BishopRic wrote:
Have you ever been a "committed ex-Mormon," Charity?
No. I don't understand what you are asking here. I am missing something.
BishopRic wrote:I have been a devout LDS member most of my life. I rubbed shoulders with church leaders, went to the temple over a thousand times, sat in the dreaded meetings for 40 years of my life. I said exactly the same things you say here on this board everyday. I highly doubt your "spiritual witness" is any different than mine was. I have simply learned to interpret that "witness" differently today.
In my training in psychology we learned that when comparing internal events, such as a spiritual witness would be, the most reliable measure is in behaviors associated with that event. As in the example I used before, when measuring the influence of a lecture on health risks associated with smoking, the number of people who quit smoking is an indication.
A question that comes up about Martin Harris and the encounter with Profession Anthon is another example. Martin Harris went to the professor and showed him a copy of some of the characters from the Book of Mormon. Harris reported that Anthon first validated the characters as being authentic, but then when told the history of the characters Anthon took back the certification. Later Anthon said he had told Harris they were fakes from the first. How do we know what Martin Harris believed? Because of his behavior. He immediately went home and mortgaged his farm to pay for the printing of the Book of Mormon. The behavior clearly indicated that Martin believed the characters to be authentic.
So two people report a spiritual witness. Is it clear that the only difference in the polar opposites of the behavior is interpretaiton? That is a big assumption.