The Nehor wrote:My belief:
"Adam was the first man of all men of the race of Adam."
This is one of the stupidest things I've ever read. It's just barely not quite as stupid as saying "the Bible is true because the Bible says so".
You know what? I'm the first man of all the race of Sethbag. I'm also the smartest of all the race of Sethbag, and the most handsome, and the best sexually endowed, and so forth and so on.
So, Adam wasn't really the first homo sapiens, eh? But he was the first man "of the race of Adam", whatever that means? And of course you can feel free to define "race of Adam" as whatever it needs to mean to help your belief system remain somewhat intact.
Everything beyond that is me or someone else guessing.
No, everything
including that is you or someone else guessing. You guess because you are relying on "truth" relayed to you by feelings, and from superstition and mythology handed down as God's own sweet Truth, straight from Guy Sajer's Bronze Age goat herders.
You don't believe what the LDS church teaches about this. What you believe is heresy in terms of LDS belief, and as BRM says, there is no salvation in believing a false doctrine. Of course, if we take that to the logical conclusion, there's no salvation in the LDS church, because it's all false doctrine. In fact, there's no salvation at all, because salvation is itself a false doctrine.
You are so wrapped up in maintaining some kind of belief in the LDS church that you are willing to jettison practically anything except some form of the idea that the LDS church is "true", however loosely that term needs to be defined for it to remain plausible.
Your faith is a complete joke. On the one you don't believe the "God-given" truth that the LDS prophets have handed down since the beginning, and on the other hand you won't accept objective reality either, preferring instead to cling to some jerry-rigged, self-defined version of some kind of personal "truth". It's laughable, if it weren't sad.
I don't have a timetable. I don't know where Adam came from.
Nobody knows where Adam came from, because Adam didn't come from anywhere. He was a figment of the imagination.
Could there have been men before Adam? Sure.
There most certainly, inarguable, definitely were men before the Biblical timeframe during which Adam is supposed to have existed. There have been human beings for over a hundred thousand years.
However that would be another 'world' in the scriptural sense, not in the sense of it being on another ball of mud in space.
No, it would be this world. I know Hugh Nibley tried to create this bizarre notion of "another world" because he was trying to somehow allow the LDS church's beliefs to remain plausible in the face of a hostile reality, but the fact is that there were already civilizations on earth, the agricultural revolution had already taken place, the first written languages were already evolving, chieftains and kings had already lead their people to war against the neighboring tribes/proto-nations, etc. before the Biblical timeframe of Adam. It was most certainly not some other world, but was in fact
this world, the one we live on, and the people who were on this world were our ancestors, and our civilizations are the descendants of those proto-civilizations.
You are torturing yourself, Nehor. I think part of the reason you can't get a girl is that you insist on an LDS girl, but no LDS girl is going to want to attach herself to an LDS guy who doesn't actually believe in what the Brethren say, doesn't believe in what the LDS church actually teaches, claims he's seen God, angels, and the devil, and all the rest. Perhaps you'd have better luck coming to terms with reality and jettisoning the false mythology of the goat herders, and come to grips with the real world in which we live. Either that, or give up mopologetics, damn the real world, and start believing LDS teachings again, become Peter Priesthood, and I'm sure you'll find yourself a Molly Mormon you can make babies with.
My story begins there.
Your story begins with "once upon a time", like all the other fairy tales.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen