A
Allweather
Guest
Interesting wiggle. I can understand your reluctance to face facts, as they must be uncomfortable things for you. I don’t pretend to do original research. I just was wondering how you TBMs cope with research already done by others, and that’s why I pointed out that it isn’t mine. Apparently you are familiar with the source I gave, as you are able to pronounce it “worthless.” I wonder if you’d mind giving us a thumbnail sketch of your reasoning behind that pronouncement. If the Abanes book is truly “worthless” then I will throw it away and admit that here. Forgive my doubt of you, but I don’t agree that it is “worthless.” It is chock full of supporting documentation. If it is well-documented and without significant factual error, then you must object to it because it illustrates the kamikaze nature of your religion, which requires a certain averting of the eyes from facts and figures.I am debating with you at the moment, not with Mr Abanes and his worthless book. If you have truly studied original LDS literature, and have criticisms to make or questions to ask about it, bring it here and we will discuss them; but I am not in the business of trying to refute every anti-Mormon literature published by a bunch of evil and corrupt men on the Internet and in bookstores. That runs into millions of pages; and I am not interested in them.
zerinus
And BTW I am not asking you to “refute every anti-Mormon literature published by a bunch of evil and corrupt men on the Internet and in bookstores.” Just the Abanes book. Let’s keep it simple for now. I’ve got other books on the burner that we can discuss later, if you’d like. But for now, just the one book, and not even the whole book, but just the section on failed Joseph Smith prophesies. You say JS never issued a false prophesy. Why don’t you just take this as an opportunity to refute a book that works to make the ranks of tithing Mormons smaller? I mean, pretty much all the rest of your efforts here are having the EXACT opposite effect that you desire. Maybe you could get some traction out of a reasoned and persuasive refutation of this book. Think of it as an opportunity to make up lost ground.