Instead the Book of Mormon is breezily dismissed by Grant Palmer, an excommunicant, who calls it a piece right out of the 19th century and an archaeologist who says there is no evidence for it in Central America. Discussion ended.
Instead the Book of Mormon is breezily dismissed by Grant Palmer, an excommunicant, who calls it a piece right out of the 19th century and an archaeologist who says there is no evidence for it in Central America. Discussion ended.
Was Palmer ex'ed? I thought he was just disfellowshipped. Or is this author incorrect?
Going off RFM threads about him a year ago, he was never exd according to the people who knew of him. It was stated that he was disfellowshipped but I have no posts saved on it. Unless something changed recently, I am unsure why Meridian refers to him that way.
"Happiness is the object and design of our existence... That which is wrong under one circumstance, may be, and often is, right under another." Joseph Smith
Seven wrote:Going off RFM threads about him a year ago, he was never exd according to the people who knew of him. It was stated that he was disfellowshipped but I have no posts saved on it. Unless something changed recently, I am unsure why Meridian refers to him that way.
I suspect Meridian likes to take a more faith-promoting approach to history. In our reality however, Brother Palmer was disfellowshiped for a certain period of time.
There's a lot of mileage to be gotten out of this little "mistake". To someone interested in defending the church, defusing the arguments of someone who criticizes it can be helped immensely if you can point to that person's having been excommunicated. Everyone on this board knows that a lot of not most chapel Mormons will nearly automatically reject anything said by an excommunicant or apostate about the church, assuming, as they do, that it must be just a malicious lie by someone who can leave the church, but who can't leave it alone.
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