ToGodorNottoGod
Member
I am doing this as a serious experiment, so please help me out here. I have a Mormon who is so believing he would continue in his testimony even if the Angel Moroni came to him in his own bedroom late at night and testified to him that Joseph Smith lied and the Book of Mormon is false.
He recently gave me a website proclaiming I was wrong in saying there is no evidence for the Book of Mormon. His words exactly were "evidences abound!" So I went to his link. Looked around a bit, and found what I thought would be a good candidate for an actually strong piece of evidence for the Book of Mormon. Here you are. My question is, if this doesn't convince you that there may be something to it all, why not?
Here we have as strong an established possibility of direct evidence as this website offers at least linguistically.
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It has all the ear marks of serious historical veracity and realism. It's a weird word this Sheum, not found in the Bible, but in the Book of Mormon, and now possible linguistic parallels with a Mesopotamian grain (also identified as such in the Book of Mormon).
So, seriously, why does no one find it convincing?
This Mormon says to me that there are evidences for the Book of Mormon in ridiculous abundance, they "abound" all over the place and only a closed minded individual cannot accept this evidence.
So everyone I have named here... why don't you believe this evidence works? It deals with linguistic loanshifting, plausible parallels with genuinely ancient grains from nations that perhaps had contact with the Book of Mormon group the Jaredites. Whence the skepticism? Can we justify our skepticism of this evidence based upon scholarly research and analysis?
He recently gave me a website proclaiming I was wrong in saying there is no evidence for the Book of Mormon. His words exactly were "evidences abound!" So I went to his link. Looked around a bit, and found what I thought would be a good candidate for an actually strong piece of evidence for the Book of Mormon. Here you are. My question is, if this doesn't convince you that there may be something to it all, why not?
Here we have as strong an established possibility of direct evidence as this website offers at least linguistically.
Loading...
It has all the ear marks of serious historical veracity and realism. It's a weird word this Sheum, not found in the Bible, but in the Book of Mormon, and now possible linguistic parallels with a Mesopotamian grain (also identified as such in the Book of Mormon).
So, seriously, why does no one find it convincing?
This Mormon says to me that there are evidences for the Book of Mormon in ridiculous abundance, they "abound" all over the place and only a closed minded individual cannot accept this evidence.
So everyone I have named here... why don't you believe this evidence works? It deals with linguistic loanshifting, plausible parallels with genuinely ancient grains from nations that perhaps had contact with the Book of Mormon group the Jaredites. Whence the skepticism? Can we justify our skepticism of this evidence based upon scholarly research and analysis?