beastie wrote:If you realize that a feasible geographic location is imperative for belief in the ancient origin of the Book of Mormon, then why did you pretend as if it were an irrelevant, minor detail that God wasn't interested enough in to convey correctly to church leaders for all these years?
(1) Saying that "a feasible geographic location is imperative for belief in the ancient origin of the Book of Mormon" is quite a different proposition from saying that "a feasible geographic setting for the Book of Mormon is a crucial issue in supporting its claim of ancient origin." You're equivocating. Moving the goalposts. The first proposition, for example, is false. People who have never given the geography of the Book of Mormon a moment's thought have still believed in its ancient origin, as have people who have held to geographical views that, in my opinion and certainly in yours, were not "feasible." The latter statement is distinct and is true, because it says that a feasible geography is crucial for many arguments that attempt to construct a case supporting the book's antiquity.
(2) I agree with the latter, but see little evidence to suggest that academic cases for the antiquity of the Book of Mormon are centrally important to most people or to God.
(3) I note your insinuation that I only "pretend" to hold the views I do. As I often am, I'm left to wonder why believing Latter-day Saints aren't simply
flocking here for the charming, respectful, and civil conversations that this wonderful board offers.
beastie wrote:You question whether or not God misled Joseph Smith. Are you denying that Joseph Smith believed in the hemispheric model? I know some attempt to deny this, but it's quite foolish to do so. Are you denying that Joseph Smith formed his beliefs regarding the ancient Americans not just through the Book of Mormon, but through actual visitations by angelic visitors?
I think his views changed over time. Clearly, through much of his life, he held to a hemispheric model. Whether he
always did is debatable.
It seems obvious to me that his views were based on what he regarded as revelations, but that they were also significantly impacted by his thinking and his reading (e.g., of Stephens and Calderwood). This is not fundamentally different from the process through which any
other Latter-day Saint arrives at his or her views on the matter. The long-standing FARMS motto, taken from scripture, expresses this nicely enough: "By study, and also by faith."
beastie wrote:The idea that an appropriate geographic location for the Book of Mormon is some sort of higher precept (line upon line, let the simpletons believe a harmless fallacy for hundreds of years, it's inconsequential) is laughable. What, did people's minds have to be "prepared" in some way to accept the REAL TRUTH about the Book of Mormon??? Lol.
LOL!!!! Laughable! Hahaha!
I hold no such view.
I don't regard it as a "higher precept." I regard it as relatively peripheral.
Your complacently superior laughter would look considerably less foolish if, before you began your rather forced guffaws, you actually understood your target's viewpoint.
****Trevor wrote:I am still waiting for someone to suggest a scenario (geographical, archaeological, etc.) in which the ancient Book of Mormon actually makes some sense.
Whereas I, by contrast, with my own fair amount of training in ancient history and languages, think it already does.
The difference between us, I suspect, is not so much one of differing facts as one of differing worldviews and variant prior assumptions. Unless and until your worldview and assumptions change, you will not see a scenario that makes sense to you.