"Knowledge"? I think we would all accept that you gained knowledge. I think you could get knowledge corresponding with Charles Manson or talking to a schizophrenic about his day.A few people from JREF have decided to read religious books in search of truth using the methods described by those books instead of the scientific method. I have done this with two of these books and have actually gained knowledge through using this method.
Bear in mind that to work the person performing the exercises must seriously entertain that the religion, philosophy or metaphysical truth could be true.Cronk, scientists, including social scientists, anthropologists, behaviorists, neuroscientists and others tell us that the phenomenon of gaining a [subjective] testimony of the truthfulness of a thing is actually well understood.
If a person is sincere in trying to discern whether or not the Catholic Church is a the one true church and that person reads the scriptures, goes to church and follows the rules then he or she will come to have a powerful witness that it is indeed true. It is so powerful that people will die for it.
Problem is, there is nothing about Mormonism that is unique in this aspect
You do realize that you have come to a skeptics forum?Pick a religious book and follow the above instructions and report your findings here. Report what truth you have found rather than things you disagree with. I want this thread to be focused on the positives we experience, not be a bashing bigot-fest.
I know that these things are true subjectively through a spiritual manifestation that is undeniable and that I can't give to you or prove in any way in and of itself other than you trying it for yourself.
I did read the bible mostly (old new testaments, skipping the psalms and begats) way back in my early teen years. It was the biggest thing that pushed me towards atheism (and I thank jeebus for that).Tanstaafl and Charlie - which religious books will you each be reading?
cyborg - I haven't spoken to a Christian who thinks I'm nuts for #5 but if I did meet someone like that, I'd probably ask them if they've read it themselves and ask them what they learned from it.
Tanstaafl - Cool. Did you learn anything new from your reading? Did you see anything that matched what you already know to be true?
I did read the bible mostly (old new testaments, skipping the psalms and begats) way back in my early teen years. It was the biggest thing that pushed me towards atheism (and I thank jeebus for that).
My view of religion is too jaundiced for me to read anything religious and give it the proper critical review. Plus, I'm about a year behind in my current reading list.
Charlie (talk is cheap, reading takes effort) Monoxide
cyborg - If they think belief in another testament of Christ is blasphemous, then I chalk it up as ignorance or stubbornness on their part.
Actually it's millions of people who have read a book and have received the same results.
I've personally invited thousands of people face to face in Chile to try it out and about a hundred of them sincerely accepted the challenge and have received a spiritual confirmation that matches what I received
Two or three that I know of personally haven't yet received an answer, but my experience so far has been that they are not sincere - and that's based on my own experience coupled with evidence of a lack of sincerity in the person.
Have you picked a book yet? Based on your previous comments, I don't think you're sincere, so perhaps it's better not to attempt the experiment at this point.