BrianH wrote:Darth J wrote:The veracity of the Bible is directly on point. If the Bible is not true, then Mormonism cannot possibly be true. The uncomfortable fact that your cherished beliefs also go down with the ship is just too bad.
You put your beliefs at issue by coming here and posting. The truth value of other religious traditions is necessarily at issue with regard to Mormonism, since the LDS Church claims to be the one, true church. Also, the scope of this board is not defined by its name alone:
http://mormondiscussions.com/Mormon Discussions. . . Because we all want the truth.
Here is a place of free discussion. Whether you want to discuss the finer intricacies of doctrine, or whether you want to discuss the truthiness of the church in general, your word will be heard here.
Pro, anti, investigator, questioner, critic, apologetic, no matter what you call yourself, what you have to say, or what your agenda is, you have a place here. We pride ourselves on a minimalistic moderation policy, so that your voice is always heard.
You are obviously confused. I did not say that complaining about the Bible was
against the rules, Darth; I said it has nothing to do with my request that Mormons show us some reasons to think that the Egyptian document universally recognized as the "Book of Breathings" somehow really does translate into what Mormons call the "Book of Abraham". And as a case in point that Smith identified the canopic deities in Fac #1 in your "Book of Abraham", CORRECTLY.
Yes, "my" Book of Abraham, which I so valiantly defend on this board.
If the Bible recites a bunch of mythology, like the story of Noah's ark, and the Book of Abraham repeats that mythology (which it does), then showing that the Egyptians are not the descendants of Ham, and that Egyptian civilization existed during the time frame when the entire planet was supposed to be underwater, furthers the case that the narrative in the Book of Abraham is not a true story. Mormon apologists frequently try to show that the substance of the Book of Abraham narrative is indicative of it being a revealed ancient document. However, if the substance of the Book of Abraham can be shown to be a reiteration of Old Testament mythology mixed with literature that was in fact available to Joseph Smith, the "catalyst" theory is disposed of. (Although that which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without argument, so there is no reason to find the catalyst theory persuasive, anyway).
The simple logical fact is, even if the Bible did not exist, my question would still be entirely valid. Thus the Bible's veracity is as irrelevant as the veracity of the Pophul Vuh, the Kojiki or even Harry Potter.
-BH
That is a dazzlingly stupid statement. All of Mormonism's truth claims depend on the Bible being actual history. Joseph Smith was a biblical literalist, and there is not a single story in the Bible that the modern LDS Church does not teach to be a record of events that really happened. The veracity of the Bible is constantly at issue when approaching Mormonism.
ETA: The Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price also assume that the events recorded in the Bible really happened.