
Brother Richards
1.2K posts

Brother Richards
@microbrandon
My aim is to uplift others through prophetic voices.


Someone created an LDS theology quiz that pairs you with the most similar LDS theologian based on your responses. I had to write my dad an apology email when I got 78% for Blake Ostler and only 75% for my own father. lds-theology-quiz.vercel.app




@Bar_tolmi Where are the original New Testament letters?




Jacob does have a point. I realized that we all teach, defend and share the gospel differently and it affects others differently. No one way to do it, though I am positive there is a good, better, best. Best always being with the spirit. How I came to realize this: @Manhattva and I both received a group DM from someone who took a photo showing he had gone back to church for the first time in a while. He said our two accounts are what helped him to do that. What’s ironic about this is our approaches on this platform are totally different but they both helped the same individually, differently. That’s when I realized a way that wouldn’t necessarily work for me could in fact would work for some else. A method that some might hate may actually be loved and beneficial for others. We are all wired differently. One thing we can all agree on, with the spirit will always be best. But I think sharing the gospel in general is better than keeping our mouths closed.











“I grew up in Arizona, served a mission in Mexico, and went to college thinking I had a pretty clear path for my life. Then I met my now wife Victoria, and everything changed in the best way. “She always knew she wanted to be a doctor. Pediatric neurology isn’t an easy road, but it’s who she is, compassionate, steady, brilliant, and drawn to help kids and families through the hardest things life hands them. When she got into med school in California, we packed up and moved. “Stepping into her dream together was an easy choice. I wanted to support her the way she has always supported me. And honestly, watching her work and sacrifice and love people like she does has strengthened my faith more than anything else. “My path hasn’t been as clear. I’ve tried different directions, learned a lot, prayed a lot. Some days I still feel like I’m figuring it out. But I do know that God doesn’t measure timelines. He measures love, humility, and the way we show up for each other. “Supporting her doesn’t shrink my purpose—it expands it. Our callings from God can look different, and that’s beautiful. I’m building my future too, but I’m grateful that right now, part of my purpose is cheering for the person I love most as she steps into hers. “There’s not one 'right way' to build a family or a future. For us, this is ours. And it’s sacred.” — Nate



Many LDS apologists attempt to use Scripture to attack a Christian's theological positions, but no surprise, the devil also tempted Jesus with Scripture. They are following their leader's crooked paths by lying and twisting the word of God.


Anti-Mormons claim Joseph Smith copied the temple from Freemasonry in 1842. That argument is nonsensical when you actually compare what each teaches. Temple worship is almost entirely different. Baptism for the dead, eternal marriage and family sealings, priesthood authority, exaltation, degrees of glory, becoming heirs with God, returning to His presence, and overcoming sin and death through covenants with Jesus Christ are central to temple worship. None of that exists in Masonry. Even the purpose is different. Masonry is about fraternity and moral improvement. The temple is about entering into covenant with God and eternal outcomes. And the few shared symbols? They are used in completely different contexts with completely different meanings. If Masonry itself draws on older biblical temple themes tied to Solomon’s Temple, why wouldn’t there be some overlap with shared symbols used? And why is it that nearly all temple doctrine was revealed years before Nauvoo? Priesthood, covenants, exaltation, and even the importance of family and sealing go back to Moroni’s first visit in 1823. For a group of Protestant converts with little background in ritual, wouldn’t exposure to symbolic teaching help them understand it? Could this be one reason that so many church members became Mason's before the Temple? If Joseph Smith was copying Freemasonry in 1842, where did everything else come from? antiantimormon.com/free-masonry-a…



I talked to a Mormon who said they don't believe in multiple gods. Was he being honest?

