stemelbow wrote:sock puppet wrote:Stem, I do not doubt you have had an experience you chhose to interpret as a sign from god confirming the truth claims of .Mormonism, LDS style. (I have no idea why you choose to interpret it that way, and you are certainly welcome to explain that. I think we'd all find that intersting.)
That is your individual experience and interpretation. Without a cogent explanation of why you dismiss all other interpretations of your experience as such, there's nothing to discuss except perhaps how you fend off evidence that contradicts Mormonism's truth claims.
So please do elucidate us on why you accept no other explanations of your experience and how you deal with the contra evidence.
I readily acknowledge my personal experiences that make up my faith can be viewed by many in a variety of ways. I'm aware that any explanation I offer concerning my experiences can easily be thought to be nothing more than my own interpretation that may not be factual. That's cool. I'm not here to justify my faith, as I said. I'm just here to discuss the issues of the Church, acknowledging often that there are problems with the claims of the church. In some cases I feel the Church can be wrong and yet my faith still hold merit. And in other cases I feel justified in thinking my faith provides evidence of issues we aren't fully informed on. The issue I have is if the critics position is to be taken seriously the critic must prove its claims--that is if the claim truly is the Church is proven false.
Since you obviously refuse to first establish that which is not self-evident, i.e. your claim that the LDS Church's claims are true, there is nothing established to be proven false.
Until you do, I couldn't care less whether you take criticism of the LDS Church seriously.
I can fully understand why TBMs will not go into a detailed description of
(a) why they choose to interpret an experience a certain way rather than other logical, alternate interpretations, and
(b) why they nibble on the edges like mopologists of historical facts and scientific advancements, for room for plausibility rather than face probabilities.
Self-examination (#(a)) above has destroyed the testimonies of many. And #(b), facing head-on the problems of probability and the most likely and obvious evidence (like the DNA evidence in this thread) has also destroyed the testimonies of many, as have the unearthing for the masses of the historical record of 19th Century Mormonism. BKP told the flock 'let it alone.' Sage advice if you can't handle the truth.