Nevo wrote:How can you say that Jesus was actually inspired by God and not Judas the Galilean or Theudas or Simon bar Kokhba or any of the other messianic claimants of his era? What about Honi the Circle-Drawer or Apollonius of Tyana? One has to pick and choose.
Hi Nevo,
My own loss of faith in certain LDS truth claims has very little to do with early church history but I understand how someone can legitimately be bothered by how Joseph Smith practiced polygamy. As you point out there are many competing claims to divine inspiration and a person must pick and chose. What role if any does morality play in such decisions? Suppose for example I have two persons claiming to be inspired by a perfectly moral and loving God Jane and Joe. Jane is a spotless example of loving charity engaging all day every day in selfless service to her fellow men. Joe on the other hand seems to be a vicious sociopath spending his time hunting down and torturing innocents to death. Is it not reasonable to conclude based on their behavior Jane's claim to be in communication with a loving God is more likely to be true than Joe's same claim? Suppose Joe really believes his actions are dictated by a loving and perfectly moral God. Can we still not say his actions reduce the probability he really is being guided by a loving moral God? The point I am trying to make is when judging whether or not an individual is really and truly being guided by a perfectly moral loving God their actions are a legitimate way to judge their claims. Perhaps not the only such way but certainly something to take into account.
So the critical argument as I understand it is that Joseph Smith behaved in morally repugnant actions hence this should be taken into account as negative evidence when we evaluate his claims to being guided by a perfectly moral loving God. Sure maybe he really believed God wanted him to institute polygamy and this is the reason he behaved the way he did. But simply because a person who behaves in a morally objectionable fashion believes God wants them to so behave does not in fact mean God really does want them to.
Now a possible response is to point out God sometimes commands morally objectionable actions the Old Testament is a great resource here :). Now this response is dependent on the critic accepting the Old Testament or such resources as a reliable record of what God does and doesn't do which will be a questionable assumption for many. Still even if we accept that God sometimes commands or engages in morally questionable actions we can confidently say this is very rare. Hence most who claim "God told me so" as justification for the morally questionable acts they perform are very likely to be wrong even if a very small number of them are right. Hence questionable moral actions by those claiming divine inspiration can still reasonably be used as negative evidence for said claims.
Personally I think the best apologetic tact is to frankly acknowledge Joseph Smith behaved in a morally repugnant way and yes this can reasonable be viewed as negative evidence regarding his claims to be guided by a moral God. But that other positive evidence outweighs this negative evidence. For example personal spiritual confirmation of Joseph Smith claims (a terrible reason by the way) or perhaps various positive scholarly evidences regarding Book of Mormon historicity.
Best,
Uncertain