zerinus wrote:All I can say is that I know the Book of Mormon is true.
You don't know what you mean when you say that. You're just saying it. Let me demonstrate.
What, specifically, does the term "true" mean in the context of your statement?
zerinus wrote:All I can say is that I know the Book of Mormon is true.
It means that it is doctrinally true as well as historically true. It means that it is what it claims to be: a book of sacred history, written by prophets, contains the word of God, written on gold plates, revealed by an angel, and translated into English by miraculous means, by the gift and power of God.I have a question wrote:You don't know what you mean when you say that. You're just saying it. Let me demonstrate.
What, specifically, does the term "true" mean in the context of your statement?
I have a question wrote:zerinus wrote:All I can say is that I know the Book of Mormon is true.
You don't know what you mean when you say that. You're just saying it. Let me demonstrate.
What, specifically, does the term "true" mean in the context of your statement?
zerinus wrote:The Book of Mormon is scripture. It is the word of God. It is the sacred history of ancient civilization, abridged by Mormon, written on gold plates, and translated into English by the gift and power of God. It is true.
zerinus wrote:It means that it is doctrinally true as well as historically true. It means that it is what it claims to be: a book of sacred history, written by prophets, contains the word of God, written on gold plates, revealed by an angel, and translated into English by miraculous means, by the gift and power of God.I have a question wrote:You don't know what you mean when you say that. You're just saying it. Let me demonstrate.
What, specifically, does the term "true" mean in the context of your statement?
mentalgymnast wrote:honorentheos wrote:MG: Did Joseph use the word grafting? Does that matter when looked along side the highlighted material I posted? Why wouldn't/didn't Joseph use the language that may have been familiar to him?
honor: I seriously wonder about how you think sometimes. No offense but the statement above is not showing you are following the line of discussion well.
I'll take the hit on that one. I didn't take the time to think this through. Joseph had the Bible.
So we're left with some potential problems with Jacob 5. Maybe.
mentalgymnast wrote:Here's where I stand from an apologetic point of view. Earlier in the thread I posted a link to a chart:
https://www.LDS.org/bc/content/shared/c ... vetree.pdf
...that showed a chronological overview of the earth's history and God's intervention...
If one takes Jacob 5 and the outline/chart accompanying it there seems to be a nice, tidy correlation/dovetailing going on between Biblical history and Book of Mormon prophecy/latter-day prophecy, etc.
mentalgymnast wrote:To better show this to be the case, this article pretty much lays it out:
https://byustudies.BYU.edu/content/expl ... olive-tree
The Book of Mormon contains a lengthy allegory representing the house of Israel. Because the allegory of the olive tree is associated with Israel, it is reasonable to assume that its symbolic events correspond to real events in the Israelites' history.
mentalgymnast wrote:As I've mentioned at other times, I tend to look at the 'big picture' and the global breadth and depth of things when I'm looking around at various religious ideas. The Judeo-Christian narrative and Hoskisson's well done 'outline' of that narrative fits onto a 'large world' picture with God at the helm directing things as history moves along. Jacob 5 fits in nicely within this narrative. Now does that prove it's true? Of course not. But it does fit nicely within an over arching 'plan'.
mentalgymnast wrote:So I'll stick with Jacob 5 as being scripture in the sense that it teaches us what we need to know,
honorentheos wrote:Here's where things stand, one last time.
The Book of Mormon claims to be ancient in origin. It can't be shown using external evidence that olive grafting was actually practiced in a time and place required for this to be true. There is a proliferation of sources regarding olive grafting as this spreads later from Greece and through the later Roman empire. The claim of ancient authorship is challenged rather than supported by Jacob 5.
As a critic of the Book of Mormon's origin, I assert it is a product of the 19th century. There are no problems showing that Jacob makes sense when olives are replaced with a fruit which Joseph Smith would have had experience cultivating or his family cultivated. There are portions of the descriptions in Jacob 5 that actually apply better to apples than they do to olives. The claim of 19th century authorship is supported rather than challenged by Jacob 5.
Chap wrote:So - that about wraps it up, doesn't it?
Jacob 5 is clearly not written on the basis of knowledge of the cultivation, processing and utilisation of the products of the olive tree in pre-exilic Israel (i.e. ancient Israel as it was before Lehi's party supposedly went to the Americas), or any other place or time for that matter....
Anything else we need to consider here to give fair consideration to this particular question?
That is an issue of translation method—how the translation was made. How the translation was made does not affect the truth claims of the book. The KJV content is approximately 7% of the book. Why God decided to do 7% of it that way, compared to the 93% which wasn’t, is a non-issue.I have a question wrote:Okay, so on what basis do you get round the problem of having KJV Bible content (including 17th century translation errors) in the Book of Mormon, portrayed as having been written by Book of Mormon era Prophets?
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Lemmie,
I do love seeing you deconstruct MG's nonsense. Just a quick question I guess. You do know MG doesn't actually read anything, right? He'll skim a bit picking up keywords or a phrase or two. But that's it. That pretty much explains why his messages tend to be all over the place, he mixes up quotes, and literally provides sources that contradict his points. The best he can offer is some superficial musings mingled with mordoctrine.
Anyway. I love how you hold him to his posts. It's awesome.
- Doc
Jersey Girl wrote:Not to put too fine a point on it, zerinus, but to a large degree your behavior pattern closely resembles that of mentalgymnastics. You dance around until you can't dance any more and then you run.