brade wrote:sock puppet wrote:So the Church prefers the second hand account related decades after the fact to those closer in time, by the scribes themselves? Forensically, sound, very sound--not.
Also, that account raises even more issues:
Every word was distinctly visible even to every letter; and if Oliver omitted a word or failed to spell a word correctly, the translation remained on the ‘interpreter’ until it was copied correctly.
Good forensic point, brade. The more vague, oblique account by Brother Richards is preferred by the LDS Church to the more specific, detailed account by Oliver Cowdery.
So, according to why me, the LDS Church prefers Brother Richards' account over Oliver Cowdery's, even though,
1-Oliver Cowdery was an eye witness, being one of the scribes; Brother Richards was not.
2-Oliver Cowdery's accounts were decades closer in time to the actual events than Brother Richards' account.
3-Oliver Cowdery's account detailed the mechanics of the Book of Mormon translation, where Brother Richards' account was more vague.
Why does the term 'revisionist history' pop into my head about what the LDS Church is doing here?