H
hosemonkey
Guest
You nailed it Bro!I think the point is that the missionaries are trained to mis-direct the feelings that people get. It is a bait-and-switch tactic.
After talking about the Book of Mormon, which the investigator may or may not care about, the missionary will testify that Jesus is our savior, that he really lives, that he loves us and wants us to be with him in heaven forever. The investigator will often feel good to hear this, as well he should.
Missionary: “Are you feeling something?”
Investigator: “Yes, I feel kind of good inside.”
Missionary: “That feeling is the Holy Ghost telling you that the Book of Mormon is true and that Joseph Smith was a true prophet of God. You are very special; not everyone receives a witness from God as quickly as you did.”
Investigator: (Flattered) “Well, I’ve always been kind of spiritual.”
Missionary: “I can feel that you are. You have received personal revelation from God. The Holy Ghost is witnessing to me right now that you are a very special, chosen child of Our Heavenly Father, and he is calling you to be baptized.”
Investigator: “Really?”
Missionary: “Yes, we should obey this revelation from our Heavenly Father. Let’s schedule your baptism as soon as possible. Would next Wednesday evening be all right?”
Investigator: “Well, I guess so.”
Missionary: (Thinking) “Got one!”
So the salesman (er, missionary) steers the process from testifying of Jesus to convincing the investigator that he has had a Moroni 10:4 experience. A classic bait-and-switch. Most people aren’t nearly sophisticated enough to spot the scam. At age 21, I wasn’t.
Above all, The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth. The Holy Spirit will not testify to a lie. Because mormonism is based on lies, then I seriously doubt that the Holy Spirit of Christianity, the Holy Spirit that we know, is at work among mormons. I believe that the Father of Lies Himself, is the Spirit that deceives mormons.
So, that ol’ “burning in the bosom” probably smells like sulphur.