...the scientifically cherished Siberian Land Bridge theory....
Nevertheless...it's been completely and unequivocally discredited. But before it was discredited, every piece of evidence that ran counter to the Siberian Land Bridge Theory was automatically thrown out. And that included any and all evidence that supported the Book of Mormon. Thus, anyone (LDS or not) who criticized the theory was automatically ostracized.
Yeah, you know who ELSE poo-poohed the value of washing hands (as well as standard sanitary practices like washing dishes/pots/pans, utensils)? Jesus. You know who else didn't believe in germs, either? Jesus thought he was curing via forgiveness of sins, since Jesus lived in the age LONG before Pasteur's 'germ theory of disease', and that's what all humans believed.
How do you know he didn’t believe in germs or that he “poo-poohed” the value of washing hands? And what difference would it make whether he believed in them or not? Jesus wasn’t omniscient at the time he lived on Earth as a man. Remember when he spit into some dirt and put it on a blind man’s eyes? The man had been born blind, yet instead of giving him an eye infection, it restored his sight. The concept of germs came well before microscopes. The Greeks knew through experimentation that something was causing the breakdown of both fruit and flesh. But they could see nothing, so they theorized that the breakdown was being caused by something so small that they couldn’t see it.
And you’re correct about the correlation between healing and the forgiveness of sins. It’s not based on science but theology. As the Son of God, he had every right and power to forgive sins.
YOU claim God exists, so YOU have to present existence of God to convince skeptics. It's called "burden of proof," and believers bear it if they claim God exists.
Look, it’s not us who needs to prove it. I never said that I or anyone else had proof that God exists, but there is evidence. The scriptures are consistent, prophecy is spot on, and the Hebrew God unchanging and wise. The prophets give consistent testimonies and there are hundreds of near death experiences. When one considers the distance from the sun to the earth, the distance, mass and orbit of the moon (which many astronomers believe is foreign to both the earth and the solar system) and the complexities of life, you’re damn right it’s an “appeal to personal incredulity.” Like the Greeks who couldn’t see the germs, but who surmised they were there, I see God throughout the universe. Intelligence and order are invariably connected, and one cannot, in my view, exist without the other. Even given everything else in the solar system, if we didn’t have a stabilizing moon the precise distance and mass from the earth, intelligent life could not exist. Our tides would be erratic, our equator would change so often crops would not grow and our climate also would be erratic. And to think it all happened with a roll of the dice.
Regarding near death experiences, I have found no inconsistencies of experiences based on peoples’ belief systems. In fact, it’s just the opposite. Of course I don’t believe every account I read. Some are silly and entirely inconsistent with scripture. Like religion, people can just make things up, which is why there is the law of witnesses. But also like religion, the truth can be ferreted out.
Atheists can believe whatever they like. But they hijack every discussion of scripture and religion and turn it into an attack on religion.
This thread was about how Jehovah’s Witnesses and other soul sleepers would react to finding out that their consciousness continued after death. Suddenly we’re treated with their opinions about religion in general, the Book of Mormon, how ridiculous and unbelievable, and unconvincing all spiritual belief systems (except their own, naturally) were and how noble and honest science has been through the ages in searching out the truth while they have been persecuted by exposing the fables of religion. The truth is, science has about two whores less than Babylon had in its heyday. Just look at how many threads the atheists have derailed here. Some hurl just one or two lines of insult (hi, Cofty!) while others insult in greater detail. Then there are those who see Mormonism and the Jehovah’s Witnesses as being equally as bizarre and ridiculous, so differences in doctrine are merely the topics of fools and the gullible. And what bothers them the most, I think, are former Jehovah’s Witnesses who remain Christians and who find more productive spiritual pursuits than the bitter path they themselves tread.
(And BTW, I don’t have anything against atheists believing as they do; I am just stunned at times about the surety of their convictions, which is very similar to the surety that exists among the religiously-minded.)
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