Richard Bushman wrote:What I was getting at in the quoted passage is that we must be willing to modify the account according to newly authenticated facts. If we don’t we will weaken our position. Unfortunately, not everyone can adjust to this new material. Many think they were deceived and the church was lying. That is not a fair judgment in my opinion. The whole church, from top to bottom, has had to adjust to the findings of our historians. We are all having to reconstruct. In my opinion, nothing in the new material overturns the basic thrust of the story. I still believe in gold plates. I don’t think Joseph Smith could have dictated the Book of Mormon text without inspiration. I think he was sincere in saying he saw God. The glimpse Joseph Smith gives us of divine interest in humankind is still a source of hope in an unbelieving world.
Bushman mockingly accused Boyd K. Packer of protecting grandmas in Sanpete County at the expense of their grandkids. Ironically, Bushman only protects the grandkids provided they stop their critical thinking on the matter right where Bushman does. I give Bushman credit for engaging the "newer" (how can something 50+ years old be new?) evidence more than did Packer, but they both erect arbitrary stopping points.
Bushman's stopping points are alluded to in the quote. The stopping point should/must leave physical gold plates, some sort of undefined inspiration for the Book of Mormon, and a divine interest in human kind after the close of the New Testament. The problems for Bushman are fairly obvious. There is absolutely zero evidence for the gold plates and they are most plausibly seen as a continuation of Joseph's gold digging adventures. The inspired Book of Mormon is riddled with anachronisms, changing theology, and was never actually quoted by its translator. As for God taking an interest in human kind in modern times, I guess that interest is in large part promoting alpha male behavior, taking teenage brides, and encouraging polygamy. No thanks.
Since there is little support for even Bushman's minimalist Mormon origins story, why does he stop where he stops? Presumably, because that's where he is comfortable stopping. Why not give Packer the same leeway to stop where he felt comfortable? If one is going to stop at an arbitrary point does it really matter where that arbitrary point is?