How do you deal with the real history on Joseph Smith?
This blog post was made in July but I wanted to address to some degree.
Joanna Brooks wrote:But as to the human side of Joseph Smith. . . polygamous relationships with women and girls as young as Fanny Alger, who was, historians believe, fifteen or sixteen when Joseph Smith initiated a relationship with her, without the knowledge of his wife Emma.
Joanna Brooks wrote:Today, I can say that I know Joseph Smith was a complex and flawed human being.
The post bothered me a bit because I don't think she addresses the problems in any meaningful way. She seems to pride herself of learning this information from the sunstone crowd and to some degree her parents. Well that's terrific, but you admit the church didn't teach you these things. So what about everyone else?
Also stating that Joseph is complex and flawed... what does that mean in this context? That God didn't tell Joseph to take Helen Mar Kimball as a wife? That God didn't tell Joseph to deceive his wife? Thing is if these polygamous marriages were of Joseph's own making, he's engaging in the third worst sin according to Mormonism compounded by the fact that he was doing it in God's name.
Joanna Brooks wrote:But it’s up to me to decide how these facts of written history shape my faith practice. A Mormon friend recently gave me a book by Annie Dillard, who quotes the Catholic priest and philosopher Thomas Merton, writing in 1968, a few days after leaving a Buddhist monastery and a few days before his death: “Suddenly there is a point where religion becomes laughable. Then you decide that you are nevertheless religious.”
Nevertheless. For the religious, everything turns on the nevertheless. The word that offers merciful refuge to the human complexity in ourselves and the human complexity in our faith traditions
Nevertheless. I am a religious person. I love a merciful God. And the religious movement Smith founded has given me some of the most intense and meaningful experiences of my life. That wide-open answer is the only way I know how to respond to the emails both hurtful and heartfelt that the legacy of Joseph Smith channels into my inbox.
Nevertheless? That's how you deal with it?