zeezrom wrote:sock puppet wrote:I agree that a reader should be skeptical, but that does not excuse the authors for the deception they've written. And I think many a reader of the Book of Mormon and/or the Bible have been socially cajoled into accepting what is read and not to scrutinize it. When I first read the Book of Mormon at age 14, it was under the intense social pressure to do so of my neighborhood (barely a non Mormon to be found) including bishop, counselors, sunday school teacher, seminary teacher, teacher's quorum adivsor, my parents, grandparents, and 4-year older sibling, and even a few aunts and first cousins sprinkled in there.
While I shoulder some of the blame, because others rejected it at ages younger than I was when I finally did, I am not willing to give the Book of Mormon's authors and those that promoted it onto me a pass, particularly the deceptive authors and the institutional promotion out of the COB.
I feel that the people who pressured you are responsible more than the authors of the book. I certainly don't look at Homer as a deceiver. I look at Homer with a grateful heart for passing to us such an interesting story.
Did Homer use his literary work, as JSJr did, to gain a following, with the threat of god's wrath and punishment if they did not do what Homer said god wanted them to, like build him a mansion house and store?