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To: Tennessee Nana
Nobody but he himself was ever worthy enough to see and read and touch them

I believe that is an intentional lie, because anyone who has actually read the Book of Mormon has read that 8 witnesses handled the plates and hefted them, and I cannot believe that a critic of the Book of Mormon would be ignorant of what one is supposed to be criticizing.

Richard Lloyd Anderson's 1981 book Investigating the Book of Mormon Witnesses shows that none of the 11 witnesses, despite the fact that many of them were expelled from the church or left on their own, ever denied their actual printed testimonies. Some of them were hounded to do so, but each died without denying their printed testimonies until only one was left, David Whitmer. Since all the other 10 had failed to cave under pressure, enemies of the Book of Mormon slapped a full court press on David Whitmer, who refused to cave while he was alive and left a message supporting the Book of Mormon on his gravestone in Richmond, Missouri.

Game over. Score 11 for Book of Mormon enthusiasts. Score 0 for Book of Mormon haters.

334 posted on 08/01/2011 4:34:39 PM PDT by John McDonnell
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To: John McDonnell

Nana: Nobody but he himself was ever worthy enough to see and read and touch them

John: I believe that is an intentional lie, because anyone who has actually read the Book of Mormon has read that 8 witnesses handled the plates and hefted them,
_____________________________________________

None of the so called 8 witnesses ever did SEE what was under the cloth

None of the so called 8 witnesses ever did READ what was under the cloth

None of the so called 8 witnesses ever did TOUCH what was under the cloth

So unless you are saying your 8 witnesses all lied ???


344 posted on 08/01/2011 5:06:05 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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To: John McDonnell

I believe that is an intentional lie, because anyone who has actually read the Book of Mormon has read that 8 witnesses handled the plates and hefted them, and I cannot believe that a critic of the Book of Mormon would be ignorant of what one is supposed to be criticizing.
__________________________________________________

John

1. All 8 changed their mind later and denied they saw the plates

2. Some got mad with Joey Smith and left his gang...

3. All of the 8 were either family or followers of Joey Smith or indebted to him and could be bribed or threatened

4. There were no critics of the bom amongst the 8

5. None ever knew what was under the cloth so yes all 8 were ignorant of what they were supposed to be critiquing...


345 posted on 08/01/2011 5:14:50 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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To: John McDonnell

You are a mormon, correct?


348 posted on 08/01/2011 5:21:55 PM PDT by Osage Orange (HE HATE ME)
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To: John McDonnell
John,
Your tales about the "witnesses" has been examined and found wanting
on another thread more than a year ago.

Here is the original link, plus a repeat of the POOR CHARACTER of the so called witnesses
http://209.157.64.200/focus/religion/2522214/posts?page=805#805

Character of the 11 Witnesses

Joseph Smith claims that after he translated the plates, he returned them to the angel Moroni. Therefore, there is no way to verify the veracity of the plates or Smith's translation. Smith's only defense of his account is the eleven men who signed statements claiming to have seen the golden plates. Therefore, the credibility of Smith's account rests on the testimony of these eleven witnesses. There are three key witnesses who claim to have seen the angel show the golden plates to them. The remaining eight allege to have seen the plates but not the angel. The LDS church asserts these men never denied their testimony. However, when we examine the lives of the witnesses, we find they were untrustworthy, wavering, and gullible witnesses.

Six of the eleven witnesses, including the three key witnesses were eventually excommunicated from the church. Former Mormon President Ezra Taft Benson summed up the legacy of the eleven witnesses this way. "Six of the original Twelve Apostles selected by Joseph Smith were excommunicated. The three Witnesses to the Book of Mormon left the church. Three of Joseph Smith's counselors fell--one even helped plot his death. . . . The wolves among our flock are more numerous and devious today than when President Clark made a similar statement [in 1949]."{6}

Let us first examine the character of the three key witnesses since their testimony is the most important. In a letter dated December 16, 1838, Joseph Smith stated this about the three key witnesses and John Whitmer, one of the eight. "John Whitmer, David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery, and Martin Harris are too mean to mention."{7}

Martin Harris' testimony shows him to be a gullible and unstable man. He changed his religious conviction approximately thirteen times. He had joined several Christian denominations and other cult groups that include the Universalists, Strangites, and the Shakers. {8}(Ankerberg, 196) In Doctrine and Covenants, Joseph Smith gave revelations in which he denounces Martin Harris and calls him a "wicked man."{9} The Mormon leaders published an article in the Elder's Journal, a Mormon publication edited by Joseph Smith, in which they accused Harris guilty of "swearing, lying, cheating, swindling, drinking, with every species of debauchery. . ." (Elders Journal, August, 1838, 59).{10} Here the leaders of the Mormon Church strongly criticize the character of Harris.

Oliver Cowdery was also shown to be a very gullible man. He was led astray by Hiram Page, one of the eight witnesses who himself claimed to have divine revelations from his own seer stone. Although Joseph Smith denounced Hiram as a false teacher, Smith stated "to our grief, however, we soon found that Satan had been lying in wait to deceive. . . . Brother Hiram Page had in his possession a certain stone, by which he obtained certain 'revelations' . . . all of which were entirely at variance with the order of God's House, . . ."{11} Despite Smith's condemnation, Oliver Cowdery joined Page's movement. Not only was he a gullible man, he was also indicted on several accounts of fraudulent business practices. The Mormon Church in a letter wrote, "During the career of Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer's bogus money business, it got abroad into the world that they were engaged in it. . . . We have evidence of a very strong character that you are at this very time engaged with a gang of counterfeiters, coiners, and blacklegs . . ."{12} Cowdery was eventually excommunicated and he later joined the Methodist Church.

David Whitmer wrote, "God spake to me again by his own voice from the heavens, and told me to 'separate myself from among the Latter- day Saints, for as they sought to do unto me, so should it be done unto them." In the spring of 1838, the heads of the church and many of the members had gone deep into error and blindness. . . . About the same time that I came out, the Spirit of God moved upon quite a number of the brethren who came out, with their families, all of the eight witnesses who were then living (except the three Smiths) came out; . . ."{13} Here David Whitmer denounced the Mormon Church and encouraged people to follow his example and the example of the other witnesses and leave the church.

Joseph Smith in response attacked the character of David Whitmer. Smith stated, "God suffered such kind of beings to afflict Job . . . this poor man who professes to be much of a prophet, has no other dumb ass to ride but David Whitmer, to forbid his madness when he goes up to curse Israel: and this ass not being of the same kind as Balaam's . . . he brays out cursing instead of blessings. Poor ass!"{14}

The character and life of the eleven witnesses to the Book of Mormon are very different from the Apostles of Christ. None of the Apostles wavered in their defense of Christ, even though all suffered and most died for their faith. The Apostles remained consistent in their teaching and never fell into any type of apostasy. Their lives were marked by honesty and integrity. They were never indicted for any criminal activity except for preaching Christ. The character of the Book of Mormon's eleven witnesses does not strengthen Smith's defense but cast further doubt on its authenticity.

Probe Ministry website quote

361 posted on 08/01/2011 7:53:16 PM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion (This message carfully checkd to misteakes by powerful softwhere)
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To: John McDonnell; Elsie; Godzilla; aMorePerfectUnion; ejonesie22; reaganaut
...only one was left, David Whitmer. Since all the other 10 had failed to cave under pressure, enemies of the Book of Mormon slapped a full court press on David Whitmer, who refused to cave while he was alive and left a message supporting the Book of Mormon on his gravestone in Richmond, Missouri. Game over. Score 11 for Book of Mormon enthusiasts.

Well, that's interesting. Whitmer's cadaver etched out a comment on his gravestone, eh?

Even the Mormon Times, owned by the Mormon church, who would have a biased vested interest in promoting all things Book of Mormon, stated about Joseph Smith's scribes:

...so many of his scribes fell away or died. The list is saddening: Whitmer, Rigdon, Parrish and Robinson all left the church, NEVER to return. Cowdery, Williams and Phelps were excommunicated, but came into full fellowship. Hyde was disfellowshipped for a time. Mulholland and Thompson died in Illinois. Whitmer even took some of the documents with him on the way out of the church. Only Richards, Bullock and Clayton stayed in the church the whole time.
Souce: Scribes recorded Prophet's 'crooked, broken language')

So that's Whitmer.

Ya first wanna tell us, John, why by 1847 -- 17 years after the publishing of the Book of Mormon -- NONE of these so-called 11 witnesses were part of the Mormon church?

By 1847 not a single one of the surviving eleven witnesses was part of the Mormon church. (Godzilla comment to John McDonnell, July 13, 2010, post 1,004 The fight over Book of Mormon geography

I mean, c'mon John, 'Zilla told you this over a year ago, and yet you're still riding the backs of such weak 'witnessies' -- witnesses that we'd probably agree fall into your "wicked old Mormons" category you brought up earlier in this thread?

Of the other 10, did you ever happen to notice that one of those was Smith...? And that two other Smiths signed their names. (So, of course, you'll have the "Westboro effect" with relatives clinging to whatever Joe Smith Jr. said)

What about the others?

Well besides David Whitmer, there were 4 other Whitmers that David had coerced to sign: Christian Whitmer; Jacob Whitmer; Peter Whitmer, Jr.; and John Whitmer. And even Hiram Page, who Joseph Smith accused of being a false teacher, was married to Catherine Whitmer Page. Just more of the Westboro effect.

So now we're down to just Oliver Cowdery and Martin Harris.

Well, on the same link above (post #1006), AMPU mentioned how Smith stated “to our grief, however, we soon found that Satan had been lying in wait to deceive. . . . Brother Hiram Page had in his possession a certain stone, by which he obtained certain ‘revelations’ . . . ALL of which were entirely at variance with the order of God’s House, . . .”{11} Despite Smith’s condemnation, Oliver Cowdery joined Page’s movement. Not only was he a gullible man, he was also indicted on several accounts of fraudulent business practices. The Mormon Church in a letter wrote, “During the career of Oliver Cowdery and David Whitmer’s bogus money business, it got abroad into the world that they were engaged in it. . . . We have evidence of a very strong character that you are at this very time engaged with a gang of counterfeiters, coiners, and blacklegs . . .”{12} Cowdery was eventually excommunicated...

Harris bounced all around -- including the shakers, etc. As AMPU mentioned: Martin Harris’ testimony shows him to be a gullible and unstable man. He changed his religious conviction approximately thirteen times. He had joined several Christian denominations and other cult groups that include the Universalists, Strangites, and the Shakers. {8}(Ankerberg, 196)

Wow, John! (Such "stellar" character witnesses).

John, even a very early (1828) supposed "revelation" from Joseph Smith holds you accountable here: "...those who lie because others lie are not exempt from God's justice..." (D&C 10:28, Mormon church version)

375 posted on 08/01/2011 10:57:11 PM PDT by Colofornian (Friends don't let friends drive drunk on Joe Smith sentimentalism to an outer darkness destination.)
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