You're welcome. And I appreciate your politeness.
Roger:
And you might be correct about that. At the same time, I doubt that you propose that Smith being discovered with Fanny was their first encounter?
I fail to see the relevance. I've already offered reasons for thinking the relationship that was being denied was well known. And if it was well enough known to require a denial in the church's scripture, I'd bet you dollars to dimes that it was known in the Smith household. If you'd bet the other way, you and I need to play poker!
Don:
The Article on Marriage states that the church had been "reproached with the crime of fornication and polygamy" and then proceeds to deny that the church believes in polygamy, without denying the incidents which brough reproach on the church actually occurred. This, and the fact that they felt such a public, canonical statement necessary in the first place, evidence that there had been some incident or incidents that were well enough known that they had to be dealt with and that it would be futile to deny them.
Roger:
Only well enough known by the authors of the article.
A public, canonical statement would not have been necessary if the relationship being discussed were known only privately to a few, such as those issuing the statement. And the Article clearly states that the church itself had been reproached because of the misdeeds. This clearly indicates a broad knowledge of something amiss, and not merely knowledge on the part of those writing the statement. Without that broad knowledge, those issuing the statement would not have had cause to do so.
Roger:
There is plenty of testimony that rumors were circulating.
If you think the Article responded to rumors about Joseph and Fanny, what evidence can you produce of rumors of Joseph and Fanny being circulated in 1835? The Article doesn't count as such evidence here, because that would be circular reasoning. So, what evidence can you put forward here?
Roger:
If that is true, then why would the church have felt "reproach" to such an extent as to feel compelled to canonize a statement that should otherwise be self-evident? So to me it doesn't rise to the level it did unless it was in response to Smith himself.
The church could have been brought into disrepute by the actions of ordinary members. We're talking about a church of just a few thousand members, and one which the public was inclined to find fault with in the first place.
for what it's worth, it strikes me as odd that you would think only Smith could have brought reproach on the church, but you think he could do so without his blameworthy actions being widely known. Private actions known to a select few don't bring public reproach.
However, it's worth noting again that I'm not arguing the statement responded to others' behavior, and not Smith's. I'm just leaving that door open. And you haven't presented good reason to shut it.
Roger:
I'm referring to his [Oliver's] accusation of an affair. [...] He was either mistaken, or there was no revelation on plural marriage in 1835.
Nonsense!
Joseph could have claimed a revelation on polygamy and Oliver simply disbelieved it. It wouldn't be the first or last time Oliver dissented from Joseph's revelations.
by the way, I've already shown that more evidence would be needed to show that Oliver understood the relationship of Joseph and Fanny to be an "affair" in the modern sense. Have you located this evidence?
Also, if you think the Article on Marriage, apparently written in part by Cowdery, responds to Joseph and Fanny, you have to consider that Cowdery would there be referring to it, not as adultery, but as polygamy. Perhaps Oliver thought polygamy was dirty, nasty, and filthy.
In making these arguments, you don't seem to be keeping consistent with yourself.
Roger:
At the very least, we can state that if it appeared to Oliver Cowdery as though an affair was going on between Joseph Smith and Fanny Alger in 1835, then it is little wonder it appears the same way to modern LDS critics.
Yes, particularly if they make no attempt whatsoever to determine whether the term "affair" carried the connotation of extramarital dalliance in its 1838 context. I would be genuinely interested in any evidence you can find on the meaning of this term in its contemporaneous context.
Roger:
In this discussion with you, all I'm arguing is that the Article on Marriage didn't respond to stories about Joseph Smith and Fanny Alger.
And yet you seem to still hold that possibility open:
Don:
I'm not an apologist, and I'm not saying that the Article on Marriage wasn't issued because of polygamous marrying by Joseph Smith.
No! I'm saying the Article almost certainly does not respond to Joseph Smith's relationship with Fanny Alger, but may well respond to an earlier polygamous relationship on his part--or to the behavior others besides Joseph. There is nothing at all that directly links the Fanny Alger relationship with the Article, and there is evidence that the Fanny Alger relationship becomes known too late to prompt the Article. So why not seriously consider other possibilities? This isn't an issue of faith, but of history. The point is--one would hope--neither to defend Joseph Smith or to attack him, but to seek an accurate understanding of what really happened.
Apparently the only difference is you are holding open the possibility of someone preceeding Fanny.
Ah, okay. We're not as far apart here as I thought.
8-)
Don