Your preliminary issue is that you have no "line of evidence". I'm not talking quality of evidence. A preliminary issue, before we even get to evidence quality, is that you have no coherent line of evidence even offered.MG wrote:It’s interesting how the critics are always the right minded impartial observers. I suppose it may be due, at least partially, to lines of evidence which are acceptable and focused on vs. others.
one example: you insist there is physical evidence for the gospel in the form of ancient plates due to witnesses testifying having seen the plates. But at the same time, you insist that seeing the plates would be too much proof, and so nobody is allowed to see them. Did Emma see the plates -- did she leaf through thin sheets of gold filled with ancient-looking writing or not? There is no reason from historical accounts to believe she did more than feel the alleged plates under a cloth in a very simple interaction while moving them. The problem is, that makes perfect sense in light of your belief that we can't go around giving people too much evidence -- and too much would be enough to rationally believe sans faith. And that means that Emma isn't actually a witness to the plates as such that you'd have "in a courtroom". She's someone who just believed there were plates without enough direct evidence to believe in them. Just like us. Any of us can just have faith and believe the plates were real. But then we can just have faith and believe the gospel is real, without having to go through the middleman of the plates. The same faith is required to believe in the so-called evidence that is required to believe in what the evidence is allegedly proving. Even if a witness has a clear, detailed account of examining the plates, your argument for faith prevents any witness from establishing the materiality of the plates because it would take away our faith.
If the witnesses establish the truth of ancient plates with court-room certainty, then they are proven well enough and no faith is needed; if they don't, then the plates are just an unnecessary intermediary we can skip and have faith directly in the gospel, and if witnesses do establish the plates with certainty for anyone who knows how a court of law works, but skeptics have hardened hearts and don't believe it, then skeptics could also disbelieve the plates if Moroni didn't take them back and the Church showed them to us, and so the argument fails that the plates can't be shown as it would take away our faith.