Jason Bourne wrote:This comment really seems a bit grade school to me. Nobody should have a testimony of history? Nonsense. The Mormon Church is founded on its claims of restoration. The First Vision is the pivotal event of that claim. The Book of Mormon second to that. The story behind these two items are historical. Too trust those making the claims we need to know about them. Again, history. Sure history is written by humans. So are the books you claim to have a testimony of.
A work colleague recently pointed me at Thomas Payne's "The Age of Reason", and I've started reading it (I'm not done yet - there's a House marathon going on on TV and my wife and I recently latched onto that show...). What I thought was actually quite humorous in its simplicity, and yet spot-on, is this simple fact: a teaching or claim or whatnot supposed to be coming from Deity to mankind through an individual can only be "revelation" to that particular individual. To all others, it is hearsay.
And when evaluating hearsay, the credibility of the teller is critical. So, was Joseph Smith credible? I think not, and in this determination, a look at what history we know of Joseph Smith is critical. One could claim I can't know enough history to make a fair judgment, and that may be true in some sense, but that just increases the unlikelihood of a real God's having acted through that person who claimed the revelation, otherwise we must suspect a God who is setting up a rational person for failure.
For there are many people who have claimed revelation, and if we must dispense with examinations of their apparent trustworthiness and motives for self-enrichment, and stick only to the "spiritual" criteria the prophets themselves claim, then we must be lost in a morass of feelings, emotions, euphorias, and other types of psychological phenomena which simply cannot serve as indicators of some independent, cosmic truth. For every LDS with a testimony from the Holy Ghost, there is a Catholic, or a Pentecostalist, or any number of other religionists, with a similar tale to tell, and there is no good, trustworthy, or reliable standard by which their experiences can be told apart, and the "real" ones, the ones that can be trusted, distinguished from the counterfeits.
Like I said, if a God truly exists, and used this particular method to instruct his creations, then he has set up the more rational part of his creations for failure for using the rational and skeptical faculties he himself gave them.