charity wrote:My experiences would have to be classified under a sixth sense also, because no emotion is what I experienced.
Charity, how would you, personally, define the difference between revelation and emotion?
MishMagnet wrote:
It leaves me with a Catch-22 of sorts because I'm willing to still consider that was God - if it was God, though, God's plan for me was to leave the church. To me, that is the only way the experience makes any kind of sense.
Ray A wrote:charity wrote:My experiences would have to be classified under a sixth sense also, because no emotion is what I experienced.
Charity, how would you, personally, define the difference between revelation and emotion?
Ray A wrote:charity wrote:My experiences would have to be classified under a sixth sense also, because no emotion is what I experienced.
Charity, how would you, personally, define the difference between revelation and emotion?
Ray A wrote:charity wrote:My experiences would have to be classified under a sixth sense also, because no emotion is what I experienced.
Charity, how would you, personally, define the difference between revelation and emotion?
BishopRic wrote:I've been thinking about this lately -- in matters of religion and elsewhere, there is always the question of certainty, knowledge...and the proof that one needs to make a conclusion. What is absolute proof?
As an eye doctor, I can assure you that vision can be decevieng. The eyes are good, and generally trustworthy, but not always. So if one says "I saw it with my own eyes," it may be 99.9 % "proof" that it happened, but not 100% I'm sure the same can be said for the other senses.
We often hear about "spiritual witness." Charity frequently promotes her claim that she has had "witness" that gives her enough proof to say she "knows the church is true." Nehor talks to God -- and I assume hears back, so he (I assume) claims that this is enough proof that he "knows" God exists. And so on.
So one question I have is, what is a spiritual witness? Charity often insists it is not a feeling. What sense, or senses, are used to receive this witness? Why is it so vaguely defined? And why does it seem to be so diverse, even among Mormons. I know that for the first 40 years of my life, I claimed to have received this witness, but I interpret what it was differently today. But maybe I was/am just wrong!
One reason I'm a bit more curious than normal is that I was reading the recent Sunstone presentation by Dr. Robert Beckstead regarding the possible use of hallucinogens by Joseph to induce visions:
http://www.mormonelixirs.org/assets/pdf ... shroom.pdf
...and thought about the possibility that many of us misinterpret what our brain "sees" at times for reality. Perhaps in a dream state, we have an experience that is so real, then later when we try to re-construct it, we create a dramatic event that we could swear was real....
Your thoughts?