WEBVTT
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[inaudible].
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Welcome to the Project Zion Podcast.
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This podcast explores the unique spiritual and theological gifts Community of Christ offers for today's world.
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[inaudible]
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Hello Project Zion listeners, Brittany Mangelson here and I just wanted to give you all a brief introduction before the main introduction of this episode.
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Recently I sat down with Brian Whitney to talk about his faith transition into Community of Christ and we just had a lot of things to talk about and we didn't necessarily plan for this to be a two parter, but the editors decided to make it a two parter and so there wasn't a real clean cut place to end the first portion of the conversation.
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So we just did our best, but know that part two is coming in just a couple of days.
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So enjoy this episode as Brian shares his early life and into his adulthood, u h, about the time when he really meets and starts working with Community of Christ through the historic sites.
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So with that, here's the episode.
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Hello everyone and welcome to a another episode of the Project Zion podcast.
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This is B rittany and I will be your host for today's episode and we are going to be bringing you another episode in our Fair Trade series, which is all about faith transitions.
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So today I'm going to be talking to B rian Whitney.
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Brian lives in Brigham City, Utah and he is an editor for Kofford books and he was recently confirmed a member of Community of Christ.
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So Brian, I'm really excited to have you on the podcast today.
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I'm glad to be here.
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Thank you.
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And Brian, you are also a podcaster, is that correct?
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Well, I, I've made my rounds in the past.
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I um, currently host the Kofford podcast.
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Uh, that's my only regular one, but I've been on several different kind of Mormon themed podcasts throughout the past
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For sure.
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So, uh, you are a seasoned podcaster, so it's going to be a fun conversation.
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I'm excited.
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So Brian we have you on today, like I said, to talk about your faith story, your story of faith, your transition into community of Christ.
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Uh, but before we get to that, we're going to back it up a little bit and I just want to know, what did face look like for you growing up, or what did religion look like for you growing up?
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So my family's primarily Presbyterian.
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Um, so let me get into a little bit of genealogy because that's, that's like such a Mormon thing to do.
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Right.
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My father's side of the family isn't as of a story.
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They were mostly Protestant farmers from the Midwest who moved to Washington State during the dust bowl era.
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But my mother's side of the family actually goes back to the origins of Seattle as a city.
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And a little bit farther back from that, even to the Yukon gold rush.
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Uh, my great, great grandfather on my mother's side was a Presbyterian minister during the Yukon gold rush, um, up in Canada.
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He had a church that was just on the northern border of Washington state, a town called Bellingham, Washington.
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And then his son started the campus bookstore at the university that's in Bellingham.
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And then his son was my grandfather.
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Um, and then on my maternal mother's side of the family, um, was a Mennonite, uh, that my great, great grandfather was a Mennonite who was a lumberjack.
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And he came out during, uh, I think early 19 hundreds to Seattle and he cleared the forest.
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He was one of the crew members that cleared the forest at Seattle was built on.
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Um, so there's, there's actually kind of an ongoing story in the family about, um, there's a famous expression, I you probably heard of the term skid row as a, as it applies to poverty.
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Well, that comes from specifically from the, uh, street that they would skid these big tree trunks down in Seattle.
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Yesler Avenue is what it's called.
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And they would, after they would cut the big evergreen tree down and these were huge trees.
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They were large enough for like 15 men grown men to stand on the trunks after they would cut them down and then they would just skip them down the Yesler Avenue to the waterfront.
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The first three blocks of Seattle are all just pilings.
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U m, that was just built on top of all of those.
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The, the rubbish and debris and the, and the tree trunks.
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And so he was poor and, u m, probably had a little shanty that was there on Yesler avenue.
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So my family literally comes from skid row.
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Thank you for that.
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I did not realize that history.
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It reminds me of little shop of horrors and, and that song.
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But yeah, I didn't know the history and I did not know that you had Mennonite heritage.
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That's really close.
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I mean, you said your grandpa was a Mennonite?
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Great Great grandfather.
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Yes.
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And then it was Presbyterian on the other side.
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Um, so most of my family would've identified as Presbyterian.
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Um, I attended a Presbyterian church as a little kid and then when I was about 11, well, let me back up.
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So my mother and father were divorced when I was two.
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And so as a single mom, um, and I was the only child, we lived in a low income subsidized housing, uh, in a town called Everett Washington, which is about a half hour north of Seattle.
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And we would go to a lot of church food banks, um, and, you know, receive public assistance, lived in subsidized housing.
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Um, I was actually an ethnic minority, believe it or not in the, to put it frankly, the ghetto that we lived in.
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U m, we were very poor and some neighbors who h appen to be latter day saints, u h, when I was about 11, recommended to my mom to start meeting with the Latter-day Saint missionaries and, u h, you know, told her that that church was really, u m, good at giving support, u h, social support, u m, food, things like that.
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So we did, we started meeting with missionaries and before long my mother was converted to the Latter-day Saint Church and I was baptized along with her.
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Uh, it was 11 at the time.
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So, that was, that was kind of our entry into that.
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I, you know, to be honest with you, I don't know that my mom ever really understood the differences between Presbyterianism and Mormonism.
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Uh, she's, she was a simple minded person.
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Um, she's a developmentally disabled and I think for her, she just saw a church that was offering help more than really digging into the theology or the doctrines or the beliefs.
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I mean, you know, certainly they had another, another set of scriptures to read, but that was probably about as deep as she thought about it.
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Um, I do remember that my grandfather who was, you know, who was a devout Presbyterian, I remember he actually attended our baptism, uh, into the LDS church and he was, he was supportive.
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He was very friendly and I knew that the LDS church was good at, um, at offering assistance and help to those who needed it.
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So, um, so he, yeah, he was supportive of it.
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Yeah.
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I was just going to ask how your extended family was, but it's good that they were able to have support that they were able to give support, that it wasn't, you know, it didn't become an issue.
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Most didn't mind.
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Um, most of my family now I would say is probably more on the religious or spiritual, but not religious side.
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Most of them are not church attenders, regular church attenders.
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They would consider themselves to be Christians and you know, believe in God, believe in Christ and probably pray once in a while, but they're not affiliated with any organized religion.
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Um, my grandmother was the only one who really had a difficult time with Mormonism and that was mostly based on the, um, the kinds of things that she'd heard about polygamy and about, uh, you know, she thought that we had to give over all of our possessions to the church and you know, she was thinking about like the old kind of, um, communal system that Mormons used run.
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And so she had a lot of stereotypes that she was basing it on.
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But otherwise, yeah, they were, my family is the type of family that you don't really discuss religion that much and you don't really discuss politics.
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You just kind of tried to be a good person and live your life the way that you feel best.
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I see.
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So Brian, how was it for you?
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You said you were 11, right when you joined the LDS church?
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So that probably means an ordination and everything was just right around the corner.
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So what was it like, um, I guess joining a new church that had a new culture to it, that had a new, uh, just social structure already built in?
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I mean, what was that transition like for you?
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It was interesting in that, so being a very poor kid with a single mom, uh, it was interesting going to a church that was so focused on families and seeing all of these moms and dads with their kids at church.
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And I think I, you know, was a little bit jealous when I saw all of these, uh, big families at church.
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Now this is, you know, again, this is Everett Washington, so it's a little bit different than like Utah where I live now.
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But, um, I do remember feeling a bit like an outsider because I was a very poor single kid with a single mom.
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Um, but, you know, nonetheless, uh, I mean, they're always very nice.
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And you know, I learned some of the stories in, uh, primary about the knee fights and things like that.
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Um, I recall that I recall being, uh, ordained as a deacon when I was 12 and serving the sacrament, uh, communion in, uh, in our congregation.
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And then I remember doing temple proxy Baptisms which is typical when you're about 12 for a Latter-day Saint kid.
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That was about it.
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And then when I was, by the time I was 14, my aunt decided to move us out closer to her, which so ever Washington is about a half hour north of Seattle and she moved us out to the Kitsap peninsula, uh, which is about an hour west of Seattle as the crow flies.
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You have to take a ferry boat to get there or drive down through Tacoma, Washington and then up through the peninsula to a smaller town called Port Orchard, Washington.
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And so that's really where I spent my teen yearsfrom 14 up until I was an adult.
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And when we moved to Port Orchard, my mom just kind of dropped out of church.
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Um, no real reasons given.
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It wasn't because she felt unwelcomed or, um, because she just said read with any of the doctrines or theology.
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It wasn't anything like that.
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It was just kind of, it was almost like she got the help that she needed from the church and now her sister was helping her.
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So she didn't need the church's assistance as much anymore.
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So she just stopped.
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And so me as a, you know, as a 14 year old kid, I wasn't going to complain.
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They didn't have to put on a suit and tie every Sunday.
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I was fine with being able to hang out at home, but I did have a lot of friends from different faith backgrounds throughout high school.
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And I guess I was always a pretty religious kid.
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Um, I always felt like I believed in God and I believed in Jesus and so they would invite me to their services, uh, with their families and I would go.
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Um, so I had a pretty wide variety of experiences in my teenage years of attending a lot of different types of churches, mostly nondenominational churches, evangelical strain.
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There, seemed to be a ton of those out in the area that I was growing up in and even a couple of mega churches and things like that.
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But so when I was, by the time that I was probably 16, um, I probably would have identified as a born again Christian and I went to evangelical churches.
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I remember doing an altar call and the sinner's prayer and confession and and then I actually attended with a group of friends from high school, a Pentecostal youth group on Wednesday nights rather than going to like LDS mutual.
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So that was interesting cause it was a very charismatic, u h, Pentecostal type thing, r ight?
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You know, where people were speaking in tongues.
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Of course they're mostly teenagers speaking in tongues and doing the whole holy laughter and being slain in the spirit and spiritual drunkenness and like all of this really kind of extreme behavior that was associated with feeling the spirit.
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And, uh, it was, that was a very interesting experience.
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It wasn't like a snake handling church, all right.
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This wasn't, this wasn't like a southern Pentecostal church, this was, this was definitely a northern one, but still all of the charismatic expression of, um, how do you know that you've been saved?
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You know, because the Holy Spirit has moved upon you in such to where you are speaking the language of angels.
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That's like how you kind of like figure out that you've been saved, which is, which was really interesting.
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I of course attended the youth group, not out of religious curiosity, but because that's where all the cute girls were.
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Naturally! I'm curious though, that's very, very different from, I mean, I can't overstate how different that would be from a typical LDS experience.
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Very different.
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So how was that?
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How was that as far as any sort of testimony or any understanding of who God is or, you know, how did that impact your spiritual development, I guess?
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Yeah.
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I, I think if, if it impacted me, I think it taught me that, u m, God was accessible through various traditions and, you know, I was actually, I never spoke in tongues.
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I'm not saying there isn't any legitimacy behind it.
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I just, I just never got to that point.
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And I k ind o f felt like if I did that, it w ould've been faking it.
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So I never tried.
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But then, I mean, in addition to that, I also had another friend who was Catholic and she and I would go attend mass together.
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We would go over, we'd take the ferry boat over to Seattle sometimes and we would, we would go attend mass, u h, a t, at a beautiful cathedral out there.
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And the w hole, the beauty of the cathedral environment was, u m, was breathtaking and spiritually very moving.
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So yeah, I had the high church experience.
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I had the very charismatic evangelical experience, and then I was attending, um, a church that wasn't quite as charismatic as the parent Pentecostals, but was just a, I would call it kind of a blue collar, sort of nondenominational.
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Um, but they were very much, the pastor was very much into this as the m times, so he was, um, he was definitely preaching like, um, uh, I'm losing the term for it.
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It's been so long, but being carried up into the sky, um, during the end times that all of the Christians would be saved by being carried up into the sky.
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Uh, the rapture, that's the term.
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Um, he was, he was very much preaching the rapture.
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I remember I was at t I was dating a girl in high school who ironically was LDS.
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And I remember telling the pastor that I thought I was going to marry her.
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I think I was probably 19 or 20 at the time.
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And I remember him telling me quite frankly, don't bother Jesus is going to be coming back by next April.
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Wow!
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Like he was that specific, right?
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Yeah.
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Right, right.
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And this was like 1999 or something.
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It was pretty crazy.
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Um, yeah, he was very, like, he was very adamant about it, which I mean, you know, I don't want to jump too far ahead, but when I did later on when I started doing a lot of historical study until like the second grade awakening, it's a very similar attitude that you see of.
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Yeah.
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Jesus is coming now.
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Like he's, his bags are packed, he's on his plane and he's going to be here in like arriving imminently.
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Um, so yeah, that was interesting.
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And uh, but still like, and then so the girl I was dating, her parents, uh, her dad especially was like, well, if you're going to date our daughter then you need to come to church with us.
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So he started taking me to LDS services and he would me up on Sunday mornings and I would go to the LDS church, uh, through sacrament meeting and through, um, the kind of the, the men's priesthood.
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Cause at this point I was over 18, and then after that I would go to the nondenominational church.
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And, uh, and, and so that pastor, once he caught wind of me attending LDS service before his, then he decided to do a whole lecture series on how wrong the Mormons were.
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How theologically wrong the Mormons were.
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So yeah, it was a really interesting, u m, upbringing visiting these different churches.
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But again, I mean, if I can take anything out of it, I guess, you know, at the time I was probably like, I can, I guess I could kind of understand a little bit of how Joseph Smith felt as a teenage boy saying, you know, the tumultuous contestation of all of these different creeds.
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Like, which one of these is right or whatever.
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But I think by the time that I grew into adulthood, I think what I began to realize is that number one, u m, faith traditions sort of evolve on their own trajectory.
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And number two, they're all sincere, right?
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Like people of any faith group are, are really sincere about what they're doing and that their prayers are very sincere.
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Their feeling of the spirit is very sincere.
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And so that's something that when I did, u h, eventually spoiler alert, get back active into the LDS church, u m, that was something that always k ind o f hung there in the background for me and made it very difficult for me to accept this whole idea of there only being one exclusively true church.
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That makes a lot of sense because I think with exposure to other religions, other cultures, other ways to view God, spiritual practices, etc, it would be hard to kind of funnel truth into one specific box.
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And I've mentioned before that I didn't necessarily have a large exposure to other faiths.
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I grew up in Provo, Utah, just about a mile south of BYU.
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So a lot of that stuff, I mean was, was just very foreign to me.
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Right.
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You kind of feel like that's the whole world, right?
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Like, yeah, you think of, you know, everybody debates about like the flood myth and like if the flood was global or if it was localized or whatever, you know, or if it was just based on other, you know, myths.
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But I always get this idea that if there was some sort of a flood, it probably wasn't global and they probably thought it was like world seemed to be filled.
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Y eah.
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That's a g ood way to look at i t.
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Right.
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And so, I mean I kind of think that that's how it is when you are, when you grow up in a predominantly like one tradition area, you know, is that you kind of feel like this is what the whole world is.
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Right?
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You don't really think that there is, or if you think that there's others, you know, there's other traditions out there, but you think that they're probably a lot smaller than yours.
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No, I think that that exposure is good and healthy.
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So, and interesting.
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What a story!
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Yeah.
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But you know, and I always, I always really loved like when I would go and visit.
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So when by the time I turned into an adult, I decided to go ahead and move over to Seattle itself, the city.
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Um, partly because, so the, the kids that I was hanging out with at this Pentecostal youth group, they were in a punk rock band.
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So like at this time in the mid nineties, there was this music scene that was starting to grow of Christian punk rock and heavy metal music, which I mean, it sounds weird, right?
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It sounds kind of like an oxymoron, but it, but it really happened and it got pretty big.
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And so my friends were in this pop punk band that got pretty popular for a while called Mx Px.
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Um, and they, like, they ended up like touring with like, No Doubt, which was a pretty big mainstream band.
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And they, and they got like a Pepsi commercial and like, you know, they ended up doing pretty well.
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They made a career out of music.
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But I mean, at the time they were just, you know, a bunch of high school punkers and there was this coffee house that was next to our high school, like within walking distance of our high school called New Song Coffee House.
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And it was owned by a hippie Christian couple.
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Um, and it was an outreach ministry and it was super cool because they were totally nonjudgmental.
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Uh, their whole point was to provide a safe place for kids to come hang out after school instead of like them going out and getting in trouble because these are mostly latchkey kids.
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And so they weren't there to preach at people, although they definitely had like Bible tracks out.
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If anybody was wanting to know more, there is information available, but they had like arcade machines and pool tables and they served coffee and they had cheap grilled cheese sandwiches and snacks and then they would bring in live bands on the weekends.
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Um, they had a little stage that was like a foot off the floor and, uh, they, um, asked me if I would be willing to help out in booking bands for the weekends.
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And so I said, sure.
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And so I ended up hooking up with this whole kind of weird but kind of awesome Christian punk rock music scene and, uh, and these punkers were like serious punkers, like they were not like, you would think of like Christian punkers as being kind of like kinda just, just kind of wimpy punk.
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But no, these guys were brutal.
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Um, and uh, you know, they were, it was very interesting.
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I mean, although ironically one of the, one of the bands that I got to know the best was called 90 Pound Wuss But yeah, I mean, there it was, it was kind of fun.
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So a lot of these bands ended up, you know, kind of playing a lot of gigs in Seattle and, and down in the state capital of Olympia.
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And so I would just hang out with them and I'd go to these other shows with them and got to know them.
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Andthere was a record label that started in Oregon and California called Tooth and Nail Records, and it was owned by a Christian dude named Brandon eval.
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And, uh, and he was kind of on the cutting edge of music.
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He was, he was signing a lot of these kind of punk rock and hardcore thrash metal bands and, um, and so he moved his headquarter office up to Seattle, um, in like 1995, uh, 96 around there.
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And I graduated high school at 94.
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Um, and so I ended up going out to work for him at Tooth and Nail Records for like a year.
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And you know, it was just like, I mean it was the kind of job that I was like in the mail room cause this was pre internet days, right?
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So we were like literally mail order catalog on all the uh, stuff and uh, or like people could buy the music like Christian bookstores, which was really weird cause it was just like total thrash metal.
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Like you're going into these nice grandma and grandpa Christian bookstores and there's like these crazy bands like The Crucified and Disciple and stuff like that.
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It was great.
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Um, but it was, that's what took me over to Seattle though, was hanging out with these like crazy Christian punk rock kids.
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And I ended up moving into this house that was, we called it the Hiawatha house and we had like four punk rock bands living in the house and it was like a three bedroom house with like one bathroom.
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Right?
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And it was in this Seattle University district, uh, like probably, I don't know, like three blocks from the University of Washington campus.
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And uh, and it was a super crazy time, cause he has Christian punk rock kids.
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They didn't act all that Christian.
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Most of them had grown up in Christian homes and a lot of them were like preacher's kids.
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So they had that kind of preacher kid syndrome, right, of like rebellion, um, rebelling against the hole.
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So a lot of them were like, I wouldn't call them anti-christian, I would say they were still believers, but they were definitely antagonistic towards organized religion, right?
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And that was like, I mean that was the punk rock ethos, right?
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It was that organized religion has screwed everything up and our relationship is directly with Christ, right?
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And we don't need a church.
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Um, of course that also means we were partying like crazy, right?
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Like, I mean it was just like drinking every night and just super insane stuff.