Uncle Ed wrote:There is no reason to select LDS beliefs for particular scrutiny or criticism.
Yes there is.
Latter Day Saints claim to belong to the only faith denomination that God see's as His.
Latter Day Saints claim to belong to the only faith denomination that has the whole truth.
Latter Day Saints belong the a faith denomination that believes in sending out tens of thousands of unpaid volunteers to intrusively inform the world that only Mormonism can get you back to live with God.
Mormonism requires that you pay 10% of all your income as a worthiness test that, if failed, would prevent you from living with God in Heaven when you die.
LDS beliefs are, and were, discriminatory against individuals based on skin colour, gender and sexuality - things that are totally unacceptable in today's society.
That's fair list of reasons, for people who have come into contact with Mormonism in one way or another, to scrutinise and criticise.
The other (not insignificant) reason is that Latter Day Saints themselves are encouraged to get people to scrutinise their beliefs.
The contents of LDS scripture are quite impressive on their own to stand up to the definition: origins and historicity claims are aside. That is why comparison to the Bible is apt. Any other religion's "holy books" are likewise comparable. None of them are more than manmade, which is to say, "God breathed" in moments of intense metaphysical pondering. But men wrote them all, and often under circumstances that critics would adequately define as "delusional".
What, specifically, is 'quite impressive' about LDS scripture?
What will you do if somebody finds "Zarahemla" or any other Book of Mormon place? Will one find change your pov? If Jericho was the only positively identified Old Testament site, and none others had left a trace that had been found up to now, would the Bible be verified by one discovered site? Many would think so, others would want more, and still others would continually demand that more needed to be discovered before they would believe any of it as anything more than some kind of weird coincidence created by observer bias....
The problem with what you're arguing here is that Jericho is not the only positively identified Old Testament site and "Zarahemla" or indeed any other site, thing, item etc that would correlate with an immigrant Hebrew civilisation of millions living in the America's (anywhere in the America's) during the Book of Mormon time frame, still evades detection....The real problem is that belief in the Book of Mormon by LDS is not precedent on real evidence, they will believe because someone tells them to believe or because they have a good feeling about it. That's why Ponzi schemes are so successful at separating Mormons from their money.
How many times do we have to dredge Loch Ness before you accept there's no monster?