evolving wrote:kind of like the last 10 September dawn MMM threads over at MA&D -- kinda like that ??
Yeah, pretty much like that
evolving wrote:kind of like the last 10 September dawn MMM threads over at MA&D -- kinda like that ??
KimberlyAnn wrote:It never ceases to amaze me how LDS apologists will sift through anything, even religions they condemn as heretical, untrue or "abominations", to find even the tiniest, most irrelevant bit of information that they can spin to lend credence to their quasi-cult. It's absolutely hilarious!
It reminds me of a TV show I thought of once for a religious audience: Junkyard Apologetics Mega-Wars. Apologists from freaky religions like Scientology, JW's, Mormons, etc., meet to put together scraps of odd archaeological finds, ancient texts, Sci-Fi books, Oprah reruns - anything to prove their respective religions true. A little chiasmus here, an NHM there, and voilà! The Church is TRUE!
Thanks for your synopsis, Trinity! You took one for the team by attending the lecture and we thank you!
KA
Calculus Crusader wrote:KimberlyAnn wrote:It never ceases to amaze me how LDS apologists will sift through anything, even religions they condemn as heretical, untrue or "abominations", to find even the tiniest, most irrelevant bit of information that they can spin to lend credence to their quasi-cult. It's absolutely hilarious!
It reminds me of a TV show I thought of once for a religious audience: Junkyard Apologetics Mega-Wars. Apologists from freaky religions like Scientology, JW's, Mormons, etc., meet to put together scraps of odd archaeological finds, ancient texts, Sci-Fi books, Oprah reruns - anything to prove their respective religions true. A little chiasmus here, an NHM there, and voilà! The Church is TRUE!
Thanks for your synopsis, Trinity! You took one for the team by attending the lecture and we thank you!
KA
Right. One of their own, Kent Jackson, criticized Hugh Nibley for doing just that.
Blixa wrote:Thanks for the synopsis, Trinity. I'm sorry I missed the FAIR conference, myself. Oh well...
Nobody disputes that I Cor 15:29 reflects baptism for the dead. The issue is whether that was a practice of the Christians or their pagan neighbors.Trinity wrote:*Any terminology related to temple work: washings/anointings, priest/priestess, gods and goddesses. Any and all deification comments referring to the fact man can become a god, and fundamental aspects about the Creation, baptism for the dead. (As a sidenote, DCP surprised me by commenting that modern biblical scholars are now saying that Cor 15:29 is accurately reflecting baptism for the dead)
Dr. Shades wrote:Blixa wrote:Thanks for the synopsis, Trinity. I'm sorry I missed the FAIR conference, myself. Oh well...
They were talking about BYU's annual Education Week, not the FAIR conference. (Right?)