mentalgymnast wrote:Could you point me towards something Joseph Smith said that could act as the "smoking gun" demonstrating that he was perpetuating a fraud? You're willing to chalk up Elder Holland's conclusions as being suspect without so much as a blink of the eye. Concluding, off hand and as of a matter of fact, that Elder Holland is mistaken and that "history shows" this or that does not have any evidential value in showing that Joseph Smith was a fraud and knew it. So where's the beef?
Show that Joseph Smith was perpetuating an illusion vs. acting with integrity and sincerity. He should have given himself away somewhere in his writings. Come up with something, say, as interesting as Elder Holland's example you referenced.
Regards,
MG
mentalgymnast,
just a few observations off the top of my head... (Hope you don't mind me butting in here...)
First, when Abinidi is speaking, about 150 years before Christ was born, he says the following to King Noah and his Priests:
"And now if Christ had not come into the world, speaking of things to come as though they had already come, there could have been no redemption." (Mosiah 16:6)
This is a clear marker of the narrator losing his place in the chronology of the fiction he is extemporaneously creating. But since Smith had made clear, either implicitly or explicitly, that the stone gave his words verbatim, Smith could not reverse course once he made the mistake of putting the opening clause in the past-tense. He had to forge ahead, adding the ungainly (and improbable, if you believe the Nephite rationale for using Reformed Egyptian on Gold Plates: efficient use of limited space) clause "Speaking of things to come as though they had already come".
Second, when the 116 pages were lost, Smith's way forward was to announce the fortuitous presence of a second set of plates... plates which would contain the same basic story, but worded in a slightly different way. He worried openly that the men who stole the 116 pages would alter them and use these alterations against him, calling him a fraud.
Throughout his prophetic career, Smith had used his seer stones to find hidden treasures, other seer stones, needles in haystacks (literally), as well as the presence of treasures in distant cities. He had used the stone to receive revelations from God. Why, then, did he not use his stone to either verify or dismiss this supposed danger?
When I was a true believer, I never thought this through, even once. Only once I saw irrefutable evidence of Smith's other misdeeds did this event snap into sharp focus for the clear fraud that it truly was.