huckelberry wrote: ↑Mon Feb 16, 2026 1:27 am
MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Sun Feb 15, 2026 11:38 pm
Ancient Israelite priests also used physical stones as instruments of revelation.
Israel “casts lots” in various situations (division of land, choosing Saul, selecting Matthias in Acts 1.
In the ancient world, kings and priests used physical objects to seek divine direction. Joseph’s 'peep' stone fits this very old pattern of object‑mediated divination.
In Joseph Smith's world the use of a stone from his folk magic environment was repurposed by God. That's what believers believe anyway.
Regards,
MG
thinking as a nonmormon I see no reason to believe God could not use a stone in a hat as part of revealing. Why in the world not? I think the Book of Mormon is the clearest evidence of revelation or not.
I suppose if one does not believe the book the stone suggests things other than revelation however.
This seems to be reasonable. God using a stone in a hat is a claim about means, not content, and religious traditions...even those not associated with Judeo-Christianity...accept different, sometimes odd, 'means' for revelation and/or messages from the gods.
Limnor, do you believe in talking donkeys?
In principle it would seem that there wouldn't be anything unusual (especially in a non-technology age) about God using the mundane, even folk magic associated objects, as a medium of communication. One would think that an omnipotent God could, at least in theory, use any
contingent vehicle to get a message across/delivered.
huckelberry, you say that the Book of Mormon itself is "the clearest evidence of revelation or not". I would tend to agree. If this is so, it is the content of the Book of Mormon itself that outweighs the delivery system. The 'oddness' of the instrument being used may be secondary.
It seems to be a bit risky and possibly unreasonable to say, "Well, the delivery system is the the primary reason to discount the revelatory nature of the Book of Mormon". The important thing may be whether or not the resulting text bears the marks of genuine revelation.
The device is neutral. In my opinion anyway.
Regards,
MG