Many other LDS disagree with your friends. IMHO, the Book of Mormon disagrees with your friends.
Then you would be wrong. This attempt by the church to distance itself from the statements expressed by its founder and original apostles is a recent LDS phenomenon.
You rejected it without praying? That's too bad. A spiritual witness is the only way to really know.
Of course I did. It's a matter of intellectual honesty and moral integrity to ask first and pray later. If my rational mind - given to me by the one who created me - is assaulted by blatant evidentiary contradictions who am I to test God in such a manner? It would be an insult to the author and essence of truth.
Many of his closest friends betrayed him. That is the definition of anti-Mormon.
In this particular instance I'm tempted to say something a little more direct than I'd like. Suffice it to say independent investigation into the historical record provides plenty of evidence to the contrary. The incidents were widely reported both within and outside of the church. That documentation is still in existence and very easily accessible to anyone interested in the truth.
I'd agree, except that a mind-boggling population explosion is not the only way that could have happened. They could have, for example, intermarried with existing people. Plenty of scholars were suggesting this over the last fifty years, and now nearly all of them are on the side of such intermarriage.
No, you don't understand the scientific basis of demographics. It has nothing to do with WHO they married or had children with. It has everything to do with the impossibility of such a large population explosion at that time in history, based on world wide population studies and the quality of life in an agrarian society without benefit of modern medicine and nutrition, high infant mortality rates, and average lifespan.
That's a lot of footnotes for something that's totally irrelevant.
I'm sorry to say it seems you have missed the point entirely.
Also irrelevant, but also false. Read 1491 to see how the demographic data has changed for the Americas. A lot. But that's neither here nor there, because if there was intermarriage, there's no need for such a population boom.
Yes, the demographic data has changed for the Americas due to giant migrations, and their effects on indigenous people. That has nothing to do with what happened in the BoM times. How many people do you think came here? It's right there, count them up. A cheap calculator and a glance at worldwide demographic tables for the period proves the BoM populations could not, would not, did not exist. Coupled with lack of physical evidence of their existence and DNA studies of indigenous people it's a no-brainer.
Also false. Again, read 1491. It's not by a Mormon, BTW, but it summarizes a series of changes in archaeological thinking, mostly dealing with demographics. Suffice it to say that the vast majority of mainstream archaeologists now claim that over ten times that man people vanished from America between Columbus and the Pilgrims. The "high counters" are winning every battle in archaeological circles.
There are heated debates on the subject. Even so, it does not account for the "bump" that would have to be explained by the populations described in the BoM based on what was said earlier, imho.
This is a great summary of the kinds of assumptions people make when reading the Book of Mormon. Were the breastplates metal? Victor von Hagen and other preeminent non-LDS scholars have found all manner of breatplates from wood and een stone. Does the BoM say they were metal? Moreover, the Book of Mormon doesn't mention coins or buttons. It mentions "Ontis" of silver, "limnahs" of gold, and many people assume they are coins--including the people who wrote the chapter summaries of the Book of Mormon--when they just as easily could have been weights.
As for chariots, there are several answers, but perhaps the best is to remind you what the leading authority on the Maya said about decomposition in the Americas. Victor von Hagan said that the Mayan roads had been so absorbed into the jungle that there would never be any way to know what kind of vehicles road on them. He bemoaned the disparate state of the world that would preserve a body for centuries in the hot desert and devour it within days--bones and all--in the jungle.
And yet we have plenty of actual evidence for the existence of the Mayan civilization - and zilch for, say, the Nephites. Go figure!
Is this really the kind of thing you base your testimony on? Why didn't you pray to find out the spiritual value of the book instead of committing yourself to a sea of shifting hypotheses?
Okay here's my testimony: I worship Christ. I don't worship a church, I don't worship a book.
And i'm sorry but the sea of shifting hypotheses belongs to the LDS church. It is their modus operandi.
I agree.
You oversimplify.
Wow, like that wasn't one opinion among thousands.
That might be telling, if it wasn't the middle of an ongoing debate. You are cherry picking.
No, not at all, I showed restraint. I could have posted many, many more such statements from official mormon documentation. The point is this. There should BE NO debate about something as critical to LDS beliefs as the site of Hill Cumorah. It's as plain as day, really - according to Joseph Smith.
What should be of concern though is the furious backpeddaling and attempted coverups. It's problematic and endemic in the church.
Oh, my mistake, you are probably getting this from that video you watched.
What are you trying to imply, that I am a moron who can't think for myself, read, study and research any area I wish to turn my attention to out of curiosity? As a matter of fact, that I would tend to be less biased than any Mormon apologist should go without saying.
It's cherry picking. Funny it doesn't quote Joseph in the Millennial Star saying the Lehite people were not the only ones here when they arrived, nor does it quote the many, many LDS scholars who beleived the Hill Cumorah was in Mesoamerica. Y'know, the ones on either side of that Ivins comment?
That's the second time you have accused me of cherry picking. What's wrong, did I touch a nerve? Let me ask you. Which would you believe to be more accurate, contemporaries of Joseph Smith, or contemporary apologists who weren't there to walk and talk with him? It's not like it happened thousands of years ago. There is no translation problem. It's all in English and all easily available. It's not that hard to piece together, if one is honest. The farther in time an opinion is removed from the actual events, the less accurate it will tend to be.
If you are really going to trust your testimony to archaeology, why are you leaving out paleolinguistics, the strongest archaeological evidence in favor of the Book of Mormon?
The Book of Mormon is false. Joseph Smith was a false prophet. I have logical reasons (the least of them scientific) for believing that is the truth. If you can prove to me using paleolinguistics, DNA evidence, archeology, or any other scientific discipline that I am wrong I will recant and ask God for guidance.