MarkTenney

1.6K posts

MarkTenney

MarkTenney

@MarkTenney

Husband, Father, Communications | Creative | Brand sage who works wonders, wears many professional hats and regularly creates the spectacular.

Salt Lake City Katılım Aralık 2008
458 Takip Edilen159 Takipçiler
TaraBull
TaraBull@TaraBull·
On a scale of 1 to 10, how is Trump doing for his first week in office?
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Benjamin Bikman
Benjamin Bikman@BenBikmanPhD·
This is a principle within the church that has been the source of both tremendous insight and tremendous frustration for me. A little background: - I'm a biomedical scientist that studies metabolism, particularly obesity and diabetes. - Low-carbohydrate diets are so effective at improving both, that many people are able to stop all medications for type 2 diabetes. - Naturally, such an approach relies on meat. Some members believe this conflicts with the Word of Wisdom. I disagree strongly. - Because this scripture has been weaponized against me (I've been accused of both teaching bad science and teaching ideas against church doctrine), I've explored it at length. To answer your question directly, and to share some additional thoughts (again, I've had to explore this deeply, in part to defend my job at BYU): - I have a deep conviction that Joseph Smith was a prophet of God, and I believe the Word of Wisdom was a genuine revelation. - However, I believe it is problematic for a member of the church to invoke only select parts of the Word of Wisdom to literally interpret, like many have done. - Many believe we should eat little meat by nature of the word “sparingly”; interestingly, this is usually the only part of the Word of Wisdom members believe should be interpreted literally. President Benson (April 83) defined this as “the Lord is telling us to avoid indiscriminately killing animals.” This is a sentiment similarly expressed in DC 49:21, which states “…wo be unto man that sheddeth blood or that wasteth flesh and hath no need.” Also, the idea that “sparingly” should mean eating very little meat is also challenged in DC 49:19, which states that we “might have in abundance” meat for food. - The modern push for vegan/vegetarian lifestyle is warned against by the apostle Paul.  In prophesying signs of the latter days, Paul tells Timothy (1 Tim 4:3) that one of the “doctrines of devils” will be “commanding to abstain from meats”. This, in combination with DC 49:18 (“whoso forbiddeth to abstain from meats, that man should not eat the same, is not ordained of God”) makes clear that no faithful member of the church can promote the avoidance of meat. - If we continue to apply the same exactness in literal interpretation, the same literal logic should be applied to fruits and vegetables, (i.e. “herbs”) that apparently should only be eaten “in the season thereof”.  Yet how many members of the church chastise another member for eating an apple in the spring? Of course, apples are not in season in the spring. Truly, if one believes meat should truly only be eaten “sparingly” (however one might define that), one must logically only eat fruits and vegetables when they’re in season. - Similarly, of the grains we have available, a literal interpretation of the Word of Wisdom would suggest that we humans can only eat wheat and certainly never oatmeal or other grains because corn is for the ox, oats for the horse, etc. This is bad news for someone with Celiac disease. - Regarding grains, they aren’t what they used to be. Whereas cows are cows (i.e. same fats and proteins in them in recent history), grains are not the same—we’ve changed them substantially.  Wheat, for example, has less than half the amount of protein it used to, and almost double the amount of starch.  In fact, the wheat that we grow now, the most predominant grain, is so different than the wheat that Joseph Smith had, that this older wheat, which still grows, is now called spelt—they’re simply not the same plant.  The same goes for most, if not all, other grains. - “Grains are the staff of life”—this comment is interesting and hard to ignore—it’s a powerful statement.  But it’s also vague.  Does this mean grains are the foundation of all life? If so, that’s not justified. One way this may be realized is that the ground spontaneously grows shrubs and grasses (the origins of most (all?) grains).  Ruminants (i.e. cows, goats, etc.) are able to eat this grass/grain. We, as omnivores, eat the ruminants. This vertical structure of eating (i.e. grass-ruminant-human) is shaped like a staff.  What is clear is that human cannot eat grass, which is the most basic form of all grains, or almost any naturally growing plant. - There is danger in trying to literally interpret the Word of Wisdom and remove one’s wisdom from the equation. In my wisdom as a faithful member of the church and scientist, we are better eating more meat over refined starches and sugars. Vegans/vegetarians have greater depression, suicide, and do not live longer (in studies where they’ve controlled for healthy user bias; all published; they just die of other diseases). - Until the brethren make clear specific proclamations on the application and literal interpretation of the Word of Wisdom, I, as a faithful LDS and scientist believe there is tremendous room for diverse application; we can each choose a diet that we feel best eating. I greatly appreciate that our temple recommend question regarding the Word of Wisdom does not list a set of specific foods to eat or avoid; rather it’s a simple question of adherence. - An additional thought on those who attempt to turn this into a specific diet and teaches these to others, Elder Cook (March 2003) taught: "Certain members have wanted to add substantially to various doctrines. An example might be when one advocates additions to the Word of Wisdom that are not authorized by the Brethren and proselytes others to adopt these interpretations. If we turn a health law or any other principle into a form of religious fanaticism, we are looking beyond the mark." I take this to mean that any member of the church that is attempting to create and preach a diet based on their interpretation of this revelation is going to far. - I was struck by President Nelson’s recent “Think Celestial” talk, where he notes addiction to food. Interestingly, carbs appear to the the only macronutrient to which humans develop an addiction. Not fat. Not protein. Just carbs (with or without fat, but never fat alone). To me, this is the heart of the Word of Wisdom: control addictions. Whatever they may be. - Regarding so called “Blue Zones”, which many invoke to support a plant-based diet, it appears it's garbage science, without any degree of clinical trial to support it. In fact, the whole notion is likely built on fraudulent record keeping: biorxiv.org/content/10.110…. As crazy as it sounds, I could continue to add substantially to this. Suffice it to say: meat is good and essential for human thriving and fertility.
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Raheem J. Kassam
Raheem J. Kassam@RaheemKassam·
Oh cool. When you type #MAGA it now comes with a little Trump “Fight!” emoji. Try it in the replies:
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@FiverMacGyver @slc_saint One point to note about this verse (Enos 1:2) is the word he uses to describe the wrestle he had. It wasn’t ‘with’ God, it was ‘before’ God. To me, this signifies that Enos had to work through his own natural desires, passions, thoughts, and mortal wants to know God’s will.
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Fiver Reviver
Fiver Reviver@FiverMacGyver·
@slc_saint Came here to say this. This wrestle we have with God (as described in Enos) is real and teaches us what to pray for. We see how his focus changes into the Lord's will.
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Divine Code 💫
Divine Code 💫@slc_saint·
Question Been contemplating one line from President Holland's talk: 👉If we “ask not amiss,” there are no limits to when, where, or about what we should pray. How would you explain or describe to a friend what "ask not amiss" means?
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@andriamcq These folks love their fireworks. LOL. I hope you stay safe over there in Draper.
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@andriamcq We just moved here from Colorado that has VERY strict fireworks bans to prevent just this kind of wild fires. Why aren’t fireworks illegal here with it being so dry?
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@adam_buchanan You do have many ways for your focused followers, friendly fans, and fabulous family to find you!
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
@MarkTenney I guess I’m not a fan of apps that give people another way to reach me. Haha 😂
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
Not a fan of Teams. it's all over the place. anyone like it?
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@adam_buchanan Congrats, Adam! It’s been fun watching you excel and do great things.
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
Im proud to announce I’m making a career change and joining Wedge brands. More to come! Really stoked to work with incredible outdoor brands! Grateful for the journey. ✌🏻🥂🏹
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
Picking up laptops for the kids at schools.
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
Earthquake in Herriman. Rumble, rumble, shaken but not stirred.
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
Hi, mind sending a prayer our way? My wife has still been struggling with health and possibly just found out she's a risk for type II diabetes. Not official, but if we could pray to keep that away, that'd be amazing.
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
Loved working up my semi annual #LDSConf illustrated notes. The words of living prophets and apostles help us know how to be happy. #ChurchofJesusChrist
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
So what’s everyone doing with their old BSA shirts?
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MarkTenney
MarkTenney@MarkTenney·
@adam_buchanan Speaking as a dad of daughters, @adam_buchanan, I'd wait. 15 at the youngest, maybe even 16. Hold out because once you open that door, there's no closing it.
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Adam Buchanan
Adam Buchanan@adam_buchanan·
People say giving a phone to a kid is like handing them keys to a car. I think it’s more like a sharp samurai sword that can easily cut themselves and those around them. Doing some serious thinking on the whole phone thing for my daughter.
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