Mary wrote:Dale, I see you have on your site the recollections of Sidney's grandson.
Sidney Rigdon's Grandson Says...
"Grandfather was a religious crank...
he tried to understand the prophicies, and the man who does that
is sure to go crazy. He studied the prophets...
Is there anything of interest in the collection of letters from Josephine Rigdon Secord? Some of the titles look interesting....
http://files.lib.BYU.edu/ead/XML/MSS1281.xml
Of course the proponents of the Smith-all-by-himself authorship
explanations are going to reply saying Sidney's grandson probably
had a grudge about the old man, and was telling lies, etc. etc.
It would take more than the testimony of a single Rigdon family
member, to strongly implicate Sidney in the production of the
Book of Mormon -- and at least two members of that same family
were happy to testify that Sidney was totally innocent.
So, unless some additional family testimony can be uncovered,
there's something like a stalemate within the ranks of Rigdon kin.
The stuff at BYU is marginally relative to the question. I've seen
some of it. There are some family tidbits that should be shared
with the interested public -- but nothing conclusive. One
interesting document in those files has what appears to be an
important page missing. Perhaps the Lee Library staff should go
ahead and release these documents for publication. But I do
not think they would answer our most important questions.
Rigdon, before his Nov. 1830 Mormon baptism, was obviously
very interested in the idea of a literal fulfillment of the biblical
prophecies to the ancient Israelites. Like Ethan Smith and so
many others of that period, Rigdon did not accept the standard
Christian tenet, that the establishment of the Church had
spiritualized, or nullified or fulfilled those Old Testament promises.
I suppose Rigdon viewed the Old Testament as an intricate
fabric of literally true events and foretellings -- which, if it
could all be understood within the framework of a single
modern interpretation, would overthrow contemporary Christian
religion, and prove it to be a blasphemous apostasy.
It must have deeply pained Elder Rigdon, to have to peddle
Alexander Campbell's 1822 Bible, which left out the Old Testament books
and relegated their Israelite promises and blessings to the trash.
Rigdon probably quit acting as Campbell's book sales agent, out
in the wilds of Ohio, toward the end of the 1820s. He was
looking for a different sort of scriptures than what Campbell
was promoting.
He tried to understand the prophecies -- and the man who does
that is sure to go crazy.
UD