Difference between revisions of "Moroni's visit/Moroni would have struck his head on the ceiling"

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This is probably one of the most bizarre claims FAIR has ever seen, and that's saying something.
 
This is probably one of the most bizarre claims FAIR has ever seen, and that's saying something.
  
One can see at a glance that Moroni would be at no risk of striking his head.  Note the high, peaked roof that would seem to provide ample room.  The beds and doorway provide scale.  On what grounds does MormonThink label this a "rather short ceiling"?  Amazingly, MormonThink even has a photo like the one at the right, but they still want to convince their readers that there's not enough angelic headroom.
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One can see at a glance that Moroni would be at no risk of striking his head.  Note the high, peaked roof that would seem to provide ample room.  The beds and doorway provide scale.  On what grounds does MormonThink label this a "rather short ceiling"?  Amazingly, MormonThink even has a photo like the one at the left, but they still want to convince their readers that there's not enough angelic headroom.
  
 
And, why didn't Joseph's family immediately understand that this claim was unfeasible?  They clearly understood that the dimensions of the room were not an obstacle to an account that was certainly incredible on other grounds.
 
And, why didn't Joseph's family immediately understand that this claim was unfeasible?  They clearly understood that the dimensions of the room were not an obstacle to an account that was certainly incredible on other grounds.

Revision as of 19:41, 11 May 2012

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==

Questions

== Critics claim that when Moroni appeared to Joseph Smith in his room on September 21, 1823, the roof would have been too low to allow an angel to stand above the floor "in the air" without hitting his head on the roof. They claim that this 'fact' is evidence of Joseph's fabrication or hallucination of the experience.

To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, click here

==

Answer

== The entire argument is laughable, as a quick glance at a photo of the room in question will reveal.

Detailed Analysis

Also, Moroni must have been a very short man to be able to float significantly off the floor and yet have his head beneath the rather short ceiling of the room Joseph slept in.
- MormonThink.com website (as of 8 May 2012). Page: http://mormonthink.com/moroniweb.htm
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Joseph Smith, Jr.'s bedroom in Smith log cabin. The Smiths lived here from 1818 to late 1825.

This is probably one of the most bizarre claims FAIR has ever seen, and that's saying something.

One can see at a glance that Moroni would be at no risk of striking his head. Note the high, peaked roof that would seem to provide ample room. The beds and doorway provide scale. On what grounds does MormonThink label this a "rather short ceiling"? Amazingly, MormonThink even has a photo like the one at the left, but they still want to convince their readers that there's not enough angelic headroom.

And, why didn't Joseph's family immediately understand that this claim was unfeasible? They clearly understood that the dimensions of the room were not an obstacle to an account that was certainly incredible on other grounds.

== Notes == None