R
RebeccaJ
Guest
The bank analogy is good. It is exactly the problem that has led to our mortgage and housing crisis (bad loans, including to people who’s income claims were never verified).This line of thinking really puzzles me. So no one can prove the Book of Mormon wrong, huh? By this logic, I should be able to go into a bank, claim I make an annual salary of $1,000,000.00 and ask for a loan 0f $10,000,000.00. Then I should expect them to just give me the loan based on my claim to make this salary based on no proof other than my word.
The bank is obviously not going to take my word for it, they’re going to ask for proof of income. So am I going to say, no you need to give me a loan because you can’t prove i don’t make $1,000,000? I’d be laughed out of the building, because this is an illegitimate argument. I would have to prove my income. LDS make the claim the church is true. It is up to the LDS to come up with something in the real world to back up this claim. Faith is fine, blind faith just doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.
Issue after issue, the LDS stand all alone, the Trinity and the nature of God, the BOM, reformed Egyptian, DNA, historicity, Baptisms for the dead, the great apostacy. I for one need more than just a burning in the bosom that may be an evil spirit or a psychological manipulation, or my own desire to believe. I need some fact to confirm the feeling, if I were to get one, is true. I didn’t convert away from the LDS based on feelings and I didn’t convert to the Catholic church based on feelings. Have I had spiritual experiences? Of course, before and after I was convinced of the truth of Catholicism.
Possibly ADDS to your analogy…hmmmmm.