reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

The catch-all forum for general topics and debates. Minimal moderation. Rated PG to PG-13.
_Redefined
_Emeritus
Posts: 1083
Joined: Wed Jan 06, 2010 1:06 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _Redefined »

Sethbag wrote:It's curious, isn't it, that Joseph Smith always had to show himself off as the go-to guy, the person with the superior knowledge. He doesn't ever seem to have been able to just be one of the guys admiring something else. No, he had to get in between the rest of the guys and whatever they had discovered to admire, and elevate himself over them by appearing to know something about it.

So when the others showed him the bones, Joseph couldn't just admire them like everyone else, he had to pronounce that these bones were Zelph, the white Lamanite, putting himself in a position of superiority to his brethren.

He had to pronounce on the altar of Adam (the old fence stones) for the same reason.

He had to say something about the Greek Psalter for the same reason.

I bet you could have approached Joseph Smith with almost anything ancient-looking and gotten some sort of bullsh!t response from him. He couldn't leave others on the same level as him, or even a superior level as the discoverers of something. He always had to elevate himself above everyone around him, and he would make up any old crap in order to do so. And by the end he was trapped into doing this by his Prophetic reputation - his followers expected this sort of thing, and he had to deliver them something.


Just your average, annoying "know-it-all". Makes ya wonder about his upbringing and what it had to have been to produce such a character. Because, if ya think about "know-it-alls" you've known in your life, it's usually some sort of compensation. . . not enough hugs as a kid or something!

I have seen this personality first hand. My own step-father was this way, could make up bold whoppers on the fly to make himself appear to have some sort of remarkable knowledge that others didn't. He was a very mentally and emotionally sick individual, and a pedophile. So it's pretty easy for me to recognize Joseph Smith's character because of that experience.
"Sometimes i feel so isolated, i wanna die."-Rock Mafia--The Big Bang
this one. . .
and this one!
_thews
_Emeritus
Posts: 3053
Joined: Sun Oct 25, 2009 2:26 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _thews »

GR33N wrote:
thews wrote:You have William Clayton mentioning "President J." twice in the journal entry and the history of the Mormon church printing the "words of the Prophet" along with quotes from John Taylor and Wilford Woodruff. When you say there are too many unanswered questions, there can always be a smoke screen if you keep asking questions without answering them. If it wasn't Joseph smith who made the Kinderhook translation to tell of the descendant of Ham, then who did? What is your main question that remains "unanswered" acknowledging the data presented?


I don't mean to divert from the question as I agree with you concerning the inclusion of this strange event in the history of the church. The truth is that it is an event that was noted for historic purposes. It may have been looked upon at the time as faith promoting by William Clayton. It seems as such. William Clayton maybe guilty of sensationalizing the event living in such exciting times as those were. Many people have been guilty of the same thing.

Thanks for the response GR33N, but I'm not following you. Are you claiming that William Clayton made up the story of the descendant of Ham without any input from Joseph Smith, and Wilford Woodruff and John Taylor ran with it? Are all three liars? You make it sound as if it's impossible for Joseph Smith to have said the words he was quoted as saying, the translation was inadvertently put into the history of the church, and for all intent and purposes the whole thing was some sort of misunderstanding. Again, if you acknowledge the history written by William Clayton, Joseph Smith's personal scribe and dear friend, you must ignore all the actual history to come to the conclusion that your "gut feel" that William Clayton was a liar is what actually happened.

GR33N wrote:
thews wrote:You are simply ignoring the evidence and theorizing reasons/questions you could attempt to find fault with the evidence. There isn't one piece of evidence, but many. Again, if it wasn't Joseph Smith, then who told of the descendant of Ham? Please acknowledge the data presented... are you calling William Clayton a liar?

Thanks


Thews, I can see this is a real sticking point for you and I can follow your line of logic. As I said, I don't mean to divert from the core problem as you see it but the truth is that there really is a lot of circumstantial and hearsay evidence with the whole Kinderhook Plates issue. We know that the quote in Church History about the translation alludes to Joseph Smith making a judgement as to the origin of the plates. We know that William Clayton was apparently a key pawn in the Kinderhook fraud. We know that there was a lot of excitement in the newspaper reports concerning the event. My point with the questions is that there is A LOT that we don't know surrounding the whole thing.

There is a lot of circumstantial and hearsay evidence when it comes to the Kinderhook plates, but there clearly isn't when the question asked is who made the translation regarding the descendant of Ham, and that was made by Joseph Smith as dictated by William Clayton and backed up by Willford Woodruff and John Taylor. If you continue to change the question to suit your answer and dilute the facts, you're really just ignoring the truth because it's not what you want it to be. The question asked was who made the translation of the descendant of Ham, and not about the entire Kinderhook account.

GR33N wrote:Is a one line "translation" of the origin of the Kinderhook plates so damning to Joseph's prophetic calling?

Yes, which is why you continue to change the question asked and ignore the truth in the actual history.

GR33N wrote:With no further reference by Joseph Smith to the plates and their origin or additional translation or information gathered from the "translation" that is be significant in any way (other than as a possible faith promoting story as I've mentioned earlier) I find it hard to put so much emphasis on it.

Again you're ignoring the question asked and inserting your opinion of its non-significance.

GR33N wrote:After typing the above paragraphs I found a website wi
th what I think is a great short video of the Kinderhoook issue. I know you are looking for answers to this and maybe this video and help answer some of those questions.

http://defendingldtruth.weebly.com/joseph-smith-and-the-kinderhook-plates.html

I really can't stand Mormon-spun lies, but I'll view this if you answer my question. Who was it who said the words regarding the translation of the Kinderhook plates to claim it was a descendant of Ham? Who said those words?
2 Tim 4:3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine.
2 Tim 4:4 They will turn their ears away from the truth & turn aside to myths
_GR33N
_Emeritus
Posts: 261
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2010 7:37 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _GR33N »

thews wrote:I really can't stand Mormon-spun lies, but I'll view this if you answer my question. Who was it who said the words regarding the translation of the Kinderhook plates to claim it was a descendant of Ham? Who said those words?


According to William Clayton, Joseph Smith said those words.

Here is another interesting article about the Kinderhook plates:
http://www.cumorah.com/index.php?target=view_other_articles&story_id=66&cat_id=10
Then saith He to Thomas... be not faithless, but believing. - John 20:27
_Chap
_Emeritus
Posts: 14190
Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 10:23 am

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _Chap »

D&C 21

4Wherefore, meaning the church, thou shalt give heed unto all his words and commandments which he shall give unto you as he receiveth them, walking in all holiness before me;


Has it ever been explained why the Mormon deity should have this thing about speaking cod-17th-century English? If he has to do so, he could at least get it right.

If he is addressing a singular person (the personified church) saying 'thou shalt', then he ought not to switch to a plural form 'unto you' thereafter. It should have been 'unto thee'.

God speaks in mysterious ways.
Zadok:
I did not have a faith crisis. I discovered that the Church was having a truth crisis.
Maksutov:
That's the problem with this supernatural stuff, it doesn't really solve anything. It's a placeholder for ignorance.
_Darth J
_Emeritus
Posts: 13392
Joined: Thu May 13, 2010 12:16 am

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _Darth J »

Sethbag wrote:
Tator wrote:Sethbag, a great job of putting Joseph Smith in the proper setting.

I can't even imagine Joseph Smith not giving some kind of answer to something "ancient". Can you imagine any kind of statement coming out of his mouth like, "this is very curious but I can't read it" or "I don't know what kind of writing this is"? His ego would never allow it.

It's curious, isn't it, that Joseph Smith always had to show himself off as the go-to guy, the person with the superior knowledge. He doesn't ever seem to have been able to just be one of the guys admiring something else. No, he had to get in between the rest of the guys and whatever they had discovered to admire, and elevate himself over them by appearing to know something about it.

So when the others showed him the bones, Joseph couldn't just admire them like everyone else, he had to pronounce that these bones were Zelph, the white Lamanite, putting himself in a position of superiority to his brethren.

He had to pronounce on the altar of Adam (the old fence stones) for the same reason.

He had to say something about the Greek Psalter for the same reason.

I bet you could have approached Joseph Smith with almost anything ancient-looking and gotten some sort of bullsh!t response from him. He couldn't leave others on the same level as him, or even a superior level as the discoverers of something. He always had to elevate himself above everyone around him, and he would make up any old crap in order to do so. And by the end he was trapped into doing this by his Prophetic reputation - his followers expected this sort of thing, and he had to deliver them something.


Was Joseph Smith perhaps the inspiration for a certain character from Cheers?

Image
_sock puppet
_Emeritus
Posts: 17063
Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2010 2:52 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _sock puppet »

Chap wrote:D&C 21

4Wherefore, meaning the church, thou shalt give heed unto all his words and commandments which he shall give unto you as he receiveth them, walking in all holiness before me;


Has it ever been explained why the Mormon deity should have this thing about speaking cod-17th-century English? If he has to do so, he could at least get it right.

If he is addressing a singular person (the personified church) saying 'thou shalt', then he ought not to switch to a plural form 'unto you' thereafter. It should have been 'unto thee'.

God speaks in mysterious ways.

elohim should have Shades tutor him on grammar.
_sock puppet
_Emeritus
Posts: 17063
Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2010 2:52 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _sock puppet »

Tator wrote:Sethbag, a great job of putting Joseph Smith in the proper setting.

I can't even imagine Joseph Smith not giving some kind of answer to something "ancient". Can you imagine any kind of statement coming out of his mouth like, "this is very curious but I can't read it" or "I don't know what kind of writing this is"? His ego would never allow it.

Sethbag wrote:It's curious, isn't it, that Joseph Smith always had to show himself off as the go-to guy, the person with the superior knowledge. He doesn't ever seem to have been able to just be one of the guys admiring something else. No, he had to get in between the rest of the guys and whatever they had discovered to admire, and elevate himself over them by appearing to know something about it.

So when the others showed him the bones, Joseph couldn't just admire them like everyone else, he had to pronounce that these bones were Zelph, the white Lamanite, putting himself in a position of superiority to his brethren.

He had to pronounce on the altar of Adam (the old fence stones) for the same reason.

He had to say something about the Greek Psalter for the same reason.

I bet you could have approached Joseph Smith with almost anything ancient-looking and gotten some sort of bullsh!t response from him. He couldn't leave others on the same level as him, or even a superior level as the discoverers of something. He always had to elevate himself above everyone around him, and he would make up any old crap in order to do so. And by the end he was trapped into doing this by his Prophetic reputation - his followers expected this sort of thing, and he had to deliver them something.


Darth J wrote:Was Joseph Smith perhaps the inspiration for a certain character from Cheers?

Image

Hey, Cliff had more integrity than JSJr. Don't besmirch Cliff Clavin Jr.
_harmony
_Emeritus
Posts: 18195
Joined: Fri Oct 27, 2006 1:35 am

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _harmony »

Tator wrote:I can't even imagine Joseph Smith not giving some kind of answer to something "ancient". Can you imagine any kind of statement coming out of his mouth like, "this is very curious but I can't read it" or "I don't know what kind of writing this is"? His ego would never allow it.


We have some current GAs who have a similiar problem.
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.
_Kevin Graham
_Emeritus
Posts: 13037
Joined: Fri Oct 27, 2006 6:44 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _Kevin Graham »

GR33N wrote:
thews wrote:I really can't stand Mormon-spun lies, but I'll view this if you answer my question. Who was it who said the words regarding the translation of the Kinderhook plates to claim it was a descendant of Ham? Who said those words?


According to William Clayton, Joseph Smith said those words.

Here is another interesting article about the Kinderhook plates:
http://www.cumorah.com/index.php?target=view_other_articles&story_id=66&cat_id=10


What reason do you have to believe Clayton was making that up?

The link you provided is by David Stewart, who is apparently a new crackpot on the apologetic scene. He's actually arguing that the Kinderhook plates were genuine? He cites Ancient American magazine published by Wayne May!
ROFL!
_thews
_Emeritus
Posts: 3053
Joined: Sun Oct 25, 2009 2:26 pm

Re: reply to Gr33n from the apologist rebuttal thread

Post by _thews »

GR33N wrote:
thews wrote:I really can't stand Mormon-spun lies, but I'll view this if you answer my question. Who was it who said the words regarding the translation of the Kinderhook plates to claim it was a descendant of Ham? Who said those words?


According to William Clayton, Joseph Smith said those words.

Thank you for stating the facts again. Does this mean you believe it was in fact Joseph Smith who said the words regarding the descendant of Ham translation?

GR33N wrote:Here is another interesting article about the Kinderhook plates:
http://www.cumorah.com/index.php?target=view_other_articles&story_id=66&cat_id=10


From your link:

Parley P. Pratt's account has previously been cited. The independent account of William Clayton, Joseph Smith's private secretary, specifically attributes the translation and lineage to Joseph Smith:

I have seen 6 brass plates which were found in Adams County by some persons who were digging in a mound. They found a skeleton about 6 feet from the surface of the earth which was 9 foot high. [A tracing of a plate appears here in the journal.] The plates were on the breast of the skeleton. This diagram shows the size of the plates being drawn on the edge of one of them. They are covered with ancient characters of language containing from 30 to 40 on each side of the plates. Prest J. [President Joseph Smith] has translated a portion and says they contain the history of the person with whom they were found and he was a descendant of Ham through the loins of Pharoah king of Egypt, and that he received his kingdom from the ruler of heaven and earth. (George D. Smith, ed. An Intimate Chronicle: The Journals of William Clayton. Salt Lake City: Signature Books,1991, 100)

Historical records document that William Clayton was with Joseph Smith on this day (ibid).] The history of Joseph Smith that contains the Kinderhook Plate statement was approved by Brigham Young. Ed Ashment notes that Brigham Young saw the plates while present at Joseph's house and "included a sketch of one of the plates he saw at Joseph's house in his diary" (Edward Ashment, unpublished article on file, Institute for Religious Research, Appendix A, p. 2). While we are unable to verify this claim directly as the diary has not been published, this is an additional piece of data which Kinderhook critics have failed to engage. Other corroborating witnesses, including Charlotte Haven also cite Joseph Smith's statements affirming the authenticity of the plates and his plans to translate them (Charlotte Haven, letter of May 2, 1843, cited in Overland Monthly, December 1890, p. 630).

Note in the above, while they acknowledge there are TWO accounts that say the same thing, because they supposedly cannot find an entry in a diary, it doesn't negate the data we do have, which clearly states by all accounts that it was in fact Joseph Smith who made the translation of the plates to include the descendant of Ham.

The May 1, 1843 edition of the Times and Seasons reprinted an article reporting the discovery of the Kinderhook Plates. This evidence edition does not appear to have actually been printed until May 3rd, two days after the prophet's encounter with the plates. The printing of this report after Joseph Smith's contact with the artifacts seems to support their authenticity. The Nauvoo Neighbor reported in June 1843 that "The contents of the plates, together with a Fac-simile of the same, will be published in the 'Times and Seasons,' as soon as the translation is completed." On January 15th, 1844, the Times and Seasons cited the Kinderhook Plates as evidence of the Book of Mormon's authenticity (Times and Seasons, Vol. 5, page 406). These articles from church publications that ultimately answered to Joseph Smith provide further evidence that he considered the plates to be both genuine and interesting.

Just a month before Joseph's death, it was reported in the Warsaw Signal that he was "busy translating them [the Kinderhook Plates]" (Warsaw Signal, May 22, 1844). Kimball selectively omits any reference to these historical attestations that Joseph Smith was interested in the plates and believed them to be genuine, but did not have time to complete a translation in the busy year before his death.

Ok... good data so far.

Here's where the BS starts:
Joseph Smith's Words or Not?

Stanley Kimball uncritically follows disaffected anti-Mormon Ed Ashment in much of his research, including the claim that the passage attributed to Joseph Smith in History of the Church referring to the Kinderhook plates was in fact copied from Clayton's journal and put in the first person years later.


This is church history and is true, but doesn't mean anything to the argument. Who cares about Ashment? In fact, the history of the church says only "I" instead of "President J." or "Pres Joseph" so it doesn't mean anything to the argument. Note the use of the scary "anti-Mormon" description above.

And it's here where you have outright lies.
In fact, this claim is purely speculative. The belief that Clayton's journal was the source for the History of the Church passage is inferential based on similarities between the passages. However, advocates of this viewpoint are not able to prove that the History of the Church passage did not come from a record dictated by Smith to Clayton that has subsequently been lost. Since Clayton was Smith's scribe, similarities between what Smith dictated to Clayton directly and what Clayton wrote in his journal are expected.

They already admitted that Charlotte Haven's account and William Clayton's account matched. Now, after dropping the Anti bomb and spinning things, they are completely removed from the previous statements of fact, only to resort to baseless claims. Read the above and tell if they are calling William Clayton a liar, without actually calling him a liar. I conclude that they are injecting distortion based on nothing in direct contrast to historical fact they've already acknowledged.

Joseph F. Smith wrote of William Clayton that "He was a friend and companion of the Prophet Joseph Smith, and it is to his pen to a very great extent that we are indebted for the history of the Church," especially in the Nauvoo period, and other scholars have commented on the "meticulous detail that was the hallmark of his [Clayton's] writing" (George D. Smith, ed., Intimate Chronicle: The Journals of William Clayton, lx, xx). Given Clayton's record as an accurate scribe and historian to Joseph Smith, it seems unreasonable to dismiss Clayton's words out of hand, regardless of whether they were recorded in Joseph's journal or Clayton's, especially since Joseph himself wrote relatively little and most of his statements were recorded by scribes whose records have been overwhelmingly accurate.


Ok... their point?

The claim of Ashment, Kimball, and others dismissing validity of the History of the Church segment because of similarities to Clayton's journal account ignore the considerable corroboration for the event from other sources.

Ok.

The History of the Church passage (DHC 5:372-379) contains additional detail not found in the previously cited segment found in Clayton's journal . Given the careful preparation and review process of the History of the Church and its approval by church leaders with direct firsthand knowledge of the events described, the inclusion of the Kinderhook story in church history provides further evidence of its validity. Would church leaders have dedicated seven pages of church history to the Kinderhook saga and have taken the extraordinary step of providing meticulous depictions of the plates if they were not confident of Joseph's statements regarding the matter?

I sort of disagree, in that Clayton's journal quoted "President J." twice, but I'll agree.

Even if one were to overlook all of these problems and accept Fulgate's problematic claim of counterfeiting, it would scarcely scratch the surface of explaining the Kinderhook saga. It is absurd to claim that William Clayton, who went so far as providing detailed eyewitness drawings of the characters found on the plates that subsequently demonstrated a meticulous match to the original when the plates were rediscovered, would have merely contrived the part about Joseph Smith's involvement (as Joseph Smith's personal secretary, no less), and the content of the translation.

Ok, seems logical.

Evidence found in personal letters, journals, histories, and newspapers, even from Fulgate himself, show that all of the witnesses who mention Joseph Smith agree that he believed that the plates were genuine and expressed a desire to translate them. In contrast, not a single account from this period attributes to Joseph Smith any remarks casting doubt on the nature of the plates or showing disinterest. There is no evidence of controversy about Joseph Smith's involvement among the eye-witnesses.

More good logic... I'm liking this.

Yet Dr. Kimball provides no explanation or even mention of these accounts. What results in Kimball's article is remarkably selective scholarship in which data supporting his conclusion of fraud is accepted uncritically, evidence of authenticity is ignored without being engaged at all, and important questions are neither asked nor answered.

Um... I'm not seeing the point.

Thanks for the response GR33N. By the data you provided, there is absolutely no doubt that it was in fact Joseph Smith who translated the Kinderhook plates to come up with the descendant of Ham... do you agree?

PS - I have a great respect for you. You just answered the question that Wade/DCP/Wiki/Simon and Pharoan could not (or in DCP's case just refused based on ignorance), and it was done by using data. Good job.
2 Tim 4:3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine.
2 Tim 4:4 They will turn their ears away from the truth & turn aside to myths
Post Reply