The
gullibility of human beings must be genetically programmed into the human
species. Nothing else can explain the
widespread acceptance of bizarre ideas.
In fact, it seems as if the more bizarre a belief system is, the more
rapidly it spreads and the more firmly it is held and defended by the True
Believer. The remarkable growth of the
Mormon church is proof enough that, the more bizarre and ridiculous a religion
is, the more likely it is to spread like wildfire. Plenty of evidence exists to show that Joseph
Smith, the founder of Mormonism, was essentially a con man, a cheat and a
liar. In his youth, Smith and his father
ran a swindle called "dowsing for treasure." In this con, Smith would convince a rich
farmer that buried treasure was on his land, and that for a small fee he would
discover it through dowsing (much like dowsing for water). Of course no treasure was ever found.
This con game does bear a resemblance to
Smith's most famous con. He convinced a
group of Mormons that he possessed the gold plates on which the angel Moroni
(aptly named) inscribed the text of The Book of Mormon. As "proof" of this, Smith led his
followers, one by one, into a darkened room where they were allowed to feel the
plates through a burlap bag. These
followers later signed an affidavit testifying to the existence of these gold plates,
an affidavit which is reproduced in the many various editions of The Book of
Mormon. In truth, no one ever
actually saw these famous gold plates--they could have been hubcaps off a 1951
Buick for all Smith's followers could tell by feeling them.
Smith also claimed that The Book of Mormon
could only be read and interpreted by his spiritual vision from the strange
characters inscribed on the plates, so there was never any reason for anyone
else to look at them. Later, as more and
more people asked to see the plates, they mysteriously "disappeared"
or were taken back to heaven by Moroni.
At about the same time, Smith claimed to
be able to read Egyptian hieroglyphs; and on one occasion he provided a
translation of hieroglyphs from an Egyptian sarcophagus. The message on the coffin, according to
Smith, was a religious text similar to the writings found in The Book of
Mormon. Several years later, when
archaeologists finally learned how to read hieroglyphs, Smith dropped his claim
to be able to read these symbols. The
message on the coffin, which he earlier "translated" into Mormon-ese,
turned out to be pretty much the standard prayer to Osirius usually found on
ancient Egyptian coffins.
Despite the wealth of evidence which
proves that Joseph Smith was basically a pious fraud, millions of Mormons will
defend their faith as if it weren't the ridiculous hoax that it obviously
is. Even serious Mormon
"scholars" recognize the fact that Smith was basically a liar who
plagiarized most of the ideas in The Book of Mormon, yet they pretend that this
fact has no effect on their own belief.
This is proof that humans are able to hold, at the same time, two
completely contradictory beliefs. There
is a remarkable ability to compartmentalize in the human psyche, so that these
ideas don't come into conflict.
You need more Mormon friends.
ReplyDelete...like a hole in the head.
DeleteI need friends who live in the real world instead of a fantasy world.
ReplyDelete