C
Casen
Guest
Reid,let me try again “they made it all up.”
perhaps through their imagination, they convinced themselves.
Now lets say that there were plates with the Book of Morman wriitten down on them, and these witness’s actually saw them How did they know where they came from? Because they believed in the word of Joseph Smith?
So, we’ve got 11 men and two women that testified they saw the plates, all of whom stood by their testimonies throughout their lives, even the ones that had a falling out with Joseph Smith and even though they never made any money off their claims. And your profound explanation is that they just “made it up” or they had vivid imaginations? That’s pretty weak.
If they were part of a fraud, what was the incentive?
Don’t you find it strange that NOT ONE witness ever retracted their testimony, even those that left the church? They got no monetary reward, nothing but ridicule, and yet they repeated their testimonies their entire lives. That many witnesses to anything would be enough to convict in any court… even in the state of California!
Then you suggest that perhaps there were real gold plates but they were a fraud. Wow, 50 lbs of Gold. That’s a pretty expensive fraud.
I can accept that people would find it hard to believe in Joseph Smith’s stories of visions and angels and gold plates buried in a mountain. It’s all pretty incredible. But your explanations are pretty hard to swallow too!
And we’re just talking about the plates themselves. What about the text?
From Terryl Givens:
The naked implausibility of gold plates, seer stones, and warrior-angles finds little by way of scientific corroboration, but attributing to a young farmboy the 90-day dictated and unrevised production of the 500-page narrative that incorporates sophisticated literary structures, remarkable Old World parallels, and some 300 references to chronology and 700 to geography with virtually perfect self-consistency is problematic as well.