Jason Bourne wrote:Wow. A bit touchy today? I was not mocking Bob.
I asked you a question about a something that has been presented to me by others who believe in Christ and the witness of the spirit but believe that the spirit tells them something different about Joseph Smith.
That is it. How do you handle such a challenge? I never have successfully because how can I argue with their claim to a such a witness when I always believed that my witness could not be challenged.
The thin skin is not mine; it never has been on this board. I think if you check my posts I don't lose my temper; I don't get upset. Just because I needle you doesn't mean that I have lost control or had my feelings hurt. I don't like my wife and children attacked, which a few of you have done, but otherwise nothing bothers me.
As to you, the purpose for my post was to explain that when Christians and Christian Mormons explain the doctrine of the witness of the Spirit, folks like you meet the doctrine with derision. And you do mock. Oh so subtly, but you do. It isn't all that significant to me that you do. Don't take offense if it isn't true.
As to your "challenge" question about others "witnesses," I can only say that a witness of the Spirit is meant for the hearer of the word. So it doesn't matter what witnesses others have; if you trust in them, they'll let you down. So it matters not to me what other folks claim as witnesses.
That reminds me of an event in my mission. I began teaching a Pentecostal preacher (like the Mormons, many of them are lay preachers). When I returned for our second visit, he kicked us out and told me that he had burned the book as trash because that is what God told him to do. When we returned a third time, he said that God had given him a witness that he was in error, and that he shouldn't abuse the Mormon elders. He was baptized.
In another event in my professional life, a Baptist pastor sued the Church and the Q12 and FP over frivolous matters involving some claim of libel and copyright violation. I represented those. One of my very young LDS associates asked to meet him. (The associate is now a 40-year-old mission president.) The pastor ranted and raved for four hours about Church doctrine, how foolish it was; how false the burning in the bosom doctrine was; how the scriptures alone contained God's direction and he knew it by the Spirit. My associate waited and then asked if he would simply dismiss my clients without question. The pastor seemed stunned, and confessed that he had a dream the night before that that very question would be posed and that he answered "yes" in his dream. The proof in the pudding of this story is that he then dismissed the church defendants that day or the next. The litigation went on for years thereafter against others, so it wasn't like he was converted.