prewitt81
Notoriously Glorious
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2004
- Messages
- 2,226
Personal spiritual events can be very strong experiences. However, there comes a point at which one has to start scratching ones head about things like this. It's important, first to realize that feelings in peoples hearts didn't begin with the Book of Mormon.
As stated above, Smith and his followers have made several claims which are directly contradicted by evidence. DNA analysis proves that Native Americans are not descendants of Hebrew sailors. Joseph Smith's "translation" of the Egyptian facsimiles that became the Book of Abraham are wrong in every respect. There is not one single shred of evidence for a pre-Columbian civilization matching the Nephites, Lamanites, etc.
If this is supposed to be Universal Truth, shouldn't the old law maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus apply (false in one, false in all)? Yet it's not just one falsehood.
Other red flags exist as well. There's a passage in the BOM about how many won't believe Smith's revelation, the golden plates are not available for scrutiny anymore, etc. There just seems to be an awful lot of explaining away.
As stated above, Smith and his followers have made several claims which are directly contradicted by evidence. DNA analysis proves that Native Americans are not descendants of Hebrew sailors. Joseph Smith's "translation" of the Egyptian facsimiles that became the Book of Abraham are wrong in every respect. There is not one single shred of evidence for a pre-Columbian civilization matching the Nephites, Lamanites, etc.
If this is supposed to be Universal Truth, shouldn't the old law maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus apply (false in one, false in all)? Yet it's not just one falsehood.
Other red flags exist as well. There's a passage in the BOM about how many won't believe Smith's revelation, the golden plates are not available for scrutiny anymore, etc. There just seems to be an awful lot of explaining away.