Your site is mostly about emotions and not history
You are creating confusion
I have a friend who is a Mormon. How do I tell her it is false?
Why are you bashing Mormons?
Do the general authorities (the most senior Mormon leaders) know the truth?
What do you say to a parent whose child has joined Mormonism?
What do you say to a person who is dating a Mormon?
What do Mormons think about apostates?
The people, including me, who contributed stories have found out that Mormonism and the Watchtower are based on false claims from our own personal studies. This site is intended to help with the emotional aspects of leaving an authoritarian organization. This site lets former Mormons, and current Mormons struggling with their belief system, see they are not alone in their feelings and experiences. It is not intended to convince a current believing Mormon to change his or her beliefs. It has though affected many.
* Ask them in the beginning if they would even want to know if the church was a hoax. Many members would rather not know. If you pursue a course in attempting to get them to leave the church, you may ruin your friendship and/or work relationship with them. Is that really worth it when you have a good relationship with them and they are perfectly happy with the church to begin with?
Another example is the suppression of church history. We found the actual Mormon history to be quite different than the official versions. Church leaders knowingly publish materials that are "faith promoting" and terribly misleading. The rationale for justifying such deception is common to any authoritarian organization. The protection of the organization and its continued growth are of utmost importance. Study the origins of Scientology, the Unification Church by Rev. Moon, the Watchtower, and many other organizations and see identical methods of deceit.
* A much better approach is to gradually and lovingly provide them with logical, reasonable information that will show them that Mormonism is a hoax.
* First, if the Mormon comes from a very active Mormon family, the person should probably just get out of the relationship. Their only other option in this situation is to convert to Mormonism which obviously isn't a very desirable option. Don't try and convert this type of Mormon to your way of thinking. The person may do so, but your relationship to the family you may end up being in-laws with will be severely damaged. If you end up marrying this Mormon (and you don't convert), your marriage will have problems. Remember that there is far more to marriage than simply being in love.
You are threatening your potential spouse's eternal future in Mormons' eyes. This can not be taken very lightly. Mormons believe that they can be families forever if they are Mormons only. You will not be well accepted by your extended Mormon family as you may destroy their hopes for their son or daughter to be "sealed" to them for eternity.
* Second, if the Mormon is a convert (and the family isn't Mormon), the person has a few courses they can pursue. If the Mormon is fairly open minded, recommend they read some of the books listed on "Recovery from Mormonism". Don't approach the situation from the standpoint of "I am right, and you are wrong". Approach the situation with a very loving attitude. Perhaps you should re-evaluate your own beliefs at this point. Make the studying a joint-study. Both parties can study their beliefs and see if the beliefs are reasonable. If both parties are looking for a logical, rational belief system at the same time, the relationship should only grow stronger and both parties' belief systems should improve in the long run. On the other hand, if this Mormon convert has blinders on and is unwilling to study their own beliefs in any other light other than the "church approved" path, you are probably better off to end the relationship.
"I was fascinated to read your experiences coming from Mormonism. So many of your experiences mirror my own. My brother's wife is "jack Mormon", and has basically put religion on a shelf - perhaps never to consider it again. Unfortunately, I don't think hers was a realization of truth and exposure of fraud - she just lost interest.
So, this issue is close to my familily. In fact, it is very close to my life. I am not a Mormon, but was involved in what you would call a "marginal" Christian group. Marginal in the sense that they were theological orthodox Christians (for the most part), but were very legalistic and controlling. I spent "the best years of my life" - my college years - with this group.
This group "encouraged" young men or women to live with families of the group. Outside living arrangements (apt., home, fraternity, dorm, etc) were not openly denounced, but it was clear that to be "truly spiritual" you lived together. After my first year in college, I was reponsible for a weekly on-campus bible study, prayer meeting (6:30 am), literature table, outreaches, etc. etc. - then these same meetings (bible study, prayer meetings) were held in the evening at the local church - double whammy. I'm not exaggerating when I tell you that I probably spent more time in religious activities than on my studies - though I did my best with both, with what time I had left.
I saw many of my friends leave the group. They left innocently. It was the subtle yet vehement attacks on these "dangerous apostates" which began to open my eyes to the truth. Why was the leadership so threatened when someone left? Why the personal attacks? Why the warnings of impending doom on the apostate? Something was wrong and I couldn't quite put my finger on it. After 5 years, I decided to move out of my living situation and get out of the fish bowl - I told them "I needed to re-evaluate my committment to this group" - that is all I said - no slanders, no name calling - I just needed to get a fresh perspective from outside the fish bowl. It didn't take long to realize that I had made the best decision of my life - I felt like a man falsely accused of a crime who finally is released from prison!!! The attacks began on me, friends no longer called me, fellow group members were avoiding me. My "friends" were really not friends at all. My experience after that was not all that easy. It was a psychological uphill battle to relearn love, friendship, grace, freedom, etc. Here's a brief chronology:
1. Escape to Freedom!
2. Anger - if there is a god, why would he let this happen to me?
3. Loneliness mixed with expectation and hope.
3. Disillusionment with All religions, including Christianity; a
strong distrust for any spiritual authority...
5. More loneliness - all my "friends" never called; they didn't leave
with me. I was really all alone.
6. Help from outside. I received the most helpful encouragement from
former members of the group - not ones who had recently left, but
those who had been gone for over 1 year."