Brad Hudson wrote:Bhodi wrote:
I said Ludwigm's article was silly, and that is jumping down his throat? He has demonstrated no knowledge of the subject, but this is not his fault and others must be blamed? He made mistakes in this thread, and others must be blamed. At all costs the anti-Mormon mindset MUST be protected, and this is silly.
You did more than call the article silly, as Ludwig has shown.
Enough with the constant derailment -- how about we discuss the substance of the thread.
Yes, let's get back to the thread. The Old Testament reference to Lucifer and its application by Smith in the Book of Mormon is interesting and helpful; but the thread was about his borrowings from the New Testament.
Here's how the thread began:
Wikipedia defines “parallelisms” in rhetoric as “giving two or more parts of the sentences a similar form so as to give the whole a definite pattern.” I propose that the following examples are rhetorical parallelisms. Each begins with a citation from the Book of Mormon, that is followed by the Book of Mormon quote to which it applies, followed by a parallel quote in the New Testament, and followed, finally, by the citation to the New Testament quote. (The previous sentence is an example of parallelism in grammar bty.)
I ask the following questions: (1) Do these parallelisms create a pattern establishing that Joseph Smith copied New Testament words and phrases as he was translating or writing, as the case may be, the Book of Mormon?; (2) If the answer to the first question is in the affirmative, what does this tell us about how to Book of Mormon was created?; and (3) Would it be helpful if I produced hundreds of these parallelisms between Book of Mormon and New Testament phrases and sentences?
I had listed ten examples in the opening post to this thread. There are hundreds more; so no need to focus solely on one Old Testament reference, when we have hundreds we could be talking about in the New Testament.