TheDonald
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Is imagined PUL sufficient grounds for belief in a set of alleged spiritual truths? Like myself, most posters here reject the Book of Mormon's historical claims of a faith anchored to Israelite tribes in ancient America as fiction. But consider how the angel Moroni claims that the book's teaching can be validated by direct revelation:
Moroni 10:4: "And when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost."
Rev. Moon is now dead. But the Moonie cult (the Unification Church) attracted many very bright and successful people. Why did they accept his revelatory claims? In part, because of his alleged spiritual fruits (aka. PUL). I was once invited as a guest lecturer to the Moonie seminary in Terrytown, NY. My professor colleague was teaching a course there and I was invited to explain in his class why their theology was misguided. For academic accreditation, their seminary needed a certain number of outsiders to teach their courses.
When I arrived, my colleague showed me their large chapel in which Moonie devotees were strewn, many face-down, all over the building desperately seeking God. I was very impressed by their apparent love and devotion to a false Messiah.
When my lecture began, I saw fear in the eyes of the large crowd of students. Instead of explaining why they are deluded, I discussed the massive problem of spiritual self-deception in my own faith tradition (Pentecostalism) and proposed various solutions in the quest for truth. I wanted them to draw inferences for their own spiritual experience.
In this thread, I want to discuss the problem of assessing the Monroe/ Moen belief system and methods by examining its basic assumptions. To the degree that these assumptions are rooted in widespread New Age groupthink, I will broaden the discussion accordingly. Readers are of course invited to share their perspectives on each example and issue raised.
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