Nevo wrote:Darth J wrote:You do think that Joseph Smith's marriages were legally valid? In what jurisdiction of the United States would they have been legally valid? Is it your considered opinion that mutual belief is sufficient to give legal sanction to a relationship between two or more persons?
Joseph Smith's polygamous unions weren't legal marriages. Nor were any one elses'. It doesn't follow, however, that all polygamous relationships are reducible to adulterous sexual liaisons. They were legitimated by religious rather than civil authority: "What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder." You might not accept that authority, but there it is.
By definiton, they were unlawful adulterous sexual liaisons. Adultery is a crime in pretty much every U.S. jurisdiction, as well as grounds for divorce. Adultery means having sex with someone other than your spouse when are legally married. That's also the definition of the law of chastity taught in the temple endowment.
DarthJ wrote:You are not seriously going to start arguing that he never had sex with his plural "wives," are you?
Not seriously, no. But I think you overestimate the role physical intimacy played in Joseph Smith's polygamy.
That must be why I said on page 3, "Whether it was for sex, or some neurotic need for an expansive "family," or both, plural marriage was for the gratification of Joseph Smith."
Are you suggesting that William Law helped write the Expositor to cover up his own adultery?
Not at all. Law confessed his adultery. I was just observing that it hadn't been mentioned that Joseph's accuser was himself an adulterer.
I have no problem talking about an admitted adulterer versus someone who lied about it so that the newspaper reporting his adultery would be destroyed.
You can't think of an example of Jesus using his followers for his personal benefit either, huh?
I did give you an example of Jesus benefitting from his followers. No, they didn't build him a big house—he didn't need one; he was an itinerant preacher—but they did underwrite his ministry.
People underwrite Benny Hinn's ministry, too. But that isn't comparable to Jesus' life, either.
Thanks for the source. Obviously that is where Hofmann got the story from. It would be nice to know, though, where Stout got his information from since Dunham apparently didn't tell a soul about receiving the order and no other sources seem to mention it.
Actually, the inference would be that Dunham did say something about it for Allen Stout to be writing about it in his journal. It does not make a lot of sense for Stout to be giving a factual journal account and then add in something he made up apropos of nothing, especially something inconsistent with the faith-promoting version of Joseph Smith's murder (lamb to the slaughter).
In any case, I'm not sure what your point is. Jesus went passively to his death and Joseph didn't? So what? How does that refute my observation that both were millenarian prophets?
I wasn't talking just about how they died, but how they lived.
But I do not fault Joseph Smith at all for trying to run away, shooting back, or appealing to fellow Masons to save him. Those were very human, very natural, and very understandable things for him to have done. It's the spin on the story that I don't care for.