mentalgymnast wrote:
Why would you expect that God would accomplish a certain operation/task/scenario of events in the easiest way possible? There are so many examples of 'simpler' ways to accomplish what to us would seem to be the more positive outcome. Pol Pot, Mao Zedong, Hitler, Laman and Lemuel (if you want to believe they existed), and many others. The easy way out would have been to see to it that these guys were pushed out with the one third (if you believe in that) or to cause a stroke, or an accident, or a terminal disease. But no, God took the more difficult path, which as a sidenote, included the deaths of many folks that didn't have to die. At least I would assume God didn't need to take large numbers of people back 'home' all in one fell swoop.
Some options. 1. No God 2. A God that enjoys and gets his kicks from killing people and watching people cry and little babies die. 3. A God that for some reason allows bad dudes to do bad things for some long range purpose.
Number three doesn't seem...to us...like the "easier way" for God to accomplish something good. But it's the only option that I am comfortable with...but not really...
I agree that there may have been easier ways to get Lehi and Co. over to the New World.
Why would God choose to do, and let others do, things the hard way? The fact seems to be, that if there is a God...he operates in this fashion...number three. I suppose we could come back to number two...
Yuck.
A lot of us really don't want to go to number 1...so what would you suggest?
Regards,
MG
I am not a writer (well I could just stop there) capable of creating a fictional narrative intended to be passed off a real history. I can, however, find reason to question narratives that don't make sense for me. So when you ask how I would have done it, I expect any thing I dream up would be susceptible to the same problems we run into from Joseph Smith's fictional creations and on a much larger scale, only mine would be obvious 21st century imaginations.
What strikes me time and time again, when I examine religious claims, especially claims in Mormonism, is that they are clearly driven by what the claimant thinks is possible to do. So for example, take the story Joseph Smith tells of God helping Lehi escape Jerusalem and sailing to American in a boat God helps them build, one of miraculous design. Joseph Smith knows no other way to get from Jerusalem to the Americas than by boat, but understands it has to be a better boat than what was available at the time of Lehi so Joseph Smith adds this portion about a design not known to man at that time. Well, if God is going to introduce them to new technology why not just fly the from just outside Jerusalem directly to where ever it is TBM think they arrived in the Americas? I mean he already is giving them a boat like no one has ever seen, why not make it a plane? Or use some sort of Star Trek transporter and make them think it was a dream. Why doesn't God just use technology not known to even Joseph Smith to accomplish getting Lehi and Co there? The answer is, because Joseph Smith is making it up and therefore nothing like that ever happens. Joseph Smith is not capable of seeing what technology could do, technology God would have long ago mastered.
As I pointed out earlier, if Nephi really made this boat capable of crossing the ocean, and he was as capable as the Book of Mormon indicates in every other area, including transmitting written information, why do we never see them build another boat of that type of try and cross another ocean. We see Moroni 1000 years later claiming he has all these records passed down in an unbroken line or prophets but somehow this is a skill they have lost?
By the way if God could teach Joseph Smith how to translate the gold plates with out even having them near why did Nephi have to kill Laben to get the plates. Couldn't God just have revealed them to Nephi later on in the Americas the same way Joseph Smith received them?
Why does Nephi have to build a new kind of ship to sail across the ocean, when God has already transported a similar group of people centuries before across the ocean in barges? (Another really ridiculous story for those of us not inclined to accept Goddit.)
What ever happen to the Book of Mormon being needed to bring the Lamanites back to the gospel? Somewhere Laben is asking for his head back.