Themis wrote:1 Iron wrote:A serious, unbiased reading of his first vision accounts does not reveal changes of content, only changes in focus.
I think it may be more accrurate to change unbiased to biased here. :)
Well said, themis. I know I have my bias here and while what I said in jest to Joseph are my true feelings and beliefs your point is well taken.
You raise good points. I have my view of this, which is that Joseph's 1832 account is focused on a specific issue – his desire to find forgiveness of his sins, followed by the completely unexpected and glorious visit where the Savior tells him he is forgiven of his sins.That said, I doubt very many have left the church due to this issue alone. There are much bigger problems then this, but yes there are some problems with the differeent accounts. In the 1832 account you have Joseph commenting that he had already found out that all the churches had apostatised before even going to God, while the canonized account Joseph says it never entered his mind. Seems a little wierd that he would have fairly opposite recollections of the same event. We also see that God and Jesus appearing only later on while early accounts have only Jesus, and some evidence says only an angel. Now if I had God and Jesus appear I don't think I would ignore either of them, and maybe even worse is that the evolution from One being to two fits with Joseph changing view of the Godhead. If he had indeed seen both God and Jesus, that should have been doctrine from the b4eggining and not a triniatrain view of the Godhead we see from the Book of Mormon and early church teachings.
Again, and to your specific point, my view is that the mention of God the Father at this time wasn’t really the core purpose of this telling, but is reflected in other contemporary sources such as his and Sidney Rigdon’s vision from 1831 contained in the D&C. We see him mentioning God the Father elsewhere at this time so the exclusion of this detail in the account isn’t as big a deal to me. One aspect I find compelling is we see even more detail in this account regarding the reason why he went to God. This account begins with him being 12 years of age, only four years after his brush with death that is now legend with typhoid fever and his leg infection – much earlier than the later accounts. It’s something to be expected of an earlier account as well. And it takes us through four years of biblical and prayerful searching for the purpose I outlined above.
In the later accounts, and more specifically the one canonized in the Pearl of Great Price we see a Joseph Smith recounting the same story from the view of one who has seen even mightier revelations for mankind (but could there be a more mighty revelation for him as a man? I think not), withstood tar and feathering, seen women and children cast out into the snow to die for the work set in motion by this revelation – of course he would recall it differently.
Interestingly, on this board I was made to recall a detail about a memory I had forgotten for years about a family memorial day tradition. Four hours ago, I would not have be able to tell you we had taken small flags to place at the grave sites/memorials of my great-uncles who had either served or had died in WWII. Yet a tiny bit of information brought that detail back.
I’m not convinced that revelation and personal life experience could not have had the same effect on Joseph as a simple internet search had on me.