Nevo wrote:But he did tell someone: a Methodist preacher. And there may have been others. The preacher's negative reaction effectively discouraged further tellings, and his reluctance to relate the experience (which he interpreted primarily in terms of personal forgiveness of sins) probably increased when he became "entangled again in the vanities of the world."
Joseph Smith Rough Stone Rolling --Bushman
Page 41 gives this explanation for the preachers reaction.
"The preacher reacted quicly and negatively, not because of the strangeness of Joseph's story but [b]because of it's familiarity[/]. Subjects of revivals all too often claimed to have seen visions. IN 1826 a preacher at Palmyra Academy said he saw Christ descend "in a glare of brighness, exceeding ten fold the brilliancey of the meridian Sun."
The Wayne Sentinel in 1823 reported Asa Wild's vision of Christ in Amsterdamn, New York, telling him that all denominations were corrupt. At various other times and places, beginning early in the Protestant era, religions eccentrics had claimed visits from divinity. Norris Stearns published an account in 1815 of two beings who appeared to him: "[i] One was God, my Maker, almost in bodily shape like a man. HIs face was, as it were a flame of Fire, and his body, as it had been a Pillar and a Cloud...Below him stood Jesus Christ my Redeemer, in perfect shape like a man."
If "subjects of revivals" were prone to making similar claims, what was unique about Joseph's claim, what makes it more true?
Was Joseph Smith the subject of revivals? When? Where?