charity wrote:marg wrote:
And I'm going to ask you again..what evidence is there that around 600 B.C. a group came from the Middle East and were ancestors of current American Indians? At this point I don't care whether or not they were important. All I want to know is what evidence do you use to conclude there were any Middle Eastern ancestry which stems from 600 B.C. arrival.
God said. That is good enough for me. LDS have never required scientific evidence for matters of faith.
But for those interested in learning truth, there are lots of things Joseph would have had to have guessed right about at an unbelievable rate for the Book of Mormon to have been simply a 19th century work of fiction.
I see so when you mentioned previously you come from a background of science, that background is completely irrelevant to the issue of ancestry of American Indians, as you base the issue completely on faith. Why didn't you mention that as well. Why mislead as if science has something to do with your claim.
You have no evidence and the claim "American Indians have Israelite ancestry dating from 600 B.C." is completely unreliable.
So if the church has lied on this matter you wouldn't know it, because you don't use evidence, you rely solely on faith. That's all well and good for yourself. But if the Church has lied then not only are others being misled, not only is it making false historical claims about a group of people, but it is also at a cost to membership as well.
If the church maintained the old wording "principal ancestors" eventually as this new science became better understood church membership would begin to appreciate Lamanites/Middle Eastern immigrants could not possibly be "principal" ancestors of Am. Indians. The powers to be running the church know that science would win out over that claim and hence the reason to change the wording and minimize the claim to allow for a small number of immigrants arriving to a land already populated. There is no reason to minimize the claim if all it was about was "importance". So by minimizing the claim it can now fly under the radar screen of science, to the point that no evidence is necessary and science is irrelevant.
I notice you are aware of this fact that if the immigrant population is small and mixes in with a larger population the evidence could be diluted out. And I also notice you talk about numbers of people in the following: You say "You should read the great guru of genetics, according to the anti-Mormons, plant geneticist, Simon Southerton. He says that if a small group of immigrants came to the New World, and mixed in with the existing population, there would likely be no genetic imprint left." So you are fully cognizant that this apologist argument about ancestry can only be argued from the perspective of a "small group of immigrants" mixing into another existing population. You are either a liar or you are intellectually dishonest when you claim "principal" does not refer to numbers because you know full well what the argument is about and any "principal" ancestry of American Indians would have genetic data to back it.
The principal ancestors of American Indians only started from a small immigrant group Charity, but it was Asian ancestry not Middle Eastern. Had the Book of Mormon talked about signifance other groups when this small immigrant group arrived you might have a leg to stand on, and you wouldn't come across as either intellectually dishonest or a flat out liar.