Apparently, if Smith does not say something like "Course, there weren't no others in this here country before the first settlement", it leaves the way open to vast rafts of humanity to have been pouring in for millennia!
I am trying to think of a way that someone can make an argument like that without either being in bad faith or suffering from a state of mental confusion. Can't do it. Charity therefore forbids further comment.
At the root of this comment is the fundamentalist mindset to which I have often referred (and which Trevor, for one, has consistently misinterpreted).
In the mind of so many exmormons, especially in the context of their explication of the reasons for their rejection of their former faith, everything that Joseph Smith (or, for that matter, any prophet or apostle) has ever said or written, or is alleged to have said or written, or is even commonly-believed to have said or written – that is the word of God himself; the “gospel”; the definitive expression of Mormon orthodoxy; the doctrine to which all believers must pledge allegiance or otherwise be branded as heretics.
This extreme position is one which has been condemned during every generation of the church, from the time of Joseph Smith to the present day, and those who have been inclined to believe such things are all but guaranteed to eventually separate themselves from the church.
I find it ironic that the only people demanding such an unyielding definition of “prophetic utterance” are those who have ceased to believe in any such thing, while those who affirm the continuing reality of God communicating to man insist on the imperative of inspired judgment as an essential component in discerning the mind and will of God.
Therefore, if Joseph Smith was of the belief that Lehi and his party set foot on the shores of an uninhabited continent (he wasn’t, and they didn’t), then believers in the historicity of the Book of Mormon must necessarily incorporate that concept into any defense of the book, regardless of the fact that the text of the book itself will not support such conclusions.
Of course, to most intelligent people, such illogical and fundamentalistic extremism is utterly absurd. Indeed, I am trying to think of a way that someone can make an argument like that without either being in bad faith or suffering from a state of mental confusion. Can't do it. Charity therefore forbids further comment.