I like the subject of "testimony," and think it will become even more emphasized in Mormonism as further scientific evidence reveals more challenges for the member to believe the historical claims of Joseph. Timely, since the "Lamanite" issue could be one of those problems developing as we speak.
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Well, there's not a great deal of scientific evidence to go around on this score such that members have anything to worry about. Plenty of thorny hypotheticals and theoretical issues, but no facts to worry about.
So, another thought. I agree that "gaining a testimony" is quite unique to Mormonism in my experience of religions. Perhaps a reason for that is the emphasis on the superiority of "spiritual witness" over "man's logic." If a person can have a "witness" of something being true, then it takes an enormous amount of logic and reason to change his mind. Maybe Joseph understood this, to a degree, and in his rapid-fire quest to build a religion, he found that "facilitating" a spiritual witness was quite successful in gaining converts.
At the Sunstone Symposium recently, Dr. Robert Beckstead presented a theory on Joseph's intentional inducement of visionary experiences by the use of "entheogens" (hallucinogenic substances in a religious setting)) He gave a compelling (in my opinion) argument that Joseph not only had access to effective hallucinogenics, but he also had relationships with various "Shamans and Medicine Men" who taught him how to induce visions and other spiritual experiences. An interesting read:
By your own admission here Bishoric, Dr. Beclstead has not a particle of documentary historical evidence to back up is bare assertions. This is the kind of straw grasping apologist like, as it makes their job so much easier, if less intellectually stimulating. As we see below:
http://www.mormonelixirs.org/assets/pdf/Restoration%20and%20the%20Sacred%20Mushroom.pdf
One clip:
"In the very first conference of the church in June 1830 in Fayette, New York, Joseph Smith recorded '...we partook together of the emblems of the body and blood of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ...had the heavens opened to their view, (and beheld Jesus Christ).
Heavenly manifestations occurred in a March 18th 1833 sacrament meeting held in Kirtland Ohio under the direction of Joseph Smith.
"Bro Joseph... promised that the pure in heart that were present should see a heavenly vision...after which the bread and wine was distributed by Bro Joseph after which many of the brethren saw a heavenly vision of the savior and concourses of angels..."
The emblems used here are, of course, common bread and wine (and later, water). There isn't a scintilla of evidence for the use of any hallucinogenic drugs. If so, where is it?
Can you imagine, having had this sort of "spiritual experience," no matter how it was induced (particularly if you didn't understand that it could have been induced by drugs....), ever being able to deny what you perceived it meant to you? In other words, you had the "experience," and then you shared it with others, and they shared theirs with you, I imagine it would be next to impossible to convince you it was anything less than a message from heaven!
Today, no drugs are used, but the physiology of fasting, group dynamics, and the very suggestion that you "should" experience a witness confirming the truthiness of the gospel...all compare to the experience of the early saints. And it seems we have the same degree of stubbornness in members who have had their "witness" to use any kind of normal logic and reason to test the claims of the church.
They already "know!"
You don't see the intellectual hypocrisy here do you? You castigate members for claiming to "know" the Church is true, and yet in the same breath you assert:
Today, no drugs are used, but the physiology of fasting, group dynamics, and the very suggestion that you "should" experience a witness confirming the truthiness of the gospel...all compare to the experience of the early saints.
Here, you assert that "today, no drugs are used", having apparently come to the conclusion that they were used by the early Saints in spite of not a particle of historical evidence to support this claim. But, you "know" they did, is that right? And you know they did because, embedded in a purely secularist, humanistic intellectual template through which that is the only grounds on which you can imagine such phenomena being experienced by human beings, this appears to be your only choice, even though no actual evidence exists to support such a inferential leap.
I think that the idea that group dynamics and the suggestion that one should experience a testimony are plausible questions to put to a Latter Day Saint. They stand, however, as purely theoretical possibilities for phenomena of testimony in the specific LDS context, and it would be up to the one proposing such a explanation to show its rational viability among a range of alternative possibilities (one of which is that testimony is exactly what it claims to be).
The physiology of fasting argument is, to be frank, quite lame Bishopric, as fasting in the LDS church never, ever approximates in length or severity the kind that would be needed to provoke hallucinatory experiences. The longest I've ever gone, on several occasions, is three days, and though I felt very good after those three days, closer to the Spirit, and detached from worldly cares to some degree, nothing of the kind mentioned in the early Pentecostal period of the Church ever happened to me, nor did I expect such to happen.
Indeed, on a number of occasions when fasting that long, I went to work, and, in most senses, moved through a normal day.