Symmachus wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:So God thinks the Book of Mormon took place somewhere in the Americas, with the Lamanites having spread to Missouri by then.
Yeah, but He's been wrong before.
Hahahahahaha! =)
Symmachus wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:So God thinks the Book of Mormon took place somewhere in the Americas, with the Lamanites having spread to Missouri by then.
Yeah, but He's been wrong before.
DonBradley wrote:It's a good thing we have precise and inarguable bull's eyes like the Book of Mormon containing English from centuries off-target. Otherwise we might have to draw targets around the random places our arrows have landed and just declare them bull's eyes.
Thank God we don't find ourselves in that awkward situation. Imagine how silly we'd look to everyone else!
EAllusion wrote:Further, it seems like there are many ideas on the table if "ghosts did it" is on the table. Maybe aliens wrote it as a prank. Maybe it a hoax written in the 16th century that Joseph Smith found. Those are absurdly unlikely, of course, but when you can hold up an alternative as a default based on remaining unconvinced in a particular natural account, why not?
I can't empathize with worldview where any time I'm confronted with only unlikely accounts of why something happened that leads me to conclude that ghosts did it. Just the other day I accidentally microwaved some food for 30 seconds when I meant to microwave it for 3 minutes. Yet the food came out done. I haven't the slightest idea why, but that didn't lead to me assuming ghosts did me a favor by hyper-cooking the food. That would just be an ad hoc account tailor-made to solve that which I cannot actually explain. When it comes to this issue, I'm sure such reasoning is compartmentalized to the religion, but to me this speaks negatively to the influence of religion on that person's thinking.
There's simply no way a person with a modicum of self-awareness would submit the ghost theory in earnest to a respected academic journal. Anyone intelligent enough to come up with it is intelligent enough to appreciate how foolish it would be perceived. I can imagine how that might embitter a sincere believer. After all, they are no dodo.
Kishkumen wrote:
I think you are overlooking the explanatory power that the obvious involvement of Dee and Kelley in the translation process possesses. This is not random, good sir! Dee and Kelley were precisely the two figures whom one would expect to guide an Enochian revelatory process.
Based on descriptions of the translation process, my tentative conclusion would be that Dee and Kelley were the actual translators, and they simply communicated their translations to Smith through his stone. Kelley in particular was well skilled in scrying, while it was Dee who was the linguist, capable of organizing Dee's rough materials systematically. Thanks to the speed of work outside the mortal body, they could transact the business much more quickly than they could in mortality, resulting in a very speedy translation process from Joseph's point of view.
Joseph Smith was not actually the translator. He was a seer. The true translators of the Book of Mormon were Dee and Kelley!
Kishkumen wrote:Yes, it is true, EA. Secular scholars, under the sway of a fashionable atheism, will dismiss the most parsimonious explanation: John Dee and Edward Kelley translated the Book of Mormon from beyond the grave and Joseph Smith contacted them through his seer stone. It is the only explanation that really works, but they will, out of their prejudice, ignore the only truly viable explanation.
Dee seems to have had an almost obsessive facination with the lost Apocrypha, especially the Book of Enoch.
Joseph Peterson, editor of Dr. Dee's Five Books of Mystery