Radex wrote:
The Old Testament books of Nehemiah and Samuel both make reference to the Urim and Thummim, and they were written well before the Book of Mormon was published, if I've calculated correctly.
Darth J wrote:See: Red Herring
Radex wrote:My good Darth,
Again I am reading things as plainly as possible, but perhaps I am missing the larger context of how thews' statement fits in with, I don't know, something else that you're contemplating but that I am completely oblivious to. It may be a function of my age or station, but I read a sentence and, being a native English speaker, interpret it how such a speaker would.
I beg your forgiveness, but thews was asking about the history and the use of the term "Urim and Thummim". As he understood it, the term hadn't been used "until three years after the Book of Mormon was published". I replied that it was used several times in the Old Testament, which is much older than the Book of Mormon. I see no red herring here, just two gentlemen discussing history and one interjecting with Sesame Street rubbish.
Oh, I forgot: your mum taught you to read things in a vacuum, devoid of context. See, people who did not benefit from those lessons in linguistics that your mum taught would have understood that Thews was obviously talking about Mormons using the term "Urim and Thummim" in relation to the translation of the Book of Mormon, rather than anyone using it ever.
Radex wrote:Darth J wrote:Thews is obviously talking about the Book of Mormon that was actually published, but thanks for dispelling that ludicrous idea I mentioned earlier about being deliberately obtuse!
When we're talking about the methods Joseph Smith employed while translating the gold plates, the entire gold plates must be within the context of the conversion. Surely you understand that and are simply being "deliberately obtuse".
No, because official LDS depictions show Oliver Cowdery and Joseph Smith. None of them show Martin Harris as the scribe.
Hey, you know, some gnat strainers and nit pickers out there don't find it very encouraging that The One True Church is disingenuous in how it depicts its foundational events. But as long as the Church is true!!!, who cares about things like integrity and honesty?
Luckily for all of us, the church is honest in its depiction of one of the translation methods.
So, what was the name of the contemporary witness who saw the Studious Joe method of translation?
In summary:
When critics of the Church refer to firsthand accounts and want history to be told accurately, they are virulent anti-Mormon liars who are persecuting the Church.
I'm sure you can point out where I've asserted such an absurd thing.
Page 7 of this thread: "Right, it sure is silly that the church would commission paintings and artwork which correspond more to official church publications than to critical documents (what were they thinking?)"
When the Church misrepresents its history and instead presents a sanitized pseudo-history that ignores firsthand accounts by people who were actually there, the Church's honesty and integrity are unassailable.
I have shown, repeatedly, that we have multiple accounts from various sources which describe more than one translation method. The Urim and Thummim, and the seer stones were the two primary methods. Both are true. Both are accurate. The pictures of the church are true and accurate.
Among your sources, which is your favorite by a person who was there and watched what Joseph Smith was doing? And since both are accurate, where's the official LDS picture of Joseph Smith with his face in a hat?