Uliti, if you’re reading, I’m SO glad you stuck with Covenant Captures despite there being lots of creators out there because you are one of my VERY favorites! I’ve felt the Spirit a lot through your videos and I love the conversations you have in your stories! While I’ve felt the Spirit through the words of specific people many times, there’s just something unique about how you share the messages The Spirit needs you to share. I’ve felt so much peace and comfort from you sharing words from scriptures. Please keep going with this! If you’re feeling discouraged ever, I hope my voice is one you can look to to remind you you’re doing great!
Loved this discussion. We all need to open to giving and receiving feedback. Righteous judgment is what we should seek and give to others. With enough experience and learning, we can discover that each Gospel topic has sufficiently good answers. The ex-Mormon guy Uliti spoke to has faith in his views, just like Uliti does. (But, in my experience, LDS critics regularly don't acknowledge all the exonerating context.) Ex-Mormons with 2.5M subscribers or 3 subscribers are leaning on faith, and usually lack significant knowledge. Nobody lives without faith. As we learn in the Gospel we sharpen and deepen our convictions.
@@EricLovesCHRIST Every channel has 3 subs at some point. Some do now. Whether an ex-MO channel or not. Most move past that. Some don't. The # of subs is immaterial. All of us walk by faith. Good luck!
@@EricLovesCHRIST I believe Uliti said that he communicated with an ex-Mormon who had 2.5M subs in his channel. Uliti didn't say whose channel that was.
As a new subscriber I´ve been looking all over RU-vid specifically for the church podcast of representation of Polynesians in the church. Thank you so much for this interview. Loved the great white shark analogy. Don't forget about us Polynesians members in the church we´re here too and there's a whole lot of us. We´re friendly people hence the nickname but don't get it twisted we will bark back!
I think it's important to also know that we all have our own paths. When it comes to careers and families, etc , it is between me and the Lord. If we're too busy worring about what people think or expect of us, we will begin to feel out of place and begin to get on the wrong course and end leaving the Church all together.
Terrific interview! Reframing the judgement from negative to positive is definitely the way to go. We live and learn to abandon negative judgement of others. Righteous judgement is essential to exercise our agency responsibly. I love you both and this delightful conversation!
When people judge others it's like the 5 year old laughing at his 3 year old sibling because his shirt is on backwards when he's standing there with his shoes are on the wrong feet. ALSO, we must judge behavior to choose our path but we CANNOT judge the person because we don't know why he is where he is; sometimes I don't know why I do what I do.
I love how this guy is just having a conversation with the host. He's answering and asking her questions back. You don't see that often on this channel. I'd love if we encouraged more of this!
I believe if a person is sincerely questioning whether they should join the church if Jesus Christ himself will guide that person through the process, and deal with all of their fears I don't think it's appropriate to worry about what other people think because he is a god of Truth and Peace. Just don't let the world's morals substitute the morals that God has given you and encoded into your body and your spirit.
If you believe the story of the creation and the Garden of Eden, if you believe the story of the flood and Noah's ark, if you believe that Moses parted the Red Sea, and if you believe than several resurrected dead people came down from heaven and visited Joseph Smith 200 yrs ago, you are a faithful Mormon!
I think so, otherwise the Savior would not recommend it. To me, righteous judgement is seeing right and wrong, but without condemnation or contempt toward others.
Everything you do in life is a judgment. Whether it be righteous or evil. Do I drink a beer or soft drink. Do I cheat on my spouse or not. Do I choose to hate my neighbor or not.
@@tylegg73 That sounds like choice. To me, one judges between good and evil, but avoids the void of smug finger pointing, contempt, hatred. I have that problem when I see political players use their sway to pollute American society. I have to watch myself.