Nevo wrote:Well, I think Joseph's threatening people with the loss of their salvation is somewhat mitigated by the likelihood (pace beefcalf) that he believed his own salvation was in jeopardy if he failed to live this law.
Maybe he should have added the fact that his salvation was on the line too! ("If you don't marry me, God will be very angry with
both of us!") He was obviously being kind by leaving that detail out. You don't want to overplay your hand, after all.
"No revelation told Joseph that God had sent the cholera. He read his own ideas about Deity into the event.... In the camp's extremity, Joseph seems to have called up a God out of his Puritan past, a God who would destroy His own people if they neglected his commands. This was the God, we must assume, to whom Joseph felt responsible for establishing Zion and preparing his people for exaltation, a God harsh and implacable, inflicting punishment on those who failed" (Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 246).
Yes. I feel more comfortable basing my life on the teachings of a guy whose judgments about the mind of Deity were sometimes founded on a flaky reading of his Puritan roots. It is so much more comforting than the notion that God really was talking to him. I wish I were kidding.
Nevo wrote:Perhaps this doesn't excuse Joseph's strong-arm tactics, but it helps to explain them. (And not to sound like a broken record but it should be noted that Jesus also threatened people with the loss of their salvation if they disobeyed God's laws.)
But the element of sleeping with Jesus was notably absent from those threats.
Nevo wrote:How else should he have done it? Taken out an ad in the classifieds? He married women that he had access to. He never married any woman without her full consent, and he often sought the consent of family members as well. Ah, but he married sisters! Well so did half of the polygamists in Nauvoo. Probably more than half, actually—I haven't counted (there were 196 male polygamists and 717 wives in Nauvoo).
I don't know, Nevo. Did God hand him a quota on that angel's sword? It seems like the principle he was operating under was "get as many as you possibly can." Why? I have no idea, but then we have such little to go on with any of this craziness. I will say that I think it is charming that you imagine coerced consent to be the same as uncoerced consent, as though in the mind of Deity it would be all the same, and it is not conceivable that Joseph could be thought culpable for manipulating others.
By all means, please continue to find any slender thread of justification you can. I hope you keep all of them in mind when the leader comes asking for all of the women in your family. It will be easier for you to hand them over and insure your salvation if you have lined up the justifications for him in advance. Far be it from me to stand in the way of your eternal salvation. I refuse to do it, even if it means that I have to facilitate your absolute misery in the present. Why, one should be willing to shed your blood, and you should thank him for it, if it would help you attain that goal!
In fact, I think you guys aren't worthy of salvation in the present because you are so unwilling to do these kinds of things. The Fundamentalists are probably right. Go Warren Jeffs! I am sure he was forced by circumstances to do all of the crazy crap he had to do to follow God's commands. What was he supposed to do? Fish in a larger gene pool? Like, right! Now you talk crazy talk.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist