Unfortunately, this scenario has happened and will continue to happen until people refuse to allow others to define and delimit their personal ecstacies. So much can be gained from a peak experience if one is not hamstringed in their choices of what the experience means, or worse where the experience originates. Your freedom to interpret your own experience outside of a matrix of memes, designed to capture your allegiance, is something every person should avail themselves of. By keeping your own counsel with regard to your experiences, you become free to interpret them and to reinterpret them as guided by your own muse.
Moroni can only corner the market on your experiences if you let him. Don't let him or anyone place limits on the myriad meanings available to a purely personal interpretation of the mystery.
This is as good an example of Boomeresque, New Agist self absorption and epistemological solipsism As I've seen in a long time. The implication, that each individual can go within himself to find his or here individual, autonomous spiritual experiences, and that each of these will be valid and true for that individual, is, of course, true, if one accepts the idea that each individual spiritual experience is, in some manner "true" in a radically individualistic manner such that each individual can prescribe that experience for himself; that human beings are not bound together by a shared capacity to engage the eternal in a way that would unite each of them in a shared vision of truth and meaning.
I'm not saying that individual spiitual experiences are not unique and ideosyncratic, but that they fall on a continuum predicated upon
the way the universe actually is.
The atomistic, radical subjectivist alternative presented here is, of course, whatever else it may be, an attempt to
circumvent the disciplines of the Gospel that become incumbent upon individuals who access the authoritative channels of revelation and communion with deity. Such encounters, if they are allowed to move the individual toward further truth, inevitably move the individual toward the same truths encountered by others who have gained access to those same channels of revelation and inspiration.
Truth, to be a coherent concept, must be one; it must be immune from atomization and differentiation. The Schizophrenic's reality is real
to him, but few would take this to mean "real" in any existential sense. If Gospel truths are actually "true", then they are a part of the cosmos; they are an existential reality accessible by all through essentially the same means.
Alternative spiritual realities exist, but the question at that point, from a Gospel standpoint, is only their legitimacy, not their reality.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson