←back to thread

Mormons Make Great FBI Recruits

(www.atlasobscura.com)
80 points churchill | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.204s | source
Show context
mouzogu ◴[] No.35773503[source]
three factors:

> "Mormon people often have strong foreign language skills, from missions overseas"

> "a relatively easy time getting security clearances, given their abstention from drugs and alcohol"

> "and a willingness to serve"

It's quite a strange religion, not to be offensive. I always get approached by them at the mall when i'm in the US...I always think to myself the kind of person is drawn to this belief around the character of Joseph Smith.

replies(2): >>35773555 #>>35773676 #
yarg ◴[] No.35773555[source]
What religion isn't strange?

Seriously, the only reason you think that the religions that you're used to aren't weird as shit is overexposure.

replies(2): >>35774288 #>>35774290 #
Ekaros ◴[] No.35774288[source]
Christianity has lot of weird stuff. When you really start to think it over from roots and consider certain aspects. But members are just told to follow and ignore those aspects. Not to mention the stuff that is simply ignored if you would slightly expand it.
replies(2): >>35774727 #>>35776500 #
1. giraffe_lady ◴[] No.35776500[source]
I don't think this adequately describes the experience or guidance, for a lot of believers. Grappling with unbelief is embedded in the synoptic tradition itself, and so we know it was present and acknowledged at the very earliest beginnings of christianity. Many prominent and highly influential early church fathers wrote about it, and acknowledged belief as an unstable and often fleeting state to be anticipated and received with gratitude. "The silence" of god is one of the most common themes in christian literature. Some churches address it explicitly in their catechism.

The public performance of belief is universal orthopraxy for christians, I think. But privately and with trusted confidants the conversation is far more nuanced than "ignore the weird stuff."