Difference between revisions of "Criticism of Mormonism/Websites/MormonThink/Mockery, hyperbole and nonsense"

(m)
(m)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Articles FAIR copyright}} {{Articles Header 1}} {{Articles Header 2}} {{Articles Header 3}} {{Articles Header 4}} {{Articles Header 5}} {{Articles Header 6}} {{Articles Header 7}} {{Articles Header 8}} {{Articles Header 9}} {{Articles Header 10}}
 
{{Articles FAIR copyright}} {{Articles Header 1}} {{Articles Header 2}} {{Articles Header 3}} {{Articles Header 4}} {{Articles Header 5}} {{Articles Header 6}} {{Articles Header 7}} {{Articles Header 8}} {{Articles Header 9}} {{Articles Header 10}}
{{Resource Title|Response to MormonThink page "Conflicts with Science"}}
+
{{Resource Title|Mockery and hyperbole from MormonThink.com}}
 
{{FAIRAnalysisHeader
 
{{FAIRAnalysisHeader
 
|title=[[../|MormonThink]]
 
|title=[[../|MormonThink]]

Revision as of 16:28, 15 June 2014

  1. REDIRECTTemplate:Test3

Mockery and hyperbole from MormonThink.com


A FAIR Analysis of:
MormonThink
A work by author: Anonymous
There's an episode of the cartoon South Park called "All About the Mormons". In the episode, a faithful LDS family tells the story of the Lost 116 pages to a neighbor boy they are trying to convert. They tell this story as proof that Joseph Smith was telling the truth and Mormonism is true. Perhaps the most telling comment we've ever heard about the Lost 116 pages debacle comes from the neighborhood boy, who, after hearing the story of the Lost 116 pages, exclaims ""Wait, Mormons actually know this story and they still believe Joseph Smith was a Prophet?"

Editor's Comments, "The Lost 116 Page of the Book of Mormon," MormonThink.com