Jersey Girl wrote:maklelan wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:and claimed he likewise could translate the Kinderhook Plates. Why couldn't he translate the Kinderhook Plates?
Jersey Girl
We can't really know for sure whether he did or did not. The accounts are all questionable, and none are written by him.
Let's back up the truck, maklelan. Are you saying that if an account came from others it should be held suspect?
Jersey Girl
The account came from the journal of William Clayton, and it was later added to the history of the church in a manner that would make it appear first hand. That one account is actually the only piece of evidence that Joseph Smith ever took any interest whatsoever in the plates, and it is probably just speculation on the part of Clayton. From that and other evidence we can safely conclude that he was not trying to translate them, as every other translation he ever undertook is heavily attested to in many different sources, expecially his own. We do have a few accounts that show he was skeptical, and/or never even began to translate them.
From a Times and Seasons article when the plates enjoyed their first stay in Nauvoo (for five days):
"Mr. Smith has had those plates,
what his opinion concerning them is, we have not yet ascertained.
The gentleman that owns them has taken them away, or we should have given a facsimile of the plates and characters in this number. We are informed however, that he purposes returning them for translation; if so, we may be able yet to furnish our readers with it."
Here's another account concerning their second visit of an even smaller period of time:
"In a letter dated April 8, 1878, Wilbur Fugate recalled: 'We understood Jo Smith said [the plates] would make a book of 1200 pages, but
he would not agree to translate them until they were sent to the Antiquarian society at Philadelphia, France, and England.'"
1200 pages from six tiny plates? Only 500 pages from a six inch thick stack of plates (the Book of Mormon)?
The account says they came back later and Joseph Smith began translating them, but
they actually never came back from the Antiquarian Society and Joseph Smith died a year later. Despite the fact that the owner of the plates was open to selling them, the Prophet never attempted to buy them or even keep them from leaving, but said he wouldn't translate them until they had been verified. Odd behavior for someone who jumped at other opportunities to own antiquities that he thought might contain some translatable material. Here's a good group of articles dealing with it. They're from an LDS perspective, but it appears people in this thread have only been reading anti-Mormon perspectives (you all should have been very aware of the dismissal of this incident as any kind of concern decades ago), so perhaps it will do y'all some good:
http://www.lightplanet.com/Mormons/resp ... htm#ensign