Benjamin McGuire wrote:Sethbag writes:I may just have to go back and re-read the apologetics on this one, but I find it pretty funny that William Clayton's journal is being doubted - it looks awfully like it's only being doubted because of the implications about Joseph's true prophethood. Elsewhere Clayton's journal entries even became scripture. William Clayton was his scribe, an eyewitness to a lot of things that went on, was let into the practice of polygamy by Joseph, ie: he was "inner circle".
Clayton's journal contains a number of incorrect elements. Most prominent among them is the non-existent skeleton. But we have the wrong county for the discovery and other issues. So, there are reasons in the text to be skeptical of the account.
What's more interesting is the late Fugate retelling of the event contains the simple sentence "There was no skeleton". The only published account of the Kinderhook plates that contains a skeleton (Pratt's account was not published then) was the History of the Church reworking of the Clayton journal entry. Fugate is responding specifically to Clayton's journal entry and not to some other account.
Given this, and the fact that (from Pratt's account which contradicts and supports in a way Clayton's account) there seem to have been other versions floating around, I think there is more than reasonable support to suggest that Clayton is recording heresay.
Furthermore, this is all of it. We don't get any more journal entries. No continuing details. This is a flash in the pan and its gone.
Scribes, who have direct access to the person for whom they are scribing, typically do not rely on hearsay. The part about the skeleton was probably Smith doing what he did best, i.e., bull****ting his moronic followers.