Scottie wrote:Apples to oranges. You apparently saw through your delusions. Harris never did. He died claiming to know.
Bishop Koyle never recanted his testimony of the Relief Mine. Maybe I should dig out my stock certificate, after all.
Runtu wrote:Scottie wrote:Apples to oranges. You apparently saw through your delusions. Harris never did. He died claiming to know.
Bishop Koyle never recanted his testimony of the Relief Mine. Maybe I should dig out my stock certificate, after all.
Blixa wrote:Runtu wrote:Scottie wrote:Apples to oranges. You apparently saw through your delusions. Harris never did. He died claiming to know.
Bishop Koyle never recanted his testimony of the Relief Mine. Maybe I should dig out my stock certificate, after all.
Wanna make a pilgrimage to the Koyle mine together? I've only seen it from the road (last October) but I'm fascinated by its Bauhaus-y architecture. That's why I'm currently in contact with the Prophet Onias/Robert Crossfield led polygamists. And the kicker? They contacted me!!!
I think Sept. 7th is currently my target date for touch down in SLC. Could be revised, but obviously before the 11th. Can't wait...
Scottie wrote:Blixa wrote:Runtu wrote:Scottie wrote:Apples to oranges. You apparently saw through your delusions. Harris never did. He died claiming to know.
Bishop Koyle never recanted his testimony of the Relief Mine. Maybe I should dig out my stock certificate, after all.
Wanna make a pilgrimage to the Koyle mine together? I've only seen it from the road (last October) but I'm fascinated by its Bauhaus-y architecture. That's why I'm currently in contact with the Prophet Onias/Robert Crossfield led polygamists. And the kicker? They contacted me!!!
I think Sept. 7th is currently my target date for touch down in SLC. Could be revised, but obviously before the 11th. Can't wait...
Is that the mine in Salem?
Dr. Shades wrote:
Incidentally, Bill Barton, the author of the piece that Calculus Crusader just quoted, is none other than the one who originally coined the phrase "magic rock."
Whatever happened to him, anyway?
beastie wrote:Why Me,
You’re being inconsistent. First you proclaim that the very oddity of the hat trick was proof of its divine origin to you.I would try to come up with a better solution to ensure the success of my written work. No, the hat technique sounds geniune to me. No one would invent such a crazy thing without it coming from god. Too much of a risk of having the book laughed at from the very start.
When I demonstrated that the “hat trick” was actually part of the folk magic practices of Joseph Smith’ time period, you change your mind and say:As for hat trick, well...the lord uses the knowledge for that time period. Hence, the hat. Next point?
Are you now saying that the “hat trick” was inspired of God in all those practioners of folk magic? I ask because Joseph Smith clearly didn’t make this up, he borrowed this – and many of his other practices – from the folk magic of the time period.
So were all those folks looking at a rock in a hat inspired of God and really finding buried treasure with the trick?Martin Harris being a human being lived life the way it was lived in his day. However, Martin remained faithful to his testimony and conviction about the Book of Mormon. The people on this board who were once members and who are now critics prove my point. No one who believes that the LDS church is a fraud has stayed the course. Why would Martin be an exception to all of you? We humans are very predictable. Martin believed. Hence, Martin stayed the course.
Oh, who cares. We’ve already demonstrated Martin had the tendency to jump around from religion to religion, all the while proclaiming great faith in each. In addition to his obvious gullibility, the fact that people believe crazy things to the day they die is not evidence of the validity of the crazy thing. Do you really think Allah wanted Muslim terrorists to kill people by plowing planes into a building? No? Why aren’t you considering the strength of the terrorists’ convictions as evidence of the validity of their belief?
What makes the emphasis on the witnesses even odder is how fast Joseph was to call their characters into question when they left the church.Joseph Smith said Dec 16, 1838, "Such characters as McLellin, John Witmer, David Witmer, Oliver Cowdry, and Martin Harris are too mean to mention; and we had liked to have forgotten them." History of the Church, Vol 3, p232
http://www.Bible.ca/mor-witness-book.htm
Calculus Crusader wrote:If Martin Harris were alive today, he probably would have lost all of his money to a Nigerian advance fee scam.
beastie wrote:Why Me,
Oh, who cares. We’ve already demonstrated Martin had the tendency to jump around from religion to religion, all the while proclaiming great faith in each. In addition to his obvious gullibility, the fact that people believe crazy things to the day they die is not evidence of the validity of the crazy thing. Do you really think Allah wanted Muslim terrorists to kill people by plowing planes into a building? No? Why aren’t you considering the strength of the terrorists’ convictions as evidence of the validity of their belief?
What makes the emphasis on the witnesses even odder is how fast Joseph was to call their characters into question when they left the church.Joseph Smith said Dec 16, 1838, "Such characters as McLellin, John Witmer, David Witmer, Oliver Cowdry, and Martin Harris are too mean to mention; and we had liked to have forgotten them." History of the Church, Vol 3, p232
http://www.Bible.ca/mor-witness-book.htm