liz3564 wrote:But, Harm....I thought your position was that you believed in the Book of Mormon. You didn't feel that Joseph became a fallen prophet until AFTER Fanny.....that the Book of Mormon was the ONE honest, prophetic work he accomplished.
If that is the case, why would the witnesses be lying?
And, if Joseph WAS scamming everyone about the Book of Mormon as well as everything else, then I suppose I do have to question why you have any conviction of the truthfulness of the LDS gospel at all? How can the Book of Mormon be a second testimony of Jesus Christ if it is completely false?
I'm not trying to put you on the spot here...I'm trying to understand your position. Frankly, I think your position makes a lot of sense. I have always had problems with D&C section 132.
This thread isn't about my testimony, much as you and Daniel and why me would like it to be, so I'll only comment once. I'd like the thread to be about the witnesses, what they sincerely thought they were witnessing, and the reliability of witnesses due to a number of factors.
I believe the Book of Mormon was given to Joseph to enrich us. God's gift to us, as it were, through Joseph. It was, I believe, supposed to be Joseph's only gift. And it truly is a marvelous work and a wonder. It matters little to me if it's historically accurate, nor do I care by what means it was developed. When I read things like the birth of Christ in the Book of Mormon, my soul resonates with the words and the meaning, thus it matters to me in ways the other books Joseph had a hand in do not. Which is, I suppose, why I am suspicious of the other books. I simply don't pick up the same wonderful spirit from the other books.
I believe Joseph went on to do many great and wonderful things, after he delivered God's gift to us, until he got caught up in the process instead of the content, and decided that what was important was his will instead of God's will. He was not the most profitable servant, and I believe that accounts for his early and untimely death. Had he been allowed to live out his life, I have no doubt he would have destroyed the church, and that would have been a shame, since I think that despite it's many faults and historical castastrophes, it continues to evolve into something that can be a conduit for God to use when speaking to his children. But to say that Joseph developed into an imperfect vessel is not an exaggeration.
I think the whole story of the golden plates isn't as it appears on the surface. I think the witnesses were sincere and honest when they reported what they saw, despite the backgrounds of some of them. I just don't think there's anything to support that what they think they saw is what has been reported to us. And until someone can produce the gold plates themselves, I'm afraid that suspicion will likely continue.
But then, I think if the walls of Jericho actually did fall down, it wasn't because the Isrealites had anything to do with it. I don't believe the Red Sea parted either, nor do I believe in any of the 7 plagues. I don't think Paul's experience was what was finally written, nor do I believe the circumstances around Christ's birth were quite what was written. Everything that is written, from Biblical stories to Book of Mormon stories, comes to us via the minds of men. God never picked up a writing utensil. Never dipped a pen into ink. We only have his word via the minds of men, and we can take it or leave it, take pieces or take the whole, believe part and disbelieve other parts. We are, as they were, discerning, intelligent, faithful people. If my relationship with God was purely based on the Book of Mormon or the Bible, I'd be an unprofitable servant too (and I may be that anyway, just as Joseph was).
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.