Array

Detailed response to CES Letter, Testimony and Spiritual Witness: Difference between revisions

Line 99: Line 99:
|claim=The author states, "I saw a testimony as more than just spiritual experiences and feelings.  I saw that we had evidence and logic on our side based on the correlated narrative I was fed by the Church about its origins."
|claim=The author states, "I saw a testimony as more than just spiritual experiences and feelings.  I saw that we had evidence and logic on our side based on the correlated narrative I was fed by the Church about its origins."
|answer=
|answer=
*The author's first sentence is completely correct: A testimony ''is more'' than just spiritual experiences and feelings. Gaining a testimony requires more than simply having "spiritual experiences and feelings," and it requires more than simply listening to "the correlated narrative" provided by the Church.
*The author's first sentence is completely correct: A testimony ''is more'' than just spiritual experiences and feelings. Gaining a testimony requires more than having "spiritual experiences and feelings," and it requires more than simply listening to "the correlated narrative" provided by the Church.
|quote=
|quote=
*Elder Robert D. Hales in his October 2003 General Conference talk "Receiving a Testimony of the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ":
*Elder Robert D. Hales in his October 2003 General Conference talk "Receiving a Testimony of the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ":

Revision as of 00:48, 24 July 2013



A FAIR Analysis of:
[[../|Letter to a CES Director]]


A FAIR Analysis of the online document Letter to a CES Director section "Testimony & Spiritual Witness Concerns & Questions"

And they said one to another, Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the scriptures? (Luke 24꞉32)
My heart was hot within me, while I was musing the fire burned: then spake I with my tongue. (Psalms 39꞉3)
What does a “burning in the bosom” mean? Does it need to be a feeling of caloric heat, like the burning produced by combustion? If that is the meaning, I have never had a burning in the bosom. Surely, the word “burning” in this scripture signifies a feeling of comfort and serenity. That is the witness many receive. That is the way revelation works.
—Dallin H. Oaks, "Teaching and Learning by the Spirit," Ensign (March 1997): 14.
∗       ∗       ∗

Quick Navigation

Response Section

"it would likewise be arrogant of a Latter-day Saint to deny their spiritual experiences and testimonies of the truthfulness of their own religion"

Template:CESLetterItem

"If God’s method to revealing truth is through feelings, it’s a pretty ineffective method"

Template:CESLetterItem

"Joseph Smith received a revelation, through the peep stone in his hat, to send Hiram Page and Oliver Cowdery to Toronto, Canada for the sole purpose of selling the copyright of the Book of Mormon"

Template:CESLetterItem

"I saw a testimony as more than just spiritual experiences and feelings. I saw that we had evidence and logic on our side based on the correlated narrative I was fed by the Church about its origins."

Template:CESLetterItem

Paul H. Dunn

Template:CESLetterItem

"a testimony is to be found in the bearing of it"

Template:CESLetterItem

"how can they be sure of the reliability of this same exact process in telling them that Mormonism is true?"

Template:CESLetterItem

"I felt the Spirit watching 'Saving Private Ryan' and the 'Schindler’s List'. Both R-rated and horribly violent movies. I also felt the Spirit watching 'Forrest Gump' and the 'Lion King'."

Template:CESLetterItem

"Why did I feel the Spirit as I listened to the stories of apostates sharing how they discovered for themselves that Mormonism is not true?"

Template:CESLetterItem