Why are people mormon considering it is obvioulsy fabricated?

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They could be. I don’t happen to believe they are. However, YOUR claim is that we believe Moroni helped Joseph Smith TRANSLATE the book. He didn’t. Speaking as an English teacher, I can tell you that even if you are investigating a work of fiction, you have to investigate it for what it claims to be, not something that isn’t in it.
No, it wasnt my claim at all. It is what other LDS have told me. Lets go with Moroni didnt help (its not important), the result is still the same.

Now what has that got to do with me holding the BoM to standards that the bible cant achieve?
They WERE under some stress at the time. The second edition wasn’t widely available; the first was.
Not really an excuse to put out a faulty copy of such an important work.
Joseph had the original text. The original translation was scattered around a bit–but it helped greatly in the very few (I did say six, right) changes that actually affected meaning: like the change from "white and delightsome’ to “pure and delightsome” which delights our detractors so much. How inconvenient for them that this change was actually made back in 1837.
I thought the gold plates dissapeared.
Sure you are. But in a debate, you have to explain why you think it is rubbish. You know, reasons, explanations…to simply dismiss it as ‘rubbish’ is rude, not to mention ineffective; it’s an appeal to ridicule, thus a logical fallacy and a red herring. It loses you points.
Especially if the person you happen to be debating, and your audience, either is convinced that it is NOT rubbish, or isn’t certain about it yet.
Oh right then.
Could do, but since it IS something that someone who merely translated, rather than wrote, a book WOULD be expected to do, you can’t use it as proof of falsity.
No, but given other things (ie: Kinderhook plates) it does add up.
 
I’m new here, and hope spring eternal.

Perhaps my experience with Catholic critics here will be better than my experiences with evangelical critics have been?
This forum is moderated. You will find that your treatment is far better here, though it is a little one sided. (shrug)

Nobody has told me that I’m headed directly for hell yet, anyway. The quality of the debate can be far better. People here have actual vocabularies.
 
what i meant to write was that scientology and mormonism should both be illegal because they are demonstrably false. the constitution can be changed, that’s what admendments are for.
You must not be an American. I love the constitution just the way it is, thank-you-very-much, and I don’t want it changed. If they outlaw someone else’s religion, what’s to say mine won’t be next? The founding fathers knew what they were doing when they wrote the 1st amendment. Amendments are for adding rights, not taking them away.
 
By the early 1970s, surveying all of the foundation’s notable findings, ***Thomas Ferguson ***began to assemble the case for the Book’s ancient origins. Other than the “Egyptian” cylinder seal, the NWAF excavators had found nothing that seemed to authenticate the Mormon faith. Ferguson grew increasingly alarmed by this lack of progress.

“With all of [our] great efforts, it cannot be established factually that anyone, from Joseph Smith to the present day, has put his finger on a single point of terrain that was a Book-ofMormon geographical place. And the hemisphere has been pretty well checked out by competent people. Thousands of sites have been excavated.” In a detailed chart that poignantly illustrated his spiritual despair, he went on to enumerate all the plants, animals, and artifacts mentioned in the Book of Mormon that were as yet undiscovered in ancient Mesoamerican digs. Under the heading, “Evidence supporting the existence of these forms of animal life in the regions proposed,” he ticked off: “***: None. Bull: None. Calf: None. Cattle: None. Cow: None. Goat: None. Horse: None. Ox: None. Sheep: None. Sow: None. Elephant: None (contemporary with Book of Mormon). Evidence of the foregoing animals has not appeared in any form-ceramic representations, bones or skeletal remains, mural art, sculptured art or any other form … [T]he zero score presents a problem that will not go away with the ignoring of it. Non-LDS scholars of first magnitude, some of whom want to be our friends, think we have real trouble here.”

Eventually Ferguson, the indefatigable apostle and founder of Mormon archaeology, came to the anguished conclusion that Joseph Smith had simply invented the Book of Mormon out of whole cloth. He pronounced Mormonism a “myth fraternity,” and slipped into a profound spiritual crisis that lasted until his death, of a heart attack, in 1983. “You can’t set Book of Mormon geography down anywhere,” he wrote in 1976, “because it is fictional and will never meet the requirements of the dirt-archaeology. What is in the ground will never conform to what is in The Book.” And in another letter: “I have been spoofed by Joseph Smith.”
This is a very convincing report on all accounts. He sounds like an honest man more interested in the truth that what he has to lose, or how he comes off to others when he admits he was duped.

This is the type of thing I read and I wonder as the OP does: Why are people Mormon when it is so obviously fabricated?

When you have a lot to lose in being open to the truth of this, one thing to do is simply close your mind to difficult facts, and* believe what you want to believe.*

http://www.loriloder.com/Portfolio/Resume_files/UnicornRainbow-filtered.jpg
 
And yet, all this (from article just linked) sounds so scholarly and important! So it must be substantial proof! Of something!.:

Substantial new evidence identifies a lush area in the western corner of Oman as the possible location where Nephi built the ship that carried Lehi’s family to the promised land.
Most Book of Mormon scholars agree that Lehi took his family south out of Jerusalem, down the Arabah and south to somewhere near Aqaba. From there Lehi angled on a southeastly direction paralleling the Red Sea coast of Saudi Arabia. Lehi’s journey likely took them through or near Medina and Mecca, two holy cities of present day Islam. About 300 miles south of present day Mecca is an oasis called Al Kunfadah, the place Lehi called Nahom, the place where Ishmael died and was buried. From here Lehi turned nearly due east and crossed the lower portion of one of the most barren deserts in the world (The Empty Quarter).
The route Lehi took paralleled the ancient Frankincense Trail. Frankincense is a vegetable resin from the Boswellia, a family of decidious shrubs or trees found in northeast Africa. The resin hardens when dried, into small yellow grains, which are then burned for their aromatic quality… …Travelling nearly a thousand miles across southern Saudi Arabia, Lehi arrived at a place he called “Bountiful”. …Even after Europeans explored the real Arabia and discovered that it truly was a barren, desolate desert; where could possibly be the forested area Nephi used to build his ship? The very idea was preposterous. The area described in 1 Nephi had to meet several conditions: …For a place to qualify as Bountiful, it had to have timber in enough types and sizes to permit ship building and a mountain prominent enough to be called “the mount,” close enough that Nephi could retreat there and “pray oft.” …
…Was this the place where Nephi built the ship? …Another couple who visited the area is Maurine and Scot Proctor who rented a Jeep in Salala, about eighty miles east of Wadi Sayq, and drove west toward the location they believed best fit the description of Bountiful. … Trees abound with “much fruit” available in the form of date-palm fruit. Dolphins frolic in the waters near the beach, wild flamingos wade in the fresh water. This is a place that perfectly matched Nephi’s description. …

Later, the Proctors observed an oval rock pattern outline on the beach in the exact shape of a ship. … Could these have been the supports for the scaffolding of a ship? …Piles of rocks could be seen leading in succession to the high-water tide line of the ocean, perhaps used as supports for a launching ramp. …It is not known who built these structures, they have not been dated, and it is impossible to say what they were used for. But it is no longer possible to ridicule the Book of Mormon story of Lehi’s crossing of a barren desert and his climactic landing on a lush, forested, protected beach that meets all the conditions required by the story.

Yup. This must prove something substantial.
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No, it wasnt my claim at all. It is what other LDS have told me. Lets go with Moroni didnt help (its not important), the result is still the same.
Actually, it is rather important, Elric. It indicates a communication breakdown that might cause issues in other areas. I’ve been around the block quite often, and have been around Mormons (and anti-Mormons and Mormon critics) for a long time. You are the absolutely first person to tell me that Moroni helped Joseph Smith translate the Book of Mormon. Something’s screwy somewhere.
Now what has that got to do with me holding the BoM to standards that the bible cant achieve?
Nothing much…a change of subject within the post. You ARE holding the Book of Mormon to a different standard than you are holding the bible to; in terms of archeology, it’s apples and oranges.
Not really an excuse to put out a faulty copy of such an important work.
an excuse? perhaps not, but it is a reason. It doesn’t much matter whether you personally think that the reason is good enough, y’know. It is what it is.
I thought the gold plates dissapeared.
Not before Joseph Smith was done looking at them, they didn’t.
Oh right then.
Glad you see the light. 🙂
No, but given other things (ie: Kinderhook plates) it does add up.
OK, educate me. How does Joseph’s non-translation of bogus plates relate to the Book of Mormon?
 
Yup. This must prove something substantial.
Hardly. Pure speculation.

Mormons are so anxious to find something they will use whatever they find and stretch the imagination to infinity.

Bottom line, no evidence of any sort.
 
Why do you have to resort to that, All that exaduration stuff?
What exaduration?
It doesnt help. People are just asking for a shread of evidence that showed such a civilisation existed, not for the whole thing to be revealed.

It was a large civilisation that had many large battles and also a different culture/technology to Native Americans (which would make their things stand out), but nothing has been found.

Those things that you mentioned, we would know where they were because there is more than one source telling us with details.
 
Joseph believed that it did, but there is no textual evidence within the book itself that supports that. In fact, the disconnect between some of the things that Joseph believed about what it said, and what it actually says, is evidence that he didn’t actually WRITE the book himself; someone else did.
Most of us don’t believe that Joseph Smith wrote the BoM; in fact, from Joseph’s statements it appears he never even read it,. The best evidence shows that Sidney Ridgon reworked the Spalding manuscript and inserted his own Campbellite theology into it, then used Joseph Smith as the Mohammed-like illiterate bumpkin who “could not possibly have written it”.

Sidney’s main problem was that nobody liked him, and Joseph turned out to be far more charismatic and power-hungry than he had anticipated. Sidney eventually got left out in the cold as Joseph gained more and more power.
The author of a book generally puts the textual evidence for his claims in that book.
Actually there are a number of BoM prophecies specifically about Joseph Smith - very self-serving.

It is very telling that the revelation in the Book of Commandments (section 4) says of Joseph Smith:
“…and he has a gift to translate the book and I have commanded him that he shall pretend to no other gift, for I will grant him no other gift.” — Book of Commandments, 4:2
by the time that revelation became D&C 5, the meaning had completely changed:
“…and this is the first gift that I bestowed upon you; and I have commanded that you should pretend to no other gift until my purpose is fulfilled in this; for I will grant unto you no other gift until it is finished.” — Doctrine and Covenants, 5:4
It is obvious to the dispassionate observer that Sidney Rigdon originally planned to be the head of the church, and the BoC passage limits Joseph’s role to that of translator. But Sidney Rigdon was a weird old man that nobody liked, despite that fact that he was an accomplished bible scholar and the architect of LDS doctrine. By the time the D&C was published, the balance of power had shifted, and Joseph was firmly in control, with Sidney as an assistant (at best).
 
The National Geographic Society maintained in 1998 that: “Archeologists and other scholars have long probed the hemisphere’s past and the society does not know of anything found so far that has substantiated the Book of Mormon.” 6

The Smithsonian Institution prepared a form letter in 1996. It seems to have been in response to a rumor that the Smithsonian had used the Book of Mormon as an archaeological guide book. Their letter says, in part: “Smithsonian archeologists see no direct connection between the archeology of the New World and the subject matter of the book [of Mormon].”

“The physical type of the American Indian is basically Mongoloid, being most closely related to that of the peoples of eastern, central and northeastern Asia.”
“…none of the principal Old World domesticated food plants or animals (except the dog) occurred in the New World in pre-Columbian times. American Indians had no wheat, barley, oats, millet, rice, cattle, pigs, chickens, horses, donkeys, camels before 1492.”

“Reports of findings of ancient Egyptian, Hebrew and other Old World writings in the New World in pre-Columbian contexts have frequently appeared…None of these claims has stood up to examination by reputable scholars.”
 
The National Geographic Society maintained in 1998 that: “Archeologists and other scholars have long probed the hemisphere’s past and the society does not know of anything found so far that has substantiated the Book of Mormon.” 6

The Smithsonian Institution prepared a form letter in 1996. It seems to have been in response to a rumor that the Smithsonian had used the Book of Mormon as an archaeological guide book.
The missionaries that taught me in 1975 told me that very lie, along with a multitude of others. If only the internet had been around then…
 
This is a very convincing report on all accounts. He sounds like an honest man more interested in the truth that what he has to lose, or how he comes off to others when he admits he was duped.

This is the type of thing I read and I wonder as the OP does: Why are people Mormon when it is so obviously fabricated?

When you have a lot to lose in being open to the truth of this, one thing to do is simply close your mind to difficult facts, and* believe what you want to believe.*
You probably won’t be surprised to learn that not everybody considers Thomas Ferguson, the California lawyer and amateur archaeology enthusiast, the final authority on Book of Mormon authenticity:

mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=16&num=1&id=531
Most of us don’t believe that Joseph Smith wrote the BoM; in fact, from Joseph’s statements it appears he never even read it,. The best evidence shows that Sidney Ridgon reworked the Spalding manuscript and inserted his own Campbellite theology into it, then used Joseph Smith as the Mohammed-like illiterate bumpkin who “could not possibly have written it”.
No serious historian of Mormonism, believer or not, accepts the Spalding/Rigdon hypothesis. Not a single one. That should suggest something, I think.

For a detailed and devastating critique of a recent version of the hypothesis, see

mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=17&num=2&id=584
 
You probably won’t be surprised to learn that not everybody considers Thomas Ferguson, the California lawyer and amateur archaeology enthusiast, the final authority on Book of Mormon authenticity:

mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=16&num=1&id=531

No serious historian of Mormonism, believer or not, accepts the Spalding/Rigdon hypothesis. Not a single one. That should suggest something, I think.

For a detailed and devastating critique of a recent version of the hypothesis, see

mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=17&num=2&id=584
Synneve, welcome to the forum. Just an fyi: It’s better to actually discuss your points instead of just posting articles from the maxwell institute. Chances are many of us have already read them or are at least aware of the major points in them. So why not bring up some important points from them?
 
Synneve, welcome to the forum. Just an fyi: It’s better to actually discuss your points instead of just posting articles from the maxwell institute. Chances are many of us have already read them or are at least aware of the major points in them. So why not bring up some important points from them?
If people have already read them, we can discuss them.

If they haven’t already read them, but intend to expound upon the subjects the articles treat, they should read the articles.
 
If people have already read them, we can discuss them.

If they haven’t already read them, but intend to expound upon the subjects the articles treat, they should read the articles.
Yes I agree with both points, however sadly that’s not how forums work, since most will think “tl;dr” (internet speak for: too long didn’t read). I can’t even get people to read a 5 page article. It makes more sense to copy out certain parts of it, post them here, link to the full article, and bring up any points you think are important. Otherwise, most won’t read the full article, no matter how much they “should” read it. And I’m talking generally, not specific to Catholics or Mormons.
 
Self-serving is the first thing you think of when you read about Joseph Smith. “Self-serving” was the common thread in all his actions.
And what, pray, have you read about Joseph Smith?

Have you read Richard Bushman’s Rough Stone Rolling? Mark McConkie’s Remembering Joseph? Dean Jessee’s edition of The Personal Writings of Joseph Smith?

My impression of the man is dramatically, fundamentally different than yours. I’ve read quite a bit about him. What have you read?
 
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