thews wrote:Why would one have to revise the word of God?
Wrong question.
As a fanatical Bible-worshipper, you naturally assume that "the word of God" = "published volume of scripture." Informed Latter-day Saints, however, do not.
Joseph didn't "revise the word of God." He revised his
translation of the Book of Mormon, a volume that
contains the word of God.
thews wrote:Is it not true that God would prevent Joseph Smith from progressing to the next word if he got it wrong
That's the trouble with getting all your "data" by mindlessly parroting anti-Mormon hate sites. Competent scholars who have studied the witness reports conclude that it was referring to the
spelling of proper nouns, and only on their first appearance.
thews wrote:with his head in hat looking into an occult seer stone?
Oooh, "occult!" The word that's guaranteed to raise the hackles of all the fanatics!
thews wrote:Did Joseph Smith claim the Book of Mormon was the most perfect book ever written?
No.
If you want to embarrass me by mining quotes from dead Mormon leaders, you need to get them right.
thews wrote:Your rationalizations are typical spoon-fed parrot talk.
And your response is typical Protestant Mormon-bashing.
thews wrote:One doesn't need to make the revisions in 1978 unless they were part of Mormonism. Care to address this fact Pahoran?
What "fact?" The fact that your opinion is worthless? The fact that you've asserted nothing meaningful?
thews wrote:Your blind ignorance of where "White and delightsome" came from is very typical of how you compartmentalize the aspects of Mormonism that make no sense. Should we all take your advice and just ignore them... hope they go away? ...pray for them to go away?
What you dishonestly try to dismiss as "blind ignorance" contains more actual pertinent facts than your entire dump of "data" mined from anti-Mormon hate sites.
thews wrote:Pahoran wrote:Indeed. Since there is no actual evidence of doctrinal change, one must blindly accept, based upon the say-so of Thews and his ilk, that it happens.
You are truly the most ignorant human I've ever come across.
Which is better than being the most dishonest one, like you.
Snip link to hate site.
thews wrote:President Spencer W. Kimball described the process through which the church decided to bestow all church privileges upon African-Americans:
"It went on for some time as I was searching for this, because I wanted to be sure. We held a meeting of the Council of the Twelve in the temple on the regular day. We considered this very seriously and thoughtfully and prayerfully.
"I asked the Twelve not to go home when the time came. I said, 'now would you be willing to remain in the temple with us?' And they were. I offered the final prayer and I told the Lord if it wasn't right, if He didn't want this change to come in the Church [snip the rest.]
Care to acknowledge the change in 1978? ...didn't think so... parrot-speak doesn't allow critical thought.
You should know about parrot-speak, since all you do is parrot the hate-speak of other Protestants as worthless as yourself.
Why pretend to ask a question if you are going to try to pre-empt my answer with a lie?
Of
course I acknowledge the change that took place in 1978.
The fact you are trying to conceal through your manipulative equivocation and brazen lies, is that not all change equals
doctrinal change. Indeed, you know this to be the case, because you started off talking about doctrinal change, and now you are trying to pretend that the word "change" in any context supports you.
But of course, you know it does not.
The change that happened in 1978 had
always been expected to happen at some time or other. It had been predicted as long ago as Brigham Young's time.
Yes, there was a change. No, there was not a doctrinal change.
Perhaps you wouldn't make such pervasive, embarrassing blunders if you stopped trying to expound LDS doctrine, something you are hopelessly unqualified to understand.
Regards,
Pahoran