It's 4am and I'm rolling in bed laughing. John Larsen is one heck of a storyteller. Back for more!
@kerrier4330 Жыл бұрын
When I was a child I was told to stop asking hypothetical questions, this episode was a dream episode for me.
@DianaMontoya-uv6sq7 ай бұрын
I'm two years too late, but I just have to say how much I love you all, and I thank you for all you do. Hugs!
@LSAPC10 ай бұрын
What a journey this was. I've been exmormon for 21 years and was still apologizing for the church until I found this group about 2 months ago. Thank you John D and Carah. And thank you John L for saying so many things I've been wanting to say for too long. I appreciate all of you. Joined the discord, can't wait to dive in
@CarahBurrell2 жыл бұрын
This was the funniest and most informative mind blowing episode of Mormon Stories, straight up. Soooo happy to just be on once a month with John Larsen! It's only getting better from here too!
@edwardnigma85292 жыл бұрын
You bring comic relief to the show. Which is needed when you're talking about somewhat depressing stuff. Please Remind John " AKA Big Boss" of this. Ok little boss?
@johnhorner19692 жыл бұрын
He’d better make good on his promise to teach us how to shave our balls next time 🤦♂️😂😂😂
@fabiankempazo70552 жыл бұрын
I do not get why there is such a focus on weird stuff like celestial births. I mean hardly any mormon believes in it (at least not the people I know) but more important: it is counter doctrinal since the scripture says that intelligence cannot be created but existed forever. That clearly indicates that "father" (refering to god) cannot be a "biological" creater. The whole Plan of Happiness makes much more if intelligence are as fundamental as matter (energy) in a metaphysical sense. Because then Plan of Salvation would be logical game theory solution. (Prison Dilemma with infinite games) and thus giving a meaning to a cosmological nihilism.
@CecilMcfly Жыл бұрын
Try try rr
@BG-ig6fd Жыл бұрын
Yes, one of the best ever episodes. Great to have all of you on here!
@lisalisa20907 Жыл бұрын
Thank you all so much! I was never Mormon, but am shocked how often I cry when you all, tonight especially Maven and Carah, say exactly what is in my heart, because my own religious childhood (Southern Baptist, my grandfather was a minister) hurt me and only now, in my 60s, am I dealing with the pain that theology and patriarchy damaged me and many others. Many individuals are sweet and loving, including my late grandfather, but the power, money, and hypocrisy of the institution is awful. I thought I had processed my trauma, but never unpacking the worthlessness indoctrinated in us …. Wow. Thank you, each of you. I will send in support for your necessary work. ❤
@laneshoemaker71892 жыл бұрын
Carah’s personality and passaz literally got me and my wife through our faith crisis and deconstruction. It looked like divorce was on the horizon for a while but this podcast got us through it. Mormon Stories episodes are always great but they are next level with Carah on.
@PrincessJamiG2 жыл бұрын
This is such a sweet comment.
@jyt74 Жыл бұрын
What a lovely thing to share!
@jamiepotts61022 жыл бұрын
As a woman who just left the church in the last month, I can honestly tell you that it never occurred to me that it wasn't in my destiny to create world's and be a god, but to disappear and pump out spirit children, never being spoken or thought about again. It is so normalized in society at large and especially in religion (including Mormonism) to have everything written to and about "men" and as women we are trained and often outright told that we just need to mentally include ourselves in the statement. As a result, creating worlds, becoming like God, were things I thought about myself until my spiritual deconstruction made me realize that that actually isn't about me.
@kelsey.targaryen Жыл бұрын
The part where you mentioned mentally including yourself. That hit me like a ton of bricks. I’ve never had someone say exactly how I felt like that before. I’m not even Mormon but I know what that feels like
@bobicusrex8 күн бұрын
As a man that is sad that women feel like that I never thought of women as less than men. Just as holding different responsibilities.
@kkheflin3 Жыл бұрын
I haven't laughed this hard in years! John's "spreadsheet" and his numbers were just priceless! What I would give for a transcript of this!
@littlebee50482 жыл бұрын
Thank you, John Larsen, for pointing out the idea that, if we’re all exalted (my husband and I, our siblings, all of our descendants, all of our ancestors) then that completely blows apart the idea that we will be living together as family units in eternity. I have thought about that idea many times and never heard it discussed anywhere at church. I always wondered if I was the only one who had thought it through that much. I never dared bring it up because I had been given funny looks in gospel doctrine class for other shelf-book questions I asked.
@TEAM__POSEID0N2 жыл бұрын
I asked some Mormon missionaries about it once and...they were stumped. Especially from the point of view of modern Mormons who have come to emphasize the nuclear family (including the missionary message about "eternal families" that focuses so much on the nuclear family), there are a lot of things that don't add up if you think about it too much. I pointed out that in a properly sealed up nuclear family, the mom is sealed into her husband's family and their daughters (if they have more than one daughter) will be sealed into their husbands' families, and if those daughters' husbands are from different families, each daughter then will be going off to separate families. So the picture of the perfect, eternally happy nuclear family unit sealed together as a family unit forever (as depicted in the typical "forever family" Mormon propaganda) doesn't really explain how anything could possibly really work in a system of multi-generational sealings. At the end of the conversation, the two missionaries basically figured that in the Celestial Kingdom it would really be like one huge extended family and Celestialized folks would basically be able to visit wherever and whomever they wanted. I mentioned that this kind of made the highly specific individual-by-individual family sealings (for both living and dead) kind of pointless. The missionaries just shrugged and kind of mumbled that they could see how someone could see things that way. (And as is the case with most half-baked Mormon doctrinal innovations, they invoked the belief that the details would be explained and make sense in the afterlife.)
@nolavee3477 Жыл бұрын
@team_poseidon Your interpretation of everybody being one HUge Everybody Family is exactly how I envisioned the Celestial Kingdom, and the ability to visit the other territories including mortal areas.
@Whocaress70010 ай бұрын
@@nolavee3477I brought this up to my Mormon aunt when I like 13. 🤯
@vintediana12522 жыл бұрын
Asking the tough questions like, “does God take a dump?” LOL! Favorite episode so far
@504CreoleCrystal Жыл бұрын
I am slowly making my way through the John Larsen episodes and I LOVE them all! But this one is my favorite!
@derektilley6692 жыл бұрын
If John Larsen had been my Sunday school teacher I might have stayed. Best podcast ever.
@Whocaress70010 ай бұрын
But why stay if it’s still a fabrication?
@desiadaven2 жыл бұрын
I am a recently shelf broken deconstructing exmormon. I have appreciated what you do, John. Both of you. And Carah. And Jenn. And Gerardo. And everyone else who helps create content to spread truth, disburse lies, and aid in deconstruction. Thank you. I can't say it enough. I always look forward to the John Larsen episodes here. They are great! Insightful, funny, and healthy expressions of anger.
@robriley68042 жыл бұрын
I hope you are doing ok. I'm in a weird place too. Trying to figure this out and there's so much... I'm constantly scratching my head. Things just don't make sense. Feeling lost.
@desiadaven2 жыл бұрын
@@robriley6804 Very understandable. I am figuring things out, I think. But right at the beginning it was pretty crazy and confusing. All the best!
@chrismiddleton4733 Жыл бұрын
Super excited to have you back Carah. Even though I only recently realized you were there and then left. Love you 3 together. Perfection!
@nancyrobertson35217 ай бұрын
4:32pm I have been LDS for 10 years. I enjoy all the podcasts. Nancy Robertson
@heathermayfield42472 жыл бұрын
Never Mormon here I often watch and no I have no idea why! Great to see Carah.
@anjavonpfeil43122 жыл бұрын
John Larsen has nailed it. He understands what these high demand religions are all about. It's power and money, but mostly power. Power gives you control over people, and that's what these leaders want.
@leedaniels25062 жыл бұрын
That's what all the organized religions want……..
@utah1332 жыл бұрын
It's like my old stepdad, a disaffected Mormon used to say . "They're just people who think they were born to tell the rest of us what to do "
@countrywestern22722 жыл бұрын
As a father Mavens comments broke my heart! I don’t ever want my daughters to feel that way itbut once again confirmed leaving was the right choice!!!
@JP-JustSayin2 жыл бұрын
EXPLOSIVE!!! It's always a banger when John Larsen gets warmed up. Glad to see Carah in this space as well.
@frankvelazqiez29612 жыл бұрын
john Larson is a great person. 👍 I'm a recovering Mormon and agree with John. Finally a person who speaks the truth.
@amberinthemist79122 жыл бұрын
This has been my favorite episode. I left the church 25 years ago and found recently that I was still experiencing it's damage especially on my self esteem and marriage. It's been a huge often heavy path to work through. So much logic with so much irreverence was so healing and freeing. Thank you for reminding me that even if the church is true it's highest heaven sounds like torture and I'd happily take my chances in outer darkness.
@chrismiddleton4733 Жыл бұрын
That is very similar to my path. I had a very slow burn departure and never processed any of it properly. This podcast has been helping me do it now, 15 years later than I should have. But better late than never!
@samandchucksmom2765 Жыл бұрын
This is amazing work! “Heaviness” is the best way to try to explain the burden of doubt. I am in my 40s now but I remember going to my bishop when I was a teenager and asking him. What am I missing? Why don’t I feel what other members felt? Is there something wrong with me? And his response was you don’t feel close to God because you’re sinning too much. That was it. There is this theme of you are bad and god is constantly pissed off and distant and cold, etc…. I have a new life now and recently had a vision that the LDS god is not real. He had to die in my mind for me to find who God really is. It was incredible to see that Jesus is real and the God of the Mormon church is not real. And God has been giving me blessings ever since I saw this vision because he is rebuilding my trust. Which is incredible and amazing that he would even care about my fear of trusting in him. I love our community. It’s nice to hear from people who “get it”
@strongallalong892 жыл бұрын
I’ve said this a couple times in Mormon Stories comment sections: I don’t know that I can say I’m happier outside Mormonism, but I know the truth now, and that is a very satisfying feeling. A good analogy would be Neo and the red pill. The extra-Matrix or “real” world was not great, but he knew the truth, and that was invaluable.
@littlebee50482 жыл бұрын
This is valuable insight to me. I’m not sure if I’m happier now, but at least I’m not deluded by some 19th century fantasy writer’s idea of “salvation”.
@strongallalong892 жыл бұрын
@@littlebee5048 Yup. Honestly, it also comes down to something as simple as how we define “happiness.” Can living in a naive, very closed minded community be complete bliss? Well sure it can. The thought of being together with family forever, being a god, having your own planet, etc. can create strongly euphoric experiences/feelings. But it’s also fake, so is it really happiness?
@nancyleejorgenson95232 жыл бұрын
The longer I listened the more I think this is the best podcast I’ve ever listened to! It deserves a podcast Pemmy or Poscar!
@nmikloiche Жыл бұрын
Indeed. I know JD has said maybe 1/4 of subscribers are never-mo, me bring one. I listen to almost every upload, and I’ve never been Mormon. I was introduced to cultural Mormonism in 1997 when I worked for a company headquartered in SLC and from that sprung an obsession with high demand religious movements and cults.
@loraleenunley24662 жыл бұрын
I’m laughing so hard. John Larsen you ROCK
@sandilynn80102 жыл бұрын
I love how John still knows these songs after so many years
@joeblo77032 жыл бұрын
Quote of the year, “the casual cruelty of mormonism towards those who don’t conform to the standard is only visible to those who don’t conform to the standard”. So…SO true
@xochitlkitty11 ай бұрын
@1:40 or so- exalted beings as parents- no thought for their children’s suffering; no empathy. Hmmm reminds me of Chad, Lori, Ruby, and Jody. I can see why they would not feel bad inflicting torture on their children. So many are deemed expendable in this planet.😰🤬
@davidcapcha9982 жыл бұрын
Great episode I follow mormon stories from cochabamba Bolivia South america
@julessharp58112 жыл бұрын
I’m so happy to see Carah! You totally make Mormon stories GREAT again! 😂 You’re the best Carah!!!!
@cherishbeagley25862 жыл бұрын
How did I miss this?! KZbin didn’t notify me. Sad day. So glad Carah is back
@Spungle152 жыл бұрын
John Larsen’s impassioned speeches always leave me feeling inspired!
@swaneespeedramsey60802 жыл бұрын
Go Jon Larson! I love seeing Carah back! There are great things happening in our worlds.
@bodytrainer1crane7302 жыл бұрын
When I listen to John Larsen in this awesome podcast I realize that the endless cycle of breeding and suffering of the plan of "salvation" is actually a reality for so many Mormons I know today. They are having so many children, disowning some of those children and perpetuating pain and suffering through all of their children. Instead, we could stop, think and solve problems with love and respect for all humanity.
@loraleenunley24662 жыл бұрын
So good to see you Carah
@reneamarsden81792 жыл бұрын
OMG this episode has been so healing just from the sheer laughter. I was literally laughing out loud while on the bus to work this morning. But also… very important topic to logically think about since “salvation” is the basis of the fear that gets instilled in people to not leave the church. And yeah…. If that’s my salvation… (covenant path)…. hard pass
@mylesmarkson16862 жыл бұрын
Oh come on Renea. You know you want to go into labor 3853032 bajillion times. You seem like someone who is up for the challenge. When I look up the definition of "Bring it on", there's a picture of you. Now how do you explain that?
@reneamarsden81792 жыл бұрын
@@mylesmarkson1686 I mean… what’s not to like …. And while it sounds super inviting …. PASS and then PASS AGAIN
@mylesmarkson16862 жыл бұрын
@@ruthie8726 Thanks Ruthie, but I have no idea what that means.
@koriel-in-real-life2 жыл бұрын
Have been meaning to watch this one for a while, 2 weeks late here. Laughed out loud several times through this. Thanks Carah, John, and John.
@jasonroyce2952 жыл бұрын
Carah, JD, John, and Jenn! It doesn't get much better than this.
@CarahBurrell2 жыл бұрын
Hellz ya!
@BG-ig6fd Жыл бұрын
Yes! And Maven, too, I loved her contribution to this podcast.
@TruthRevolution101 Жыл бұрын
Love Love LOVE This episode!!!! The interview with Maven was my favorite "Mic Drop" part. I love how she and John Larsen and Carah summed up their epic answers. I love you guys!! Thanks again John Dehlin for another AMAZING show!!!!
@raecrowe94682 жыл бұрын
John Larsen may very well be my very favorite person ever. 😄
@CarahBurrell2 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@moesyah2 жыл бұрын
a lot of people mention the ME episode "how to build a transoceanic vessel," and for good reason, but i think this one is even better. this breakdown of how the plan of salvation is supposed to work, it shows how the entire concept is bonkers.
@TuathaTuna2 жыл бұрын
So glad Carah is back 💜🌈
@shannonfisher68722 жыл бұрын
Love these John Larsen chats and totally agree not down on people….institutions are fair game!
@miguelthealpaca89712 жыл бұрын
Thank you for bringing up all these questions and problems I had for years, including the biological ones. I was studying biology at university when I got baptized, so that led me to wanting an explanation for all these issues about how the body will function. But I was also led to believe that I would find out one day. Also about how it would be better to have never been born or to have died before the age of 8, cos then I would have gone straight to the Celestial Kingdom, but now I and everybody else, risk not getting there by screwing up in one of the many ways we can screw up (such as not being able to overcome an addiction). I had to just ignore these issues if I wanted to stay sane!
@awilk072 жыл бұрын
All the questions I grew up thinking and was told we would figure out someday ...
@susanjoyce80532 жыл бұрын
How is that working for you? 🥲
@TheKopels2 жыл бұрын
As an anthropologist, I enjoyed this episode very much 😂😂😂
@harryfve52 жыл бұрын
Made my day seeing all 3 of you together. Cheers friends.
@Cessna8057F2 жыл бұрын
So much great discussion!! Thank you all!!
@kenwick79212 жыл бұрын
Instant classic. This rivals John Larson's "How to Build a Transoceanic Vessel" (Mormon Expression, Episode #276).
@kiterafrey2 жыл бұрын
I had an abusive ex who was an exmo (closeted) in a family of current LDS members. He told me a story about how just before his 8th birthday he took a whole bottle of vitamins (thinking they’d be like pain killers) trying to unalive himself because he thought if he didn’t die before 8 he’d never get to the celestial kingdom because of how violent and unfaithful his mother was being at the time. He was pretty manipulative, so I have no idea if he was being honest, but based on how many exmo members I know who say they wished for years they’d passed before 8 I believe him.
@AmyLynn112 жыл бұрын
Yay! So happy to see Carah back!!
@iamjustsaying12 жыл бұрын
JD's question (around 2:30) about whether it's disrespectful to talk about the church this way, and the resulting answers to that question, were on 🔥!
@katscheib83322 жыл бұрын
This episode was hilarious! It totally brought be back to some discussions I remember back in Sunday school, trying so hard to make sense of things that you can't make sense of.
@jasonblanzy2 жыл бұрын
I have said the same thing where processed Mormons DO act like heroin addicts. My mother in particular. My siblings and I are just starting to have these open conversations and IT IS liberating! Thank you all so much for these highly important conversations. Mormons truly act like non-Mormons are non-human. Our mother has traumatized at least 4 out of 5 of us and even worse by her conditional treatment based on who is Mormon and who isn't. Our older sister is still a "member" but her eyes might be the easiest to open given the right timing.
@jdrobinson48652 жыл бұрын
The other head scratcher that I contemplated in my youth was…our DNA comes from our earthly parents. We’re exactly 50% our father and 50% our mother genetically. If our spirit looks exactly like our physical body, then our Heavenly Parents somehow “spiritually birthed” us with our earthly DNA prior to our ourselves and our progenitors being born physically!??
@PrincessJamiG2 жыл бұрын
People would tell me that this is how we know which families we're supposed to be in. Which is also problematic, especially for adoptive families.
@mattjohansson89312 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha this is gold. It all comes apart like a cheap 2 dollar t shirt. You've got to do this more often. The 3 of you swearing and analysing Mormonism is sooooooo good. I'll watch the next one with a couple of rums. As always good work MS.
@claudetterush10865 ай бұрын
Listening for the second time. Tears. Can't breathe. 😅
@grandmaroxie22102 жыл бұрын
So if Satin did what he was intended to do, did he receive exaltation?
@kkheflin3 Жыл бұрын
"It is easy to get good people to do good things and good people sometimes do bad things. But to get bad people to do good things you need religion." The constant emphasis on happiness in the hereafter has the saddest effect in that the people in the church are often ignoring happiness and truth in this life with so much concentration on life after death.
@Hallahanify9 ай бұрын
Yes thats what I hate about religion, it is dehumanizing. My mom says she can't wait to go to heaven. She is healthy, mid 60s with healthy children and grandchildren
@paullanderman769310 ай бұрын
Just a moment to wonder, I am old enough to remember David I McKay, Hugh B Brown, J Ruben Clarke, N Eldon Tanner, and others who at the time were awe-inspiring, but todays first presidency all seem to be continually upset and pushed off at all of us and seem they cannot speak to us without chastising the members
@skyb52992 жыл бұрын
No joke, the single question that started the entire deconstruction of my own faith was, “is there a ‘why’ behind the deepest doctrines of the plan of salvation?” As in, if I look at at the entire framework and structure for this doctrine, is there a clear answer for why things have to be this way? In the end, I found no motivation behind the plan of salvation and it led to an even more existentially nihilistic view in my opinion.
@TEAM__POSEID0N2 жыл бұрын
Why...would you ask such a question? (Just kidding.) Seriously, that's a good point. A lot of children go through a phase where they are constantly pestering their parents with "why" questions. That's the questioning phase that many parents have the hardest time with, so they usually answer "just because". That's basically all you'll ever get from Mormon leaders too.
@chrismiddleton4733 Жыл бұрын
Did not expect this episode to be so hilarious! I laughed out loud countless times.
@LockeDemosthenes22 жыл бұрын
I'm glad to see Carah back. I absolutely understand her frustration after the Rod Meldrum episodes, he was given free reign to repeat the same racist and homophobic nonsense for hours on end and had an incredibly smug and condescending tone the entire time. I would've rage quit halfway through.
@kacycatartist2 жыл бұрын
I agree with you Joshua. I’m a NeverMo, but when Rod started spewing his BS, I stopped listening. I still support MS every month. I want more John Larson- he is brilliant and entertaining. 👏🏻
@overatourhouse40262 жыл бұрын
I knew I couldn’t listen to Rod and when I heard Carah later that evening I just wanted to hug her❤️
@nancyleejorgenson95232 жыл бұрын
I agree with Carah. I couldn’t listen after about five minutes in. I hated the way he kept looking back at Carah as if challenging her to respond. I would have left if I was Carah. Either that or go all out ridiculing his ridiculous ideas.
@TEAM__POSEID0N2 жыл бұрын
I would say that the value in that is that the leading proponent of a line of thinking and belief that is quite influential among TBMs is now fully on the record, in his own words, for anyone to examine in detail. It's a valuable contribution to the historical record and I appreciate MS for doing those kinds of things, even though I'm sure that it wasn't a fun time.
@WeirdHousePlants2 жыл бұрын
Yay yay, the crew is back! More collabs and visits in the future please! 🥰
@stevejonas2 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best episodes ever
@ThomasJDavis2 жыл бұрын
1:12:27 So as far as Mosiah 3: 19 is concerned, it doesn't say we can't act unless the spirit entices us to do good, it says we have to _"yield_ to the enticings" and develop other various virtues which implies moral agency. This idea is also depicted in D&C 58: 26-28 where it says, _"men... should do many [good] things of their own free will and bring to pass much righteousness... for the power is in them, wherein they are agents unto themselves..."_ Now having said that, Moroni 7: 12-13 does say, _"Wherefore, all things which are good cometh of God; and that which is evil cometh of the devil; for the devil is an enemy unto God, and fighteth against him continually, and inviteth and enticeth to sin, and to do that which is evil continually."_ _"But behold, that which is of God inviteth and enticeth to do good continually; wherefore, _*_every thing which inviteth and enticeth to do good,_*_ and to love God, and to serve him, _*_is inspired of God."_* This is what I think John might be referring to. In my opinion, these are just doctrinally contradictory teachings. On the one hand, the D&C reference says we do have the capacity to think good thoughts and act on them without divine intervention, but according to Moroni, every good thought is essentially from god.
@jdrobinson48652 жыл бұрын
Why can’t our own good thoughts be exclusively ours?
@pansprayers2 жыл бұрын
@@jdrobinson4865 because then you wouldn't need an omnipotent being to fear.
@davidyuwa15982 жыл бұрын
Good to see you back. ❤️
@drkyledpt2 жыл бұрын
This was amazing for so many reasons! Great job y'all!
@flutterbybird13 Жыл бұрын
🦋🦋🦋 im just not sure how i feel about all this. Im not a Mormon nor am i an ex- Mormon. Now i was brought up in a cult. ( Not sure you are familiar with it, but I bet you are! I grew up in the Worldwide Church of God)I was involved in it til at the age of 27 and the changes came about. By the time I was 30 i was going and involved in a “Splinter Group”. Around the age of 35 i was no longer apart of that group either. My mom taught it before we were able to attend “church”. We started going to church when I was 5 years old. I loved the fact we went church. It did however take some time for me to get used to the way they held services and how quiet and still i had to be. Unreal for any children. Anyway with all the different studies I did and at the beginnings of the changes in WCG I just took to the Bible as my learning/study guide. Usually the NIV and the NKJ and some in the KJ and NLT. With all that being said … i just don’t really know what I feel about what John Larsen is saying. I hear what he is reading and saying especially in the Holy Bible, but I’m not sure how i feel about his interpretation. I know he has so much more knowledge in a lot of this than i do. Im gonna have to go back and listen to the scriptures write them down and read them for myself. I know several things he has said make sense, but not sure how much sense it really makes to me. Thank all 3 of you for putting this out there… its (hopefully) gonna show me things in a different light either way 🙃 Hence I do understand that he is reading from the book of Mormon and mostly talking about a lot of what Mormon’s teach. 🦋🦋🦋
@Vampslayer815 Жыл бұрын
I feel so vindicated that I'm not the only one to have seen Mormon Jesus as someone throwing Lucifer under the bus after leaving! WOW! Loving this! ❤
@gardengirl66362 жыл бұрын
OMG! Straight up critical thinking at its best! So good! So good!
@ThomasJDavis2 жыл бұрын
1:00:25 John Larsen is forgetting about the beginning of Moroni 8 where it basically says that little children are "alive in Christ", or something to that effect. So the atonement still applies to all of those children of god who came to Earth, got a body, and then died in their innocence. edit: The plan of salvation still applied to them too also because they need to gain a body in order to be resurrected. But of course you could ask, "well why didn't god just have them as physical babies in the pre-mortal existence?" And the answer that comes to my mind is, these people wanted to be born physically on Earth rather than by heavenly mother directly. They wanted both Heavenly parents and earthly parents.
@RoughStoneRollingLapidary2 жыл бұрын
I’m soooooo happy to see Carah back! Please don’t leave us again!!!
@lisettebordeleau3765 Жыл бұрын
My favorite episode ever! Congratulations to the three of you.
@CottonWoodBlues2 жыл бұрын
I had a Mormon co-worker who once told me about the celestial heavens after telling me she was a Christian too. I am under the impression that you don't have babies and you do have Jesus in the Terrestrial heaven. I told her that is where I want to be, I don't want to be pregnant for the great of eternity..doesn't sound like Heaven to me,..Be with their family forever.??.yes I think of a lot of things like that can not be justified ( illogical) because of what they say they believe..and you never hear them address that!! There is a new Jesus for every planet they start when they get their own planet..that thought goes along with being with your family forever!!
@Sadie372 жыл бұрын
I so love you John Larsen! You are the BEST🥰❤️❤️❤️
@bobbyaugust65682 жыл бұрын
When my son was 4 yrs old we were reading the bom...when we got to Omni he said "wait, stop mum, does anyone actually end up happy in this book?" 😂😂😂...we stopped and have never picked it up again 😂 We went to church and he whispers to me during sacrament..."hey mum, don't u want me to be happy?"😂😂😂... we've never been back😂
@mormonstories2 жыл бұрын
"out of the mouths of babes" as they say
@kerrier4330 Жыл бұрын
Yep they know don’t they well done. On another note our 7yo bored during scripture study made her own verse up and apparently her verse said Moses took the people to the airport to catch a plane so…..
@nataliep79222 жыл бұрын
Mind blown! If I even brought up part of this to my TBM family, they would just say “oh well we don’t understand everything now, but we will in the afterlife-and don’t forget that there is no end to time and space, so there will always be room for more and more gods and worlds.” So many mind gymnastics. I guess it’s okay that so many people will suffer. That’s the plan according to Mormonism.
@michaelkeith53982 жыл бұрын
Another great ep featuring my Comrade John Larsen
@denz41332 жыл бұрын
Best Episode Ever
@antiquemold2 жыл бұрын
Love the energy in this ep
@jacobopstad54832 жыл бұрын
I think it's safe to say that the church does help create "peaceful" people but also people who tend to be pleasers and the type who easily look the other way while bad things are happening
@Hallahanify9 ай бұрын
Peaceful people like Lori + Chad daybell, rubie franke, jodi hildebrant, Mark hoffman
@littlezentz Жыл бұрын
I think we should be allowed to throw a giant festival in one of these gorgeous buildings like the temple, dance the night away. Who really owns all their buildings and accumulated wealth. Churches owe reparations. Those of us without the fake shelter of religion are being expected to pay the debts that the essence of religion caused.
@darin69582 жыл бұрын
Would be interesting if John Larsen did a podcast on the history of the Mormon Polynesian settlement in Iosepa (Skull Valley) UT.
@thoughtsbeforesleep2 жыл бұрын
RFM last week, now another John Larsen and also Carah? I must be living right.
@christeljulia2 жыл бұрын
I had the same thought--this is some quality shit!
@caseyjude54722 жыл бұрын
This was so great. Edit: Sweet, I am SO looking forward to hearing Shiela’s Mormon Story!
@paysonstudios2 жыл бұрын
All the x-mo rockstars! Love ya'll
@thehappyapy2 жыл бұрын
So I was really late to the party on this DELIGHTFUL conversation. When it comes to the horrors of an eternal afterlife, even for a divine eternal being, I highly recommend the short story "The Last Answer" by Isaac Asimov. This first opened my eyes to the ramifications and eventual, unavoidable, and perpetual horror of infinite consciousness.
@TEAM__POSEID0N2 жыл бұрын
My guess is that an infinite consciousness would have an infinite variety of ways to keep itself entertained (which may explain this joke of a world) and feel wonderful whenever it wanted to feel wonderful. Asimov's take may be valid, but if there is such a thing as an infinite consciousness I would tend to discount to the point of worthlessness any attempt to understand the ramifications of such consciousness by way of projecting into eternity the feelings and perceptions of human consciousness (including all of the physical body and physical world phenomena that shape and influence it) and then imagining how it would feel if it just went on forever.
@ThomasJDavis2 жыл бұрын
38:15 I think one argument a believer could make here is that, since we're gods, we'll be omnipotent. So we'll have the ability to communicate telepathically. So yes, you could communicate audibly/vocally, but also telepathically. But you could also say, by that same logic, that omnipotence affords gods to have spirit babies through some faster and more efficient means en masse rather than through the typical 9 month pregnancy. But then if that's the case, why is it that "gender is an essential characteristic of our eternal identity and purpose" as it states in the Family Proc.? If the natural, biological conception/pregnancy/birthing process is optional, why is this doctrine so core to the LDS gospel? edit: I guess the argument would be that a binary gender in the couple allows them to have the means to reproduce in that way just based on the principle of being omnipotent. Because if they can't reproduce naturally, then they aren't omnipotent. edit2: I guess you could also say the same for basically everything that a physical body allows you to do. Sure, it's all superfluous, but it's just for the sake of being omnipotent. And someone could ask, well then if we're just going to appeal to omnipotence, then why go through the Plan of Salvation in the first place if omnipotence could also give you the ability to create a physical body through organizing the physical elements? And the only response I have to that is that we have to prove to god that we're worthy of godhood which includes controlling our carnal desires and obeying god's law.
@kateq72126 ай бұрын
I know I am 2 years late to this, but this is hilarious. The phrase "I have done some research..." is just the precursor to more scientific facts and laughter. "Does God take a dump?"
@ksummer6427 Жыл бұрын
2:32:01 thank you John Larsen!!!!!
@jonb21452 жыл бұрын
I love this! You three are brilliant!!!!!
@bestoffriends7032 жыл бұрын
Pay John Larsen double!
@themaskedmormon28782 жыл бұрын
Oh, my Zeus! This is brilliant!
@lindachristie84532 жыл бұрын
Absolutely loved this one! It was interesting for a nonmormon like me but it made me laugh too. Very well done! Thank you!
@thirdplanet44715 ай бұрын
1:49:22 Love what he says here and it would make for an interesting novel.
@eekabear142 жыл бұрын
I loved this. I want to show it to all my Mormon family members. But maybe they will find it when they're ready.
@sandramelia376511 ай бұрын
So glad to be a non-mo and Christian. This Mormon stuff is really messed up.
@karenhess619 Жыл бұрын
I "road-tested" LDS for over 2 yrs. The theology never made sense yet I admired the community. When they demonstrated the hypocrisy I told them from the beginning I could not accept, I finally let them go and they have not contacted me since. Since then, they built yet another temple that I can see from my apt parking lot. If LDS cared about the environment, they would not create light pollution, especially in a North-South migrant bird pathway. I drove by yesterday and they have planted grass all around which is a huge water waster. The could have landscaped with drought-tolerant plants. This tells me LDS is planning on the End of Days as they are misusing a precious resource called Water. LDS is not a good environmental neighbor IMO. But if they planted appropriate landscaping, they would alienate the membership that wants the 2nd Coming to happen soon. We need to seriously re-think the church tax exemption thing......if they want light 24x7 and green grass all around, they need to pay. Something.
@BG-ig6fd11 ай бұрын
Yes, it is a huge disservice to the country, that religious orgs don’t pay taxes. This needs to change, yesterday!