The size of these other groups doesnât matter. According to the rules of logic:
Argumentum ad Numeram:
- A fallacy that asserts that the more people who support or believe a proposition then the more likely that that proposition is correct; it equates mass support with correctness.*
Therefore, just because the CoJCoLDS is the largest group that views the BoM as scripture doesnât make it the ârightâ or âTrueâ one. To be fair, this
also applies to the Catholic Church as well, claiming that the CC is it true based on the number of adherents is a logical fallacy.
I donât pretend to be an expert in logic, but to me, the statement âthe BoM is true, therefore the CoJCoLDS is the True Churchâ appears to be a non sequitur.
Non-Sequitur:
An argument in which the conclusion is not a necessary consequence of the premises. Another way of putting this is: A conclusion drawn from premises that provide no logical connection to it.
This is one of the issues I had when I was considering the LDS thing. Because using Moroniâs challenge, I could have concluded that one of these
other groups was the True Church. Believing the BoM doesnât appear, at least not to my mind, to point uniquely to the CoJCoLDS.
I would also add that I can see another possibility here: someone could consider the BoM to be true, yet not think ANY of the faith groups that use it was necessarily the One True Church. One might just think that JS had a very significant religious experience. Now, why God would do is a whole other can of worms

, one for which I donât even pretend to have an answer.