So, it would seem that the ex-LDS on this thread demand that the CoJCoLDS is not true if we come to understand our scriptures differently because “the Mormon Church took its scriptures literally and are having to back away from that idea due to science” but the Catholic Church has always taken its scriptures literally or allegorically and thus can “back away from that idea (a literal interpretation used to ban books and do many things) due to science.”
It is my position that, “The Catholic Chuch always took its scriptures literally or allegorically” is less true of the Catholic Church than the CoJCoLDS. And that the CoJCoLDS took its scripture literally is not anywhere near as universally true as Stephen168 and RebeccaJ would have us believe.
This is of course, a subjective measurement that is going on in your own head. Since your conclusions don’t match reality, one conclusion could be, the reason for this subjective measurement weighing in favor of Mormonism is so that you are prepared. It is deducing, not mind reading.
But anyway, and whatever! I already know you have a known-only-to-Tom way of measuring things. Which is according to your own conscience, and I don’t seek to infringe on your conscience, forcing something. No.
If you are going to measure things, the Book of Mormon was published by Joseph Smith and claimed to be a historical account of the people of the Americas. Certainly, events related in that historical account can be viewed as allegorical or literal. But the BoM as a whole has always been presented as a historical account. Period.
You provide, what is in your own mind, scientific evidence for this claim. It is not in my estimation, evidence, but correlations. Like washing your car will make it rain. A nice correlation, but meaningless to anyone who isn’t seeking to provide evidence that cars cause rain. But who cares?
It all dodges the point, that the evidence against the BoM being a historical account, is going to force a change in Mormonism to where the book as a whole is not claimed to be a historical account.
You duck and dodge this, by pointing to specific stories that can be viewed as allegory or not. While all the while, providing what you see as evidence for a historical account, when the point is, the BoM itself is going to one day have to be put aside as history and the entire book presented as allegory.
Lehi and his family leaving Jerusalem, not literal, but allegorical. Lamanites and Nephites, not literally existing but allegories. etc.
This will be extremely difficult to reconcile with other Mormon scripture. The difficulty can already be seen, in the D&C, where Joseph sent people to teach the Lamanites. Of course he held the view that all indigenous people, anywhere and everywhere, were descended of Lamanites. But today, would you, a Mormon, agree that the people being taught were actually, literally, Lamanites?
If so, what is your evidence, if not, how do you reconcile the error of your scriptures?
The Catholic Church has always viewed our scripture as both allegory and not. Including the OT. Jesus names Himself, in the NT, both Jacob’s ladder and the temple. These are both figurative and literal, but more importantly is anagogical. If we viewed the OT as only literal, what Jesus said about Himself would be nonsense.
What a Cardinal or Council decrees is not scripture. What is in your D&C, attributed to Smith, is scripture. In my taking measure of the situation, you have an inestimable burden to overcome.