bcspace wrote:
The same as any nonhuman imho.
Care to elaborate?
The same as any nonhuman imho.Care to elaborate?
bcspace wrote:I prefer a local flood hypothesis.
The bodies had been buried with curious attention. According to the expert Bohuslav Klima, of the Czech Institute of Archaeology in Brno both young men had been laid to rest with their heads encircled with necklaces of pierced canine teeth and ivory; the one with the pole thrust up to his coccyx may also have been wearing some kind of painted mask. All three skulls were covered in red ocher. The most peculiar feature of the grave, however, was the arrangement of the deceased. Whoever committed the bodies to the ground extended them side by side, the woman between her two companions. The man on her left lay on his stomach, facing away from her but with his left arm linked with hers. The other male lay on his back, his head turned toward her. Both of his arms were reaching out, so that his hands rested on her pubis. The ground surrounding this intimate connection was splashed with red ocher.
bcspace wrote:Neanderthal doesn't count because his spirit is not a literal spirit child of God. Nor any homo sapiens prior to Adam. Thus Adam becomes the "first man also" because his spirit is the first spirit child of God to inhabit a physical body on the earth.
BCSpace, I think your "creative period evolution" theory is absolutely wacky, and you are taking advantage of the fact that the scriptures can only use words to a certain level of precision.
You are creating an entire theory out of the fact that the Book of Mormon didn't go out of it's way to specifically negate "death" during the creative period in a single verse, as if the original author of this verse intentionally worded it in such a way to allow you this room because it was important to allow for death before the final creation.
And whether it was originally written by Lehi or Joseph Smith, I'm sure neither could fathom that one day, someone would argue that while the final "created" product was immortal, God used an evolutionary cycle of repeated births/deaths during the creative process.
2 Nephi 2:22 isn't precisely worded as a divine gift to you to support your theory; it is worded in the only way that would make sense to Lehi or Joseph Smith. The scriptures can't go out of their way to precisely debunk every LDS crackpot theory, and you are taking advantage of that.
After reading your posts over at MADB, I can honestly say that I believe you and I have the same level of doubt towards the Church's claims.
Our only difference is the creativity and effort you are willing to devote to convince yourself that you don't doubt. Either that, or your whole "creative period" theory is a subtle but sharp parody of apologetic arguments people resort to in trying to resolve conflicts between LDS doctrine and science, and the degree of legalism people can apply to the scriptures and words of modern leaders in that pursuit.
cinepro wrote:Here's the part where I come clean and admit that until a few years ago, I totally believed Adam and Eve were the first humans (or human-like creatures), and that there was no physical death in the world until Adam fell.
I also totally believed Noah's flood covered the whole world.
And I believed these things because that was what I had always been taught at Church.
That now seems like so long ago, and I understand that the many different wards I lived in were all teaching a particular strain of fundamentalism, and were misinterpreting the scriptures and lesson manuals provided by the Church.
bcspace wrote:I prefer a local flood hypothesis. Dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago.