I still think I see your point, but don't completely agree.Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Tue May 12, 2026 8:23 pmI think it does depend on the claim you are responding to. If the claim is that the 3+8 are the best evidence, I would respond the same way -- attack the weakness of the evidence. If the claim is that all important events in the restoration are backed up by the testimony of several witnesses, I'd attack the 3+8 as not addressing an important event. I think it's two different arguments -- both of them strong. But mixing them without being clear weakens both. Let me illustrate:malkie wrote: ↑Tue May 12, 2026 7:19 pm
I believe I understand your point, Res. However, I prefered to mention the actual witnesses for two reasons:It is sometimes said that the 3 + 8 witnesses are the best "evidence" for the existence of the Book of Mormon plates. In effect I want to be able to say: "Is this the best you've got?", and show the weakness of their testimony.
- I cannot be accused later of ignoring the important events for which there were witnesses
- I believe I can make the case that having witnesses who can be shown to be unqualified may be perceived as worse than not having witnesses at all
Church: There is testimony of several witnesses supporting every important event in the restoration.
Me: Not the first vision, not Moroni's visitation, not receiving the plates, etc.
Church: What about the 3+8?
Me: They're not qualified.
Church: Now you're moving the goalposts. The issue was whether there was witness testimony, but when I refer you to witness testimony, you introduce the new concept of "qualified."
That would be a valid objection.
What I''m suggesting instead:
Church: What about the 3+8?
Me: All they witnessed was a staged event -- not an important event in the restoration. If you take away the events the witnesses witnessed, all of the important events of the restoration would still have occurred.
This response stays within the bounds of the church's original claim: that all important events of the restoration are backed up with the testimony of several witnesses.
From the beginning of the OP:
[my bolding]Church History and Modern Revelation, 1:40 wrote:Paul taught the principle that “in the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established” (2 Corinthians 13:1). President Joseph Fielding Smith said of this law: “In giving the world the testimony of three witnesses in addition to Joseph Smith, the Lord fulfilled the law. We are called upon in this life to walk by faith, not by sight, not by the proclamation of heavenly messengers with the voice of thunder, but by the proclamation of accredited witnesses whom the Lord sends and by whom every word shall be established.”
Student Manual: D&C Section 5, The Testimony of the Three Witnesses
So the claim made by JFS is not just that there are several witnesses, but that the Lord sent accredited witnesses. I'm not allowing the church to define the claim as something less - a self-straw man argument - in order to weaken my case.
Let me do a Take Two on your illustrative dialog.
Church: There is testimony of several witnesses supporting every important event in the restoration.
Me: Actually, JFS says that the important events since the restoration are supported by the testimony of several accredited witnesses.
In some cases - the first vision, Moroni's visitation, receiving the plates, etc. - there are no witnesses of any sort, accredited or not. In others, there are witnesses, to be sure. However, it's easy to show that they were not qualified to evaluate and testify on vital aspects of the events.
Now I don't need to assert that the testimonies of the 3 + 8 were based on staged events. If that were the case I would have to get agreement on what "staged" meant for these events, and on the significance of the staging. For example, apologists have a ready and arguably reasonable answer for the fact that we don't have original witnesses' own signatures on an original document - some could not sign their names, and, in any case, the source document has been lost. However, none of the witnesses ever complained about feeling they were "managed" into providing their statements, and all of them verified afterwards - some of them several times - that they stood by the statements ascribed to them.
But don't give up on me yet - I appreciate that you're helping me to refine what my objections are, and there are no doubt other weaknesses to overcome.