Book of Mormon Blog
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ururimi: English
Talisman (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 31 Nzero 2017 20:18:54
I'm doing a youtube everyday talking about the Book of Mormon.
If your Interested visit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZVcfTvfddE
it really is a cool story
Vestitor (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 31 Nzero 2017 20:38:40
Kliphph (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 31 Nzero 2017 23:24:41
mkj1887 (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Ruhuhuma 2017 03:09:54
Vestitor:It may be cool, but it's also completely false.Yes, but you can say the same about the New Testament. The New Testament was written, in secret, by the Roman aristocracy as an antidote to Judaism. Judaism was a thorn in the side of the Roman Empire, and the Roman aristocracy wanted to neutralize it. The story that they came up with, which comes down to us as the New Testament, was not very original, either, being based very largely on a prior religion called Mithraism.
Vestitor (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Ruhuhuma 2017 19:50:17
mkj1887:Thanks. You saved me the trouble of typing. I agree, the New Testament is also fictional.Vestitor:It may be cool, but it's also completely false.Yes, but you can say the same about the New Testament. The New Testament was written, in secret, by the Roman aristocracy as an antidote to Judaism. Judaism was a thorn in the side of the Roman Empire, and the Roman aristocracy wanted to neutralize it. The story that they came up with, which comes down to us as the New Testament, was not very original, either, being based very largely on a prior religion called Mithraism.
BeardedBloke (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Ruhuhuma 2017 23:12:16
mkj1887:No. Such assertions are popular among keyboard warriors, but have no credibility. The evidence all points to the NT being early. E.G. Nearly all scholars agree Paul, a Jew, penned at least 7 of the letters attributed to him beginning around 50CE, and he quotes sayings about the resurrection of Christ that probably date back to the mid-30's CE. The Gospel of John includes reference to an architectural feature that was destroyed by the Romans C.69-70AD and considered a myth by modern scholars until it was discovered (I think in the C19th, but the exact date isn't relevant). The only evidence is that early Christianity emerged from Judaism and the NT makes most sense when understood that way. The point being that the alleged link between Christianity and Mithraism, or any other mystery cult, is a bigger myth than critics claim for the NT itself.Vestitor:It may be cool, but it's also completely false.Yes, but you can say the same about the New Testament. The New Testament was written, in secret, by the Roman aristocracy as an antidote to Judaism...
Vestitor (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Ruhuhuma 2017 23:33:17
That's all I'll say though, because I spent lots of wasted hours on another thread like this on here with a pair of twits who treated the arguments like jazz solos (i.e. pure invention on the fly).
BeardedBloke (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 3 Ruhuhuma 2017 02:38:52
Vestitor:Well I'm not a keyboard warrior and I'm well-read enough to confidently assert that the New Testament is fiction cobbled together with snippets of obvious fact; the latter being completely irrelevant to the supposed message the New Testament wants to deliver.Glad you don't want to argue! It's Not why I'm on Lernu (but couldn't let it go unchallenged). (BTW, I didn't mean to accuse *you* of being a keyboard warrior, just that that's where a lot of this stuff comes from.) Totally agree - you can waste your life spending hours on the internet trying to convince complete strangers to change there mind - the worst place to try to accomplish anything like that. Enjoy your day/night, whatever it is in your timezone.
That's all I'll say though, because I spent lots of wasted hours on another thread like this on here with a pair of twits who treated the arguments like jazz solos (i.e. pure invention on the fly).
mkj1887 (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 4 Ruhuhuma 2017 20:15:50
BeardedBloke:I think the roots of your beard have grown up into your brain.mkj1887:No. Such assertions are popular among keyboard warriors, but have no credibility. The evidence all points to the NT being early. E.G. Nearly all scholars agree Paul, a Jew, penned at least 7 of the letters attributed to him beginning around 50CE, and he quotes sayings about the resurrection of Christ that probably date back to the mid-30's CE. The Gospel of John includes reference to an architectural feature that was destroyed by the Romans C.69-70AD and considered a myth by modern scholars until it was discovered (I think in the C19th, but the exact date isn't relevant). The only evidence is that early Christianity emerged from Judaism and the NT makes most sense when understood that way. The point being that the alleged link between Christianity and Mithraism, or any other mystery cult, is a bigger myth than critics claim for the NT itself.Vestitor:It may be cool, but it's also completely false.Yes, but you can say the same about the New Testament. The New Testament was written, in secret, by the Roman aristocracy as an antidote to Judaism...
Anyway, bear in mind that a major truth or breakthrough is seldom promulgated without some error in detail. To give just one example, Copernicus had the right idea, but he was mistaken in the details.
And what do you think about keyboard cowards who hide their identity?
Vestitor (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 4 Ruhuhuma 2017 20:54:34
mkj1887:I think the roots of your beard have grown up into your brain.Very odd. The roots/follicles do not grow backwards and if they had grown the way you suggest then our bearded friend would have bigger problems than being right or wrong on a speculative matter.
Anyway, bear in mind that a major truth or breakthrough is seldom promulgated without some error in detail. To give just one example, Copernicus had the right idea, but he was mistaken in the details.
And what do you think about keyboard cowards who hide their identity?
The thing about Copernicus though, being a scientist (or natural philosopher if you like), is that he was not trying to prove a conclusion. If we were to fetch him from history and point out his errors as well as the fact he was on the right track, he may well be overjoyed.
I don't know if this is the same as the 'errors' in so-called sacred or 'revealed' texts. These tend to have intractable errors because the conclusion is fixed and immutable and everything 'evidential' is constructed on it or with it in mind. Pull one brick out and the lot comes down, so they have to stay and ever outlandish, foolish new explanations are given to try and solve the problems.
I'm not pointing the finger at you, but so many people on the internet talk about keyboard warriors or anonymous cowards or whatever. In reality what gets typed into these little boxes is all there is and it should stand or fall based on its merit. The question of a person's official academic credentials or what their real name might be is completely irrelevant.