charity wrote:Exactly. It is all about faith. I have heard the idea expressed, (I don't know that I believe it, necessarily, however,) That there will never be archeological proof of the Book of Mormon discovered because then the book would not have to be taken on faith. And that is the whole point.
Since when is that the whole point? Since when? This whole "... never be archeological proof of the Book of Mormon because then we wouldn't have to have faith." crap is only even brought up at all
because there's no archeological proof of the Book of Mormon.
And check out FARMS. They seem to really want to demonstrate proof that the Book of Mormon is true. What's with the whole NHM thing, if they aren't trying to discover and demonstrate such proof? What's with any of it? Why bother with NHM instead of just standing up and bearing testimony, if it's all really just about having faith, and not actually having evidence?
But seriously, since when is the whole point of the Book of Mormon having faith, such that it's necessary, in order to support this aim, for archeological proof never to be discovered?
Did the people described in the Book of Mormon actually exist, or didn't they?
Did Zarahemla exist, or didn't it?
Were the ancient American peoples (at least some significant chunk of them) between ~600 BC and ~400 AD actually Christian, or weren't they?
Did the ancient American peoples (at least some signficiant chunk of them) have steel, chariots, horses, barley, wheat, elephants, etc., or didn't they?
These are all questions of
fact, Charity. They either are fact, or they are fiction. If they are fact, then the Nephites and Lamanites would have left evidence around, just like every other race and people on the face of the earth. There will be ruins and artifacts from them, just as there are from all the other civilizations and peoples. There's not a reason in the world that the Book of Mormon peoples, cities, races, civilizations shouldn't be provable by the same means that existence of so many other past civilizations and peoples is verified - by find their evidence.
The only contradiction to this is that maybe God actually hid all the evidence, specifically to thwart us finding them, so that we, as you suggest, are required to "have faith" in the Book of Mormon rather than actually have physical evidence back up the claims.
Do you think God actually hid up the entire civilizations of the Book of Mormon for this reason, Charity? You would have to believe that God left evidence in the Earth of evolution, of an ancient Earth, of no Noah's Ark having happened, of human beings existing on the face of the Earth for hundreds of thousands of years past the earliest Biblical timeline for Adam and Eve, and all sorts of troublesome and pesky things, but he
wiped out, erased, or hid the evidence that would back up the Book of Mormon events having been real? Does this actually make sense to you? Is this really, in your heart of hearts,
reasonable to you, that God should act this way?
This life is a test. Remember that? Do you believe or do you not believe? I can't imagine the following testimony on fast day. "I know the Book of Mormon is true because Dr. Digalot has just found Zarahemla."
You know, it's entirely possible that the only reason that F&T meeting is necessary at all right now is to keep people repeating the mantras, so that they keep believing what otherwise appears not to be true. Maybe F&T meeting would even be needed anymore if Dr. Digalot really did find Zarahemla, and what exactly would be wrong with that? What exactly is wrong with people believing things that actually appear, from the historical record,
to be true?
Why is it that religious apologists like to fall back on this absurd notion that in order to be authentic, faith must be in things that, scientifically, or archeologically, actually appear to be in serious trouble? What kind of God gives us all a very logical, capable, rational mind, and then only will reward those who figure out how to circumvent all the mental and rational safeguards and learn to believe things even though they actually appear, on the evidence, not really to be true?
Sorry, Charity, but if God exists, he gave me the rational mind that looks at the evidence that the Church is apparently not true and
takes that seriously. I'm sure he'd understand.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen