liz3564 wrote:marg wrote:JAK is correct you do wish to keep your God notions from scrutiny. You have responded to him as a person would, who has something to hide. I remember when I read statements from the Book of Mormon witnesses I observed the same thing, lack of detail. When people are not forthcoming on detail of their experiences their claims do not ring true.I don't think this is the case.
I have had spiritual experiences which, frankly, are too personal for me to feel comfortable sharing on a message board such as this.
The good news is, no one is asking you to. But if you start claiming God speaks with you and you speak with God and you have knowledge of truths over and above what science can offer..then you'll likely be asked questions if any skeptic is interested. Religious claims are not sacred on this message board, from being questioned.In answer to JAK's earlier question, do I feel that my spiritual experiences were simply emotional responses? No, I do not.
Well if you hold that opinion then you should be able to give your reasoning why you perceive your spiritual experiences are different than your other experiences.Am I going to go into detail here as to why?
No. I may at a later time, but not in the guise of winning some sort of debate.
Well without details, without giving reasoning, you've presented no convincing argument. Winning is irrelevant.I don't think that you or JAK have any business insinuating that Nehor is a liar simply because he does not want to share his spiritual experiences in detail.
They are of a deeply personal nature, and frankly, difficult, if not impossible, to explain to someone who is closed-minded to the possibility that the experience could really exist in the first place.
There is a difference between someone experiencing something in their mind solely and someone experiencing something that occurred actually. It may very well be Nehor experienced something in his mind, which didn't occur in actuality, but because he is so vague, I'm not convinced of that either.
I'm not the least bit closed minded to appreciating people hallucinate. I don't require extraordinary evidence for that. And why exactly should hallucinations be too personal?
by the way, I don't think you have any business telling me that I am "closed-minded to the possibility that the experience could really exist in the first place." There is a difference to being skeptical versus closed-minded.
If a religious person, such as yourself, is going to make extraordinary claims ("I have had spiritual experiences") and then say it's too personal and too difficult to talk about, then I am being skeptical when I don't accept, not closed minded.