he didn’t feel bad about it until that time in his mission? That means he didn’t need to confess it according to Elder Grow. There are problems in this system in that transgressions that were committed prior to a new obligation are counted towards you as if you had just committed them. Also the discipline is so inconsistent that it’s sickening.

You see it all just depends on your bishop or stake president. If you did something bad a long time ago some will say you’re ok, others will say that you are still in need of repentance. The honor codes at church schools that one signs are agreements for proper conduct while attending the school. They are not signed agreements for previous sins. So to send a student home from a church school because of previous sins (just like the missionary example) is much less warranted than the missionary example. I have seen this happen multiple times and it upsets me. If there was a need for repentance, then why do they need to go home and resolve it with another bishop? They are confessing to relieve themselves of the burden not to be formally disciplined right…?

To finish off, I want to talk about the inappropriate nature socially of confession. When one confesses to church leaders typically you have to go into discrete detail about the sin. For example I couldn’t just say me and the girlfriend got naughty last weekend, I’m sorry. I’d have to describe who touched what and how. That’s all fine and good (albeit creepy) for an adult to confess that, but when young men and women some as young as 11 are confessing these things to a sometimes older than 50 year old male it sounds absurd. Since women can’t hold the priesthood however these young women must go in and confess in detail their sins to their older male counterpart. I think in any other social setting that kind of discussion would be completely inappropriate.

So I have talked a lot about what is sin and why I think confession isn’t needed or appropriate in most cases. But all in all I think repentance is something that is a personal matter between you and God. If you feel the need to confess, then confess. If you feel guilty because someone told you it was required to confess, try to talk to God first and see what he thinks. After all in the end you’ll be judged by him, and I’ve been told he tries not to go back on his word. Just like sin is a personal thing between you and God so is repentance. You do it to please God, not to appease him. In that sense you should really be doing it to also please yourself if you feel that pleasing God is a happy thing. If you don’t think pleasing God is a happy thing then please re-think your religion/religious status.

I will just say that I live my by what Jesus taught “Judge not, that ye be not judged”. No matter what you believe or how you feel about repentance, as long as it helps you become the person you want to become I’m all for it (granted you do no harm to others). Jesus is kind loving and Christians believe he died for your sins. I’m pretty sure if he was willing to die for you and suffer horrible agony, then he loves you plenty enough to not be a prick about the repentance process.