mentalgymnast wrote:The overall point that I'm making in this thread and other threads over a period of time is that the Book of Mormon is the keystone of the CofJCofLDS. Without it, the church falls
It's the keystone only in the sense that it is a requirement to believe that it is historical in order to lend credence to the Church being 'true'. Past that, I'm not seeing that it defines the present-day Church as far as doctrine or practice, as the modern-day Church is more defined by D&C and PoGP. You may have a different opinion on that. I'd like to hear it if so.
mentalgymnast wrote:OTOH, if the Book of Mormon is 'true' then all else...including issues and other controversies along the way...become peripheral to the central message/mission of the church.
No, because of what I just stated.
In other words, the Book of Mormon could be true, but every other utterance from Joseph Smith could be balderdash or psychotic ramblings. Yet that balderdash then becomes what the Church is, centrally, via it's self-defined activities and proclamations of what is 'important'. There's simply no guarantee implicit in the Book's supposed historicity that then guarantees that all doctrine to follow -
what essentially defines the modern Church - is rooted in any sort of reality or God-given 'authority'.
As with the previous statement, you might not disagree with this, so let's discuss if that's the case.
mentalgymnast wrote:To believe in and plant the Book of Mormon in the soil of 'God's word' is a choice. But it's not a blind/ignorant choice. It's based on data...for and against. How else can a choice be made? Personal biases/prejudices/assumptions play a role in how one views the Book of Mormon within the larger/universal/global picture of mankind and world history...
Sure. This is how it works with
everything, right?
mentalgymnast wrote:...and what one might consider to be a sensible view of eternity and life after death.
Sensible? Or perhaps...
more familiar?
I actually don't see much
sensibility in the Plan of Salvation. But I also don't see much about the PoS presented from within the Book of Mormon anyway. This seems more rooted in things like D&C, the PoGP, and the KFD. So how would this perceived sensibility about the LDS PoS validate the Book of Mormon?
mentalgymnast wrote:So, the point of this thread was simply to put the Book of Mormon on the table instead of up on the shelf and encourage investigation rather than placing permanent and/or insurmountable roadblocks in the way of opening the covers and reading the book with the intent/desire to gain a testimony of Jesus Christ and the great plan of happiness for God's children.
And this would seem to be what many folks have done. Would you not agree? Don't you think that most folks here have read through the Book at least once, and possibly many times?
If they are not reaching the same conclusion as you, for reasons ranging from the
Great Plan of Happiness not really being a part of the Book to other reasons rooted in basic historicity (or lack of), how many more times should they read the Book in order to gain the preferred testimony of historicity?
mentalgymnast wrote:But I realize that his all sounds like gibberish and gobbledygook to those that have biases/prejudices that get in the way. If one doesn't believe and/or hope in a creator/God, that's going to act as a bias...consciously or not. If one doubts the reality of continued existence after death as an individual entity, that's going to act as a bias...consciously or not. If one is biased in thinking that God's prophets must be closer to 'perfect' than 'weak', that will create a bias/prejudice when a prophet comes along who IS weak in ways that we might not expect/accept. If one let's the theory of evolution get in the way of US and why we're here...and questioning if there might not be some grander purpose...then that bias towards secular/humanistic thought is going to act as a bias towards spiritual things...consciously or not.
We know that
everyone has a bias. Therefore,
all readers will approach the Book with a bias. This says nothing about the Book's historicity (or lack of), which can be examined by biased individuals regardless. As can any subject, with conclusions to be reached that can be agreed on by folks with different biases. So there's no gibberish or gobbledygook here, just the observations of
people and fact that can lead to a conclusion one way or the other.
Again, you seem to be suggesting that folks who don't reach the same conclusion about the Book's historicity claim are doing so because of a bias. But that's no different than saying that your own acceptance of a historical Book is
also due to
a bias.
mentalgymnast wrote:The list could go on. And the thing is, on this board the 'herd' mentality is pretty much of one mind and one heart, generally speaking.
Two things, here.
1. The phrase, 'herd mentality', has been so terribly over- and mis-used by board participant
Amore that it carries a bit of bad 'bias' of its own. Perhaps use of a better descriptive term would be wise.
2. Would not any 'herd mentality' also exist within the community of LDS believers?
mentalgymnast wrote:Yes, there are some folks here that are open Christian thought/belief/hope/teachings...but overall there is a general and STRONG bias/prejudice towards religion and God/Christ belief that acts as an insurmountable barrier in any conversation with the 'other'...one that is open to further exploration and thought in regards to possibilities/plausibility. There is a line in the sand and it can't be crossed. And when the herd says what will be...that will be. The 'other' is literally an invader. An outsider. A foreigner.
MG, I read the Jenkins-Hamblin debate several times. Neither of those two gents treated the other in the terms that you are using here. So I'm going to ask again what I've asked a few times before, but what you have not yet answered - what part of that exchange seemed obviously biased to you, and how do you feel that it affected the conclusion by either participant?