achilles wrote:I don't know if my comment will actually make it past moderation, but I wanted to share it here.
I don't see your quote on the page, but it is a sentiment I share. The final reason for any LDS doctrine comes down to having a testimony of Joseph Smith and the priesthood continuing with modern prophets, seers, and revelators. This explains translations, polygamy, the Book of Mormon, temples, chastity, and any other good or bad aspect of the LDS church. Gene Schaer's foundational claim comes back to this same reasoning which is repeated in this paragraph (emphasis mine)
Gene Schaer wrote:The Church, moreover, teaches that any temptation—including gay members’ temptation to use their procreative structures in ways that violate God’s commands—can be overcome through the atonement of Jesus Christ. As Elder Oaks put it in his interview, the Church teaches that “through the power and mercy of Jesus Christ we will have the strength to do all things. That includes resisting temptation”—including, for all of us, the temptation to engage in sex outside heterosexual marriage.
Yes, the church does teach this and Elder Oaks entirely agreed in the referenced interview. If I lack a testimony of either of those as authoritatively speaking for God then I am deeply inclined to disagree with them. It's not compelling to me either when Pope Francis teaches against birth control or clergy marrying even though I largely like the guy. I don't fully buy those sources of wisdom except for when they overlap with my basic Christian humanist sensibilities.
If the LDS church wants to convince me that they are right they have to do the immensely difficult work of engaging me and the rest of the world upon logic and authority we agree upon. They are making a material claim that living authentically as a homosexual will make God angry and lead to LGBT persons sadder than the straight people. This claim has not been substantiated. Claiming to speak for God and calling it my fault when I am skeptical leaves both of us frustrated.