There are ways to state a truth in a way that it becomes a lie.
Since I like stock car racing I will use this story to illustrate.
A Mormon and an Anit-Mormon ran two car, ten lap grudge race.
One headline of the outcome:
Mormon wins by five car lengths.
Another version of the race.
Mormon comes in a very poor next to last, Anti-Mormon finishes a respectable second place.
Ben
Let me guess. You're saying a Mormon leader who marries 400 ancestors for eternity, is sealed to a mass murderer, particpates in seances, advocates blood atonement, and the like are all "winners."
Hmmm...Well, thanks for your 2 cents' worth...
The reference to coffee should be referenced to show it happened before the Word of Wisdom was reviled. As you posted it it implies he should not have been drinking coffee. And don't say it is not important to the rest of the sentence, the "mormon coffee" people are experts at creating their Anti-Mormon rederick.
There is however a way to tell lies over and over that some believe them
IE Joseph Smith's restoration of the Word of God
Explains MORMONism quite succinctly.
There is NO way to state a LIE in a way that it becomes a TRUTH.
Explains MORMONism quite succinctly.