Jason Bourne wrote:It is not unreasonable to assume that the idea the Indians are all direct descendants of Lehi, that they family of Lehi mingled with a small group and that they were in fact limited in the geography. If such is the case we would not expect to find their DNA in the population. I understand that many leaders have taken a stance that the Indians ALL are descended from Lehi. In fact the D&C has a revelation directing missionaries to go the the borders of the Lamanites to preach and that Zion would be located in the borders by the Lamanites. So perhaps this position can be argued to be official from that stand point. Still that this seems not to be a deal killer at least in and of itself. Even with the other stuff you and Runtu post to say WE KNOW IT IS NOT TRUE seems a strech. To say due to this and other evidences we have concluded that we no longer believe it is true is much better.
I haven't said I KNOW it's not true. I believe it to be highly unlikely that it's true. Nothing's impossible, but it sure doesn't look like the true church to me.
You say it is a fact he was a con man? What are your facts? No opinions please. And by the way I am not trying to make it work for me. I do no think the LDS Church is the ONE TRUE Church but I do not know it is not for certain and I do think it has some God given truth and some of that came through Joseph Smith.
I think his glass-looking escapades, which no one disputes, are pretty good evidence that he was a con man. That he used the same method to produce the Book of Mormon doesn't inspire confidence (no pun intended).
Why is it obvious?
I figure that the best way to tell if it's a hoax is to ask yourself how you would respond to a similar story from someone else.
A man seeks buried treasure using a peepstone.
He claims to have found buried plates which he translates using said peepstone.
The book he translates is littered with anachronisms and describes no known civilization in the ancient New World.
He essentially quits working once the book is produced and lives off the kindness of his followers thereafter.
He continually revises his theology, usually in response to new information or a crisis within his church.
He promises wealth untold for people who invest in his unauthorized bank and then flees the scene when the bank fails.
He claims to translate Egyptian, but his translation is found to be erroneous.
Unbeknownst to his wife, he takes at least 33 women as plural wives, 8 of whom are already married.
When a follower decides to expose the plural marriages, he destroys the printing press that would have been used to expose him.
If the man's name were James or Haroldson or Hancock, you wouldn't even consider the man's claims, would you?