Darth J wrote:The only presupposition influence what I read is the grammar of the English language.
enter the grammar nazi with feeble dissection...now!
Darth J wrote:You said "receive it or that you will accept it." The disjunctive ("or") means that you are positing alternatives. I am not confusing receiving something with having something given to you. The word "receive" means that something is given to you.
actually, "or" is a conjunction in grammar and is disjunctive only as a logical operation, the latter being something vague to your post. Though it may, at times, be considered an exclusive disjunctive in grammar, that is not the case in statement. The alternatives are idiomatic.
for example one may "receive" a package, which means to "take delivery"...in contrast one may "refuse" (or not accept) delivery and thus not receive the package.
Darth J wrote:If you don't receive something, then it means that the something in question is not offered/delivered/bestowed/conferred.
an obvious statement to confirm a lack of understanding for the definitions of "receive", "accept", "offer", and "delivery"
Darth J wrote:The plain meaning of what you said is that this kid got hurt either because God did not offer/deliver/bestow/confer any help, or because God did offer it but the kid rejected it. This allows the possibility that God does not help people who are entitled to it.
false dichotomy, try again.
(and once again we see DJ tell posters what they "really mean")
It is not possible for you to offer any facts to be analyzed. Show me the objective evidence that can be used to analyze anything about whether God does or does not help LDS missionaries.
"objective" evidence...why so specific?
oh, that's right...because you truly believe that "objective" has a special loophole for you....yet it serves only to wrap a blanket of fail around your shivering argument.
Darth J wrote:The only thing you can offer is:
1. If a missionary doesn't get hurt, then God was helping him.
2. If a missionary doesn't get hurt, then God was not helping him.
3. If God was not helping him, then it's because: (a) the missionary wasn't worthy, or (b) he was worthy but did not accept the help (which is indistinguishable from (a)), or (c) God must have had some higher purpose.
perfect example of typical DJ revision for his own position, yet inadequate in execution (expected and quickly becoming the assumption).
#2 is contrary to the correct and adequate notion of God.
#3 is invalid due to the incorrect assumption made in #2
Darth J wrote:This catch-all Delphic prophecy (an after-the-fact prophecy) is absolutely useless in determining anything about God or about events that happen in the real world.
agreed... unfortunately you are the only one making that "prophecy"....obviously you have neither been set apart for this purpose nor received any keys - thanks for the affirmation.