Franktalk wrote:Alfredo wrote:Your view of spiritual communication is an interpretation based upon what...?
If I could be granted one guess, I'd suppose that you came to this understanding of spiritual communication somehow through an act of spiritual communication?
You would be wrong. It is obvious that many people say they are witnessed by the Holy Spirit. Yet they are all over the map as to the exact message they obtained. There is only one truth and God is not a God of confusion. So it is man that says one thing or another thing. The warm cozy feelings that were misinterpreted run rampant among seekers. It is an obvious observation of man that leads me to this conclusion.
My personal spiritual experience is my own and I offer no proof what so ever. Except that before my experiences I was a different person. My change in behavior was caused by my spiritual communication.
I'm wrong? Well, then I still don't understand your answer to my challenge so I'll try rephrasing.
I'll warn you again, because before we know it, you and I will have produced paragraph upon paragraph intended for two different conversations. So, please read carefully and respond accordingly.
I realize that you've somehow arrived at several interpretive
conclusions concerning the nature of spiritual experiences and that you wish to illustrate them thoroughly. I don't care how clearly you can illustrate these conclusions, because as I've explained, the entire thrust of my argument is to question
how you've arrived at these particular interpretations/conclusions to begin with. I'm asking you to isolate the single element or method which has led you to believe that
the way in which you interpret spiritual communication is preferable or more reliable than any contrary interpretation.
Whatever that element or method is, my challenge against it is this:
Can you provide a single reason to rely on this method which isn't itself somehow dependent upon your prior interpretation of spiritual communication, which is in question?I'm looking for a
direct response or dispute for this question. It seems many faithful don't understand the concept of a direct response. Maybe you'll be a lucky winner.
The purpose of this thread is to question that there is
any reliable method to interpret religious experience, but it seems all you can offer is... no surprise... interpretation of religious experience and no method for finding which interpretations should be trusted.
But considering you've already resolved to offer no proof other than the experience happened to change
you, I don't see how your interpretation is relevant to anyone but yourself, and weakly relevant at that. So as response, it's irrelevant to a discussion about what can be said about categories of religious experience. We know people make significant changes for all sorts of reasons. Are you claiming that the only value you find in Mormonism is pragmatic? Is there any truth value at all?
You need to take a step back and view your interpretations and the method used to arrive at these interpretations as in competition with contrary interpretations and methods. To do what proves most difficult for hardcore Mormons: To consider your religious experience from a perspective
independent of Mormonism.
So, help me understand... is this something you even want to talk about? Because if you do, and you understand and acknowledge my argument exists, you'll have done much more than anyone ever has when presented with this argument. It's likely you either don't understand or just aren't interested in entertaining this clearly important idea for some silly reason someone else could use to defend a contrary religion. Prove me wrong?