thews wrote:KevinSim wrote:Thews, then you went on to explain how you know that you're "not wrong" regarding "the divine inspiration of Mormonism." It seemed to come down to five points. (1) God would not have His prophet use an object to translate ancient records that had been used occulticly to allegedly see evil "treasure guardians." (2) God would not reveal to His prophet that things happened anciently when those things have no historical support. (3) God would not choose as a prophet someone who would claim "to be more accomplished than Jesus Christ." (4) God would not command His prophet to marry seventeen-year-olds behind his wife's back. (5) God would not choose a man as His prophet who could be fooled into believing modern manufactured plates were actually ancient documents, as in the Kinderhook incident.
What I believe based on the facts is represented in the above 5 points, but there's a lot more to solidify why I believe Mormonism is false. If you don't mind Kevin, can you address the 5 points above with your take on them?
Gladly. Regarding point (1), a little bit later in your article you quoted:
Deuteronomy 18:10-12
10 Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, 11 or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead. 12 Anyone who does these things is detestable to the LORD; because of these same detestable practices the LORD your God will drive out those nations before you.
So, in Deuteronomy 18 God does command that "no one be found among" the Israelites "who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead," but God also restricts those who practice divination. You mentioned the prohibition on divination yourself.
Now in Exodus 28:30, while talking about the things God wants His priests (or in particular Aaron) to wear, God says, "And thou shalt put in the breastplate of judgment the Urim and the Thummim; and they shall be upon Aaron's heart, when he goeth in before the LORD: and Aaron shall bear the judgment of the children of Israel upon his heart before the LORD continually."
If you go to "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urim_and_Thummim" you'll see that at least some scholars (assuming Wikipedia is actually telling us what scholars think) believe that the Urim and Thummim "is a phrase from the Hebrew Scriptures or Torah associated with the Hoshen (High Priest's breastplate), divination in general, and cleromancy in particular. Most scholars suspect that the phrase refers to specific objects involved in the divination."
The point I guess I'm trying to make is that just as God commanded the Israelites to not let "one be found among" them "who practices divination," and then commanded His priests to actually wear items that scholars later associated with divination, you can't conclude that because God also included those who consult the dead with those who practice divination, He's going to necessarily refuse to let His prophet work with seerstones, just because some people think they're involved in necromancy. Or can you think of some reason why seerstones should be associated with necromancy more than the scholars mentioned in the Wikipedia article associate the Urim and Thummim with divination?
The scholars can be wrong about whether the Urim and Thummim involved divination, in the same way that you can be wrong about whether God would or would not have His translator use seerstones, based on what you think about seerstones being involved with the occult.
(2) Every faith has some things that can be verified from history and some things that cannot. Christianity certainly does. Sure, much of the Bible can be verified; significant parts of it cannot. All that means is that it was common practice for the Jews and early Christians to include some parts of their history in their scriptures. History does verify that Israel did have a king named David, yes, and it verifies a lot of other things about the nations of Israel and Judah that the Hebrew Tanakh records.
But all that we have to support the narrative in the first five books of the Tanakh is the discovery of chariot wreckage at the bottom of the Red Sea. The historicity of the entirety of Genesis and Exodus is controversial at best, and laughable at worst. And there are many places in the Tanakh whose historicity is in question, not just the first five books. Is there any historical verification that an Israelite prophet convinced the entire city of Nineveh to repent of its sins, as related in the Book of Jonah? Is there any historical confirmation that a Jewish queen of Persia saved her race from complete annihilation, as related in the Book of Esther?
So, sure, I'm not aware of any historical support at all for the narratives in the Book of Mormon or the Books of Moses or Abraham. On the other hand, there's great historical verification that large numbers of Latter-day Saints moved as a group to the Kirtland, Ohio area, and that other large numbers of them gathered in Missouri as they believed God had commanded them. Both of these events are talked about in the book of scripture known as the Doctrine & Covenants. Joseph Smith-History in the Pearl of Great Price also mentions historical facts that can be verified.
Parts of the LDS-specific standard works can be historically verified; parts cannot. Parts of the Tanakh and New Testament also can be historically verified; parts cannot. So what's the big deal about historical claims the LDS Church has made?
(3) I think the assertion that Joseph Smith claimed to be more accomplished than Jesus is an exaggeration. The simple fact is that when Judas kissed Jesus in Gethsemane and Jesus Himself prevented Peter from using a sword to defend Him, the apostles scattered. Peter followed from a distance for a while, and the author of John's Gospel relates that John himself stood at the foot of the cross, but in the case of most of Jesus' apostles and disciples, they were nowhere to be found during Jesus' trial, beating, and execution.
Matthew 27 verse 20 says, "But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitude that they should ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus." Then later verse 25 says, "Then answered all the people, and said, His blood be on us, and on our children." I find it hard to believe that any of the apostles would make statements like this, so I'm convinced they weren't present. But verses 20 and 25 sound like pretty persuasive arguments that during that horrible day Jesus was pretty surrounded by His enemies.
That's all that Joseph Smith meant; the Latter-day Saints never abandoned him like Jesus' disciples abandoned Him on that day.
(4) The victim in the case of Joseph Smith marrying the seventeen-year-old was Joseph's wife, Emma. I guess a case could be made that the seventeen-year-old herself was also a victim, but I think the principal victim was Emma Smith. Thews, you seem to be convinced that God would not choose as His prophet a man who would commit an offense against someone like Emma period, let alone do it without her knowing what he was doing.
On the other hand, the victims in the account of 1 Samuel 15 is not just a wife and a seventeen-year-old girl, but instead is a whole race of people, the Amalekites, men, women, children, infants, and sucklings. When God commanded Samuel to commit genocide on the Amalekite race, and Samuel passed that order on to Saul, did Samuel tell Saul to inform the Amalekites that God wanted them dead? The Bible doesn't say. But I think military precedent indicates that Saul probably thought it was in the best interests of the Hebrew warriors if he caught them by surprise, so they probably didn't know they were being annhilated until the day of the attack.
So Joseph Smith didn't tell Emma what he was doing, and in all probability Saul didn't tell the Amalekites what he was going to do before he attacked them. Why in the world is it more likely that God would command Saul to kill an entire race (including every single "infant and suckling") than it is that God would command one man to polygamously marry a seventeen-year-old girl?
(5) One of the main, overarching themes developed in almost every part of the Bible is that there has been only one man in the history of the human race that didn't make a single mistake, and that man is not included among those who are commonly called prophets. Why is it so hard to believe that a man that God chose as His prophet wouldn't make a mistake regarding the Kinderhook plates?
I'm not conceding that Joseph Smith did make a mistake regarding those plates; LDS apologists have said things regarding this issue that I haven't read, and I probably need to read those things before I decide my opinion on this matter. What I'm saying is that even if it was estabslished that Joseph Smith did make a mistake, I don't see how you can go from such a mistake to the conclusion that God had not chosen him as God's prophet.
In short, I really don't see how any of these five points lead to the inescapable conclusion that God did not choose Smith as His prophet, as His spokesman to the world.
But while you sounded very convinced you were not wrong on the subject of the divine inspiration of Joseph Smith, you admitted that you might be wrong on the subject of endless torment for the unsaved, an issue that divides you with the vast majority of Biblical Christianity. Can you tell me, perhaps, what good it does for anybody, for the unsaved to spend the rest of eternity suffering unbearable agony that will never end? If one cannot know that a good God would cause the unsaved to cease to exist, if He could, rather than let them suffer unbearable agony forever, then what can one know that a good God would do?
You said that there were things beyond the five points I addressed above that made you doubt the divine inspiration of Joseph Smith. Think for a moment about all those things you were thinking of. Do any of them involve an infinite amount of damage to any of the souls of men or women? If so, then I'd like to know what they are. If not, then how in the world can you be more sure that God did not inspire Joseph Smith than you are that God would cause the souls of the unsaved to cease to exist if He had the ability to do that?