tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2337988965190761352.post6125057775450351090..comments2024-01-10T11:18:41.110+01:00Comments on reclaiming the restoration: "Herren lät stenarna lysa" (Eth. 6)Christianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17472278874852515384noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2337988965190761352.post-53984321231346779802015-06-01T19:51:40.710+02:002015-06-01T19:51:40.710+02:00Mark - welcome to my blog. I'm glad that the l...Mark - welcome to my blog. I'm glad that the language barrier isn't one. Google translate FTW!<br /><br />Considering the fact that the LDS Church culture and the gospel are to very different things (one saving, the other potentially damning), I'd say it's a good thing to be agnostic about the culture of the Church. In some ways, this culture are traditions of the fathers and take away light and truth from us (see D&C 93:39).<br /><br />God bless!Christianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17472278874852515384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2337988965190761352.post-15474291928307581632015-06-01T03:41:44.439+02:002015-06-01T03:41:44.439+02:00Though my family name, "Boberg", is from...Though my family name, "Boberg", is from Sweden, I know no Swedish, except for occasional cognates. I enjoy reading your blog. How? Arthur C. Clarke said once, "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Yes, by a modern magical Urim and Thummin called "Google Translate", with some effort on my part I can read and enjoy your blog. <br /><br />I found your blog from Adrian Larsen, by a link from Rock Waterman's Pure Mormonism blog. I have a testimony of the Book of Mormon and of Joseph Smith, but I seem to be becoming more agnostic about many other aspects of modern LDS church culture.<br /><br />Mark Boberg <br />(MarkinPNW - I live in the US Pacific Northwest, on an isle of the sea)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com