DrW wrote:Simon,
Joseph Smith cannot honestly be characterized as an average human being doing the best he could, even when looked at in the context of the times (early 19th century).
Oh, he was definitely not average.
He was clearly charismatic as are many successful people as well as many of the most notorious conmen and criminals then and now. But his charisma does not balance the scales.
What are you saying here? All charismatic people are conmen?
Let's look at the arc of his life as described by his latest Church-approved biographer, Richard Bushman.
Oh, right. You're poisoning the well here by discounting the work because the biographer was "Church-approved." Rough Stone Rolling was the 2005 Best Book Award from the Mormon History Association, 2005 Evans Biography Award from the Mountain West Center for Regional Studies at Utah State University, received a great deal of praise from organizations like The Christian Science Monitor, Christianity Today, Providence Journal, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and the New York Times Book Review. So, it is unfair of you to outright dismiss it because you don't like it. It's obviously a credible source.
He was born and raised in a family that believed in and practiced folk magic. As a young man he engaged in fraud as a glass-looker and money digger, taking other people's money in exchange for telling them where they could find non-existent buried treasure, which he falsely claimed to divine with a magic rock.
Do you understand how common folk magic was in Joseph's time and place? It makes perfect sense that the Smith family would buy into it. Joseph did not make much money at it (about $14 a day).
Seeing how easily his fellow man could be conned, and having no other skills, he undertook to develop and run ever larger and more elaborate cons, often neglecting to think things through enough to make his lies consistent with one another. Thus we have the constantly altered narratives of the first vision, the obtaining of the gold plates, joining the Methodist Chrch in spite of his claim of having been told by God to join 'none of them' (churches), and his demonstrated inability to translate ancient documents in spite of his claims to be able to do so.
This is a typical argument from omniscience. as is most of your post.
A balanced view? Perhaps not.
Definitely not. The fact that you think there is some semblance of balance in your view is very telling, and fits perfectly with your constant need to poison the well.
But it is the one that I have gained having spent more than half my life as a member of the Church.
And you believe that gives you some sort of credibility?
It is hard to imagine what you could possibly put on the table that would balance the scales for Joseph Smith or the Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
The truth, of course.