Benjamin McGuire wrote:...yours...
Just to remind folks here, the claims for Spalding documents
(such as "The Frogs of Wyndham") were made before I was ever
born -- the people setting forth those claims died before I was
ever born. I never met them, nor conversed with them. Their
reports are
theirs alone --
I did not make them up.
I have uncovered (and posted to the web) some correspondence
written by Mr. Spalding, as well as two short articles that were
published in the Pittsburgh newspaper near the time that he
moved to that place. If somebody wishes to assign those items'
transcripts to me -- then fine -- (that's all I take credit for).
If Mormons wish to believe that the several missing artifacts
associated with their late 1820s beginnings were real, then
that is their choice. But I am not confined by the necessity of
bearing witness to Nephite breastplates nor the holographs
of the Patriarch Abraham upon papyrus -- fortunately.
I suggest, however, that before Mormons accuse others of
being ridiculous in their acceptance of the existence of "lost"
texts, that they (the LDS) stop and think for a moment how
ridiculous they themselves appear in the eyes of many, when
Mormons appeal to the validity of a dozen or more of these sorts
of "lost" items themselves.
Their propensity in that direction comes across as ludicrous as
would a Scientologist's sneering at an investigator's use of a
polygraph or authentic biofeedback apparatus.
UD