stemelbow wrote:I'm not sure what issue you guys think you've discovered. Let me put it this way.
The scriptures are scripture to me, not necessarily because they are verbatim, each word, that God wants me to have, but because they represent teachings, spirit of teachings that will be good for me. I think I've demonstrated many times I do not hang on every word written within the LDS canon. I do not get why it is such a problem for a non-believer. I'm quite cool with the notion that the Book of Mormon contains writings that, while found in the biblical canon, were not original to it. Why? Because I find the Book of Mormon message, the message's spirit, useful to me. NOw, if its from God, as a believer maintains, then its up to God to include biblical passages, from the KJV, in the Book of Mormon.
So While I get why you guys don't want to believe and in your minds can''t believe, I see no reason to be forced to accept the notion that the Book of Mormon is a fraud based on this reason. It makes no sense, if God is involved. I suppose you can conclude God was never involved, or there is no God. Fine by me. Conclude whatever you wish. I see the reason in that. Just don't expect me to accept your guys' position and feel forced to accept something that is not all that reasonable to me.
Would you mind if I tried to reformulate your position in a way that will I hope say what you intend to say, but in a way that will (to many I think) seem a bit less tangled:
"Stemelbow
1. Concedes the force of the objections against the Book of Mormon being a genuine ancient text, based on the fact that it contains some material that could not have been available at the time it is supposed to have been written. He agrees that these objections, taken alone, might be thought to support the position that the Book of Mormon is a 19th century forgery.
2. But on the grounds of his personal and uncommunicable religious experience and conviction, Stemelbow is convinced that the Book of Mormon is in its essentials a text of divine origin containing teachings of inestimable value.
3. Therefore Stemelbow is prepared to discount the objections in (1), and to assume on the basis of faith alone that there is some reasonable way to explain the anomalies complained of by critics, even though at present he cannot say what that reasonable way might be.
4. Stemelbow considers it unreasonable for people who do not share his convictions mentioned in (2) to demand that he discount them and conclude that the Book of Mormon is a merely human production of a 19th century forger."
Can you agree that the above is a fair statement of your position? by the way, I do not have a sucker punch that I intend to throw if you say 'Yes' to that!