beastie wrote:
Well...not completely. I originally said, "give them a guidebook to begin with" and then let them run with it. The guidebook is one of God's "fingerprints" which would provide some evidence that the church is not wholly man made in its totality. This guidebook may not be the only fingerprint. But these fingerprints are only observable, it seems, by those that have eyes to see and ears to hear. Similarly, fingerprints left behind in a room are only detectable by those who have the tools to retrieve them. If all of the fingerprints that were left in a room were directly observable, one would not have to have faith that they are there. After all, it would be possible that there weren't any finger prints in the room, period. But, they either are or aren't. It is just as possible that there are...or aren't... any of God's finger prints on the LDS church. If these purported prints are invisible to the naked eye, it would take special apparatus to see that they really are there. The fingerprints that show God's handiwork in the LDS church may literally be invisible to those that do not have the apparatus to observe them, or are unwilling to use said tools.
As a result the church could, in a very real sense, appear to be completely and exclusively man made.
That is how you and others see it. I think it is possible to have at least a partial understanding of why that may be the case.
No. You’re talking nonsense. The only reason you don’t recognize it as such is because you’ve completely immersed yourself in your “choice” to believe.
You're making my point, Beastie. If the LDS church is true, you literally can't see it.
And no, I haven't "completely immersed [myself] in [my] “choice” to believe." You may see this to be so from your vantage point...but it just ain't so. I'm totally open to the possibility of being wrong. I've mentioned this a number times on this board. I think I've mentioned as much on this thread, or the other recent one dealing with skepticism.
Regards,
MG