Fence Sitter wrote:Dan,
I am still pondering your analogy of the car accident and cars, relating to David Whitmer's witnesses. Is it possible that your analogy does not take into consideration the evidence of "personal mystical experience", that Brade refers to, when you categorized David Whitmer's testimonies? Wouldn't that spiritual experience, if you will, be the same for his plate's testimony as it was for his views of Joseph Smith's theology?
I think his testimony about his spiritual experience is as valid as his testimony about the plates
as far as it goes. I assume you're refering to his claim in "An Address to All Believers in Christ" that the voice of God told him to separate himself from the Church in Far West. The connundrum TBMs are supposed to be in, I guess, is that this would ostensibly be impossible, that God woud never have done this if He had used David as one of the three witnesses.
I can completely accept that God told David (really, not just that he "thought" God did) to separate himself from the main body of the Saints. I can see many reasons for this, not the least of which is the dynamics at the time, and David's utility as a special witness for decades later.
So, in my view, David's unique position as one of the three witnesses is not compromised at all by him believing that God told him to leave the Saints (or God actually telling him to).