Here's another mental exercise for everyone: If you were not a member of the Church and someone told you about the BOM, would you accept it as a historical document?
I'm not interested in conversion stories or spiritual experiences here (although I admit that they may be important)--let's just stick with the evidence. There's no way that I would accept the BOM today. It has all of the hallmarks of a fraud--from Kinderhook plates to gold-digging to DNA evidence to lack of archaelogic remains to retracted false claims by its author about the Lamanites being "the principal ancestors of the Indians". And that's just off the top of my head--give me some time and I could present a pretty good case. Sure, there are answers to all of these, but you get to a point where the totality of the explanations just seem too convoluted, the mental gymnastics too much.
So why do I stay a member if I think that based on a rational treatment of the evidence, the BOM is likely a fraud? Because there's a chance it's not and believing in that chance makes me a better and happier person. For me, it's a bit too hard to read the scriptures with any sort of effort if I think they're completely allegorical/fabricated, but I can respect that approach. I still enjoy church and without exception, come home a better person than I went, if I go with a desire for enrichment and not conflict or criticism. I think the Mormon Church is dead wrong about a few things but for the time being, I can find a place in it. I'm also one of those whom Indy derides who feel that it doesn't matter a lot what creed one belongs to if one is learning the basic principles of a good life (how can it matter when only 0.001% of the population has even heard of the one true church?), so the possibility of being wrong doesn't keep me up at night.
I'm not interested in conversion stories or spiritual experiences here (although I admit that they may be important)--let's just stick with the evidence. There's no way that I would accept the BOM today. It has all of the hallmarks of a fraud--from Kinderhook plates to gold-digging to DNA evidence to lack of archaelogic remains to retracted false claims by its author about the Lamanites being "the principal ancestors of the Indians". And that's just off the top of my head--give me some time and I could present a pretty good case. Sure, there are answers to all of these, but you get to a point where the totality of the explanations just seem too convoluted, the mental gymnastics too much.
So why do I stay a member if I think that based on a rational treatment of the evidence, the BOM is likely a fraud? Because there's a chance it's not and believing in that chance makes me a better and happier person. For me, it's a bit too hard to read the scriptures with any sort of effort if I think they're completely allegorical/fabricated, but I can respect that approach. I still enjoy church and without exception, come home a better person than I went, if I go with a desire for enrichment and not conflict or criticism. I think the Mormon Church is dead wrong about a few things but for the time being, I can find a place in it. I'm also one of those whom Indy derides who feel that it doesn't matter a lot what creed one belongs to if one is learning the basic principles of a good life (how can it matter when only 0.001% of the population has even heard of the one true church?), so the possibility of being wrong doesn't keep me up at night.
, I think it's an interesting question, although I like oxcoug's hypothetical phrasing much better. I may be missing something here, but I see your first two questions as weird existential questions that don't have much to do with anything. Your third question is much "more to the point". I'd obviously keep going to church, but the more interesting question is how would it affect my approach to things. From the POV of a believer, God had some reason for not making these things provable, and I wonder if we'd really be any happier with the "proof". Laman and Lemuel weren't (assuming they existed...
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