harmony wrote:marg wrote:
I think there is greater incentive to choose a route of least resistence. Any historian who would promote the Spalding theory as a high probabilty would likely be attacked by the Church, as far as their credibility. The Church is an extremely powerful organization both in manpower and financial resources.
Are you saying you don't think the church attacked Fawn Brodie?
There are degrees of attacks, but as you'll notice DCP will use Brodie and Vogel when it suits his purpose to attack the Spalding theory, so apologist use to their fullest Vogel and Brodie's position on this, which from my readings, their position is very weak.
This is what the Jockers et. all 2008 paper has to say on this issue.
"Throughout the 19th and early 20th century, the Spalding-Rigdon Theory was the favored explanation for the origin of the Book of Mormon, but Fawn Brodie's (1945) rejection of this theory in her controversial biography of Smith marked a turning point in the debate. Invoking witness tampering and 'false memory syndrome' , Brodie dismissed the affidavits collected by Hurlbut. Despite having no evidence that the Honolulu manuscript was the same text that the Conneaut witnesses heard Spalding read to them (and subsequently recognized as a source text for the Book of Mormon), Brodie nonetheless concluded that Spalding could not have been an author of the Book of Mormon because the similarities between the Book of Mormon and the text found in Hawaii were 'not sufficient to justify the thesis of common authorship'. Her rejection of the Spalding-Rigdon Theory came to be regarded by most students of Mormon history as 'an historiographical artifact without credibility among serious scholars' (Bushman,2005)."
If one looks at the reasoning given by both Brodie and Vogel, one can see that their justification to dismiss the Spalding witnesses was extremely weak. But apologists and the Church are able to accept their position, a very subjective weak one, because at least it has Smith being the sole author.
If I was a writer of Mormon history, I would much prefer to hold to the Smith as sole author theory, knowing full well I'd be given a level of credibility that I certainly wouldn't receive from the church and their apologists if I supported the Spalding Rigdon theory.
So it's no surprise the DCP and others bring up Brodie and Vogel on this particular issue, in their arguments as if they are the ultimate authority.