Hey MG...
Yes I do. But as I said before, it is difficult if not impossible to qualitatively compare/analyze these experiences.
Well, yes and no. :-)
There has been some amazing research on spiritual experience... have you read, Why God Won't Go Away?
While obviously we can't know exactly how each and every spiritual experience manifests, it seems fairly clear folks from the religions of the world experience similar neurological phenomenon during these types of experiences.
Nevertheless, what we can know is how one individual describes their spiritual experiences while they have been a believer in more than one religion. Or as a believe and a non-believer.
So far as I can tell, literally everyone who was a believing Mormon and had what they considered powerful spiritual experiences, witnesses of the HG, and even inspiration and personal revelation, and who no longer believes in the LDS church can compare their experiences before and after belief. So far I have not heard of anyone in this circumstance who asserts their experience as an LDS believer is different than other "spiritual" experiences, some even having the same types of experiences that have nothing to do with religion or belief.
One would be hard pressed to do so and then conclusively propound the idea that they are all the same experience with simply a different syntax attached to them.
I do not think it is quite so difficult.
In other words's, I don't know that you can use this argument to say that there isn't something qualitatively different about the Moroni 10:3-5 experience as it may compare to those experiences that people have in other religious traditions. To use this argument and then in turn discard the possible truth/validity of Moroni's promise is a shaky postition...at best. Totally fallacious at worst.
Again, I do not see it quite the same. However, the fact is, folks in virtually all religions of the world believe their experiences are representative of truth. Just as LDS believe theirs are better/more powerful/more true/ more Godly/more something, other religions dismiss the LDS witness as something other than from God.
The point being... relying on one's spiritual experiences as some ultimate form of truth seems VERY suspect given that everyone believes theirs is representative of truth and no one seems to be able to support their belief with anything other than assertion.
Ya know?
:-)
~dancer~