MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 07, 2022 9:16 pm
Alternative location? I’m sure you can come with one that works. Consider time and location, etc.
Oh, is it possible that God had something in mind by leading them through the geography and the experiences they had along the way?
And…what’s with this ‘magic’ stuff? You’re making it appear as though when God supervises and guides his children along it’s all some kind of hocus pocus ‘trickery’ of some sort. I don’t think that’s how God works. Here and there he might do a ‘Red Sea’ thing, but that’s a one in a ______ exception/anomaly.
Any communication from God to man seems magical. There's been no demonstration it has ever happened or that there is a God at all. No one's identified what GOd is, where we can find him and every single claim that he is there shows it's as likely he is there as he is not. That is anyone who claims God has helped them or said something to them, could have benefitted by chance rather than direct help from God or could have thought of the words themselves while thinking God's inside them making up the words.
Nephi's story has God doing magic in order to build a ship. In his case, if true, God actually did help--you know the claims of finding lost keys isn't really help from God because surely keys have been found with and without invoking God. As you said God provided aid in at least the form of giving him plan sets, if you will, magically...out of thin air, as they say. The tools making process seems magical too. If we're going to take his story seriously, we can think of it in two ways: 1. Nephi thinks God inspired him on how to build a ship, but in reality he built a ship, perhaps having seen something like it before, and claimed God helped. Or 2. God actually magically (as in we don't know how) gave Nephi plans, guided him as he worked and directed the work, provided him means to create tools, etc. Excluding the concept of magic may seem ok because you just assume there's a god and he does magical things enough already. But, as I said, none of that has been demonstrated as ever really happening. Its an assumption at this point.
Leading Lehi and Co. to a place where THEY could do the work necessary to build a boat and get to the promised land is much more up God’s alley, at least in my opinion.
Well, sure...its all possible. I'm just pointing out it's not a rational position to hold until one demonstrates a God, what he is, how he's there and helps....and demonstrates, in the case of the sequestered claim from the article you linked, that the location is the only possible location from which God's plans, magically divined, could work. Or demonstrate God couldn't have led them anywhere from Jerusalem to the coasts of Oman, or Yemen or wherever they think it happened, and performed some magic to get them to build a boat.
There’s a certain degree of rationality to God relying on folks to learn and grow through experience rather than doing magic tricks, don’t you think?
Regards,
MG
No. That's outside the bounds of rationality. In order for there to be something rational in what you're saying, we need demonstration of a God first. Until then all claims that "God did it" is just assumption. You see, it seems extremely unlikely Nephi and co could have built a ship worthy of transoceanic voyage. Toss a magical God who could do anything he wishes into the mix and there is no reason to think that unlikeliness raises to any degree. Why? because we don't have a God in any demonstration anywhere.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos