January 2020 Ensign-more to discuss

Because of the huge response to my post about the January 2020 Ensign, I’m going to clarify some points here.

The cover is my editorial depiction of the contents, not the actual cover of the original magazine. But don’t be surprised to see such a cover eventually because that’s the narrative we’re getting from historians (and M2C advocates) today.

Consequently, the stone-in-a-hat narrative is being passed off as correct history, contrary to what Joseph and Oliver always taught.

If you read the contents of the Ensign, you will see in words and pictures a depiction of Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon with a seer stone in a hat. Here is a passage:

The “interpreters” used by Joseph during the translation process included the “two stones in silver bows” that were deposited by Moroni with the plates (see Joseph Smith—History 1:35.) In addition to these two seer stones, Joseph used at least one other seer stone that the Lord had provided.7

The first sentence is consistent with what Joseph and Oliver taught. They always said Joseph translated the plates with the Urim and Thummim. They never once said Joseph used a seer stone in a hat.

The article should have stopped right there. 

Instead, the second sentence introduces Church members to Mormonism Unvailed and David Whitmer’s “Address to All Believers in Christ.”

Look at the sentence again.

In addition to these two seer stones, Joseph used at least one other seer stone that the Lord had provided.

This is what the historians want us to believe, but here is the key point: every witness who said Joseph used the seer stone to translate today’s Book of Mormon* also said he did not use the Urim and Thummim. This includes the observers quoted in the Ensign, David Whitmer and Emma Smith.

This is what happens when historians accept statements uncritically. They mistake claims for truth.

This is an either/or situation, not “in addition to.”

Joseph translating with the
stone in a hat and not the
Urim and Thummim

Logically, we cannot combine two directly contradictory statements with the phrase “in addition to.” If we applied the logic of the Ensign article to the story of George Washington, we’d get this: 

“In addition to chopping down the cherry tree with an ax, George Washington did not chop down the cherry tree.”

When there are directly contrary statements, people have to make a choice about whom to believe.** 
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Because the historians apparently want Church members to read Mormonism Unvailed and “An Address to All Believers in Christ,” let’s see if there’s an accurate way to frame these statements. 

Those (and similar) materials are easily available on the Internet anyway. Critics have been citing them for years. They are old news.

What’s new is reading them in the Ensign, especially presented as the “true” story of the translation.
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Here is an example of what would be historically and analytically accurate.

Although Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery always said Joseph used the Urim and Thummim that came with the plates, some observers claimed that Joseph instead used at least one other seer stone.

With this approach, we acknowledge the observers’ statements without presenting them as the truth of what happened.

We also accurately show that these observers’ statements directly contradict what Joseph and Oliver said. 

And we don’t make the unsubstantiated claim that the Lord provided the seer stone Joseph found in a well, which raises a host of other issues.
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Because the Ensign is teaching Church members about the seer stone scenario, readers deserve to know there are three ways to handle the observers’ statements. 

1. Accept them as true and reject (or redefine, which is essentially the same thing) what Joseph and Oliver taught. (Some revisionist historians claim Joseph and Oliver used the term “Urim and Thummim” to mean both the Nephite interpreters and the seer stone found in a well, but that redefinition of the term contradicts the plain and explicit history of the terms as used by Joseph and Oliver and their critics, as anyone can see by reading the original writings.) 

2. Reject them as false because they contradict what Joseph and Oliver said. (This is problematic because it frames David Whitmer, Martin Harris, and Emma Smith as dishonest.)

3. Accept the factual elements as true but reject the hearsay and assumptions involved in the statements. (This is the approach that makes sense to me and is consistent with the historical evidence.)
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The next paragraph in the Ensign article comes close to objectivity by framing David’s statement as mere “additional information.” But by then it’s too late because we were just told that Joseph actually did use the seer (or “peep”) stones to translate and that this stone was provided by the Lord.

David Whitmer, whose family provided a place for Joseph and Oliver to complete the work of translation, provided this additional information: “Joseph Smith would put the seer stone into a hat, and put his face in the hat, drawing it closely around his face to exclude the light; and in the darkness the spiritual light would shine.

The article extends this quotation from “An Address to All Believers in Christ” for several paragraphs. It is obviously hearsay; David never claimed he looked into the hat himself. He did not personally observe words appearing and disappearing. He doesn’t even claim Joseph told him what he saw. David just reports what he observed (or heard) and then makes his own inferences and assumptions about the translation.

Readers of this blog know that I think Joseph conducted demonstrations to satisfy curiosity and explain the concept, but never “performed” a translation in the presence of people who were not authorized to see the plates or the Urim and Thummim. That’s just my interpretation, of course; it works for me but we’re all free to deal with the evidence in whatever way makes sense.
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This all brings up the question of whether Church history matters. I’ll be discussing that in upcoming posts. I suppose the existence in the Ensign of articles such as this demonstrate that history matters, but then the question becomes, does it matter whether we accept or reject what Joseph and Oliver taught?

Stay tuned.
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*Today’s Book of Mormon does not include the Book of Lehi that was on the 116 pages that Martin Harris lost. Martin Harris gave contradictory statements about how that translation took place, as did Emma. But none of the “stone-in-a-hat” witnesses said Joseph also used the Urim and Thummim after the 116 pages were lost.

**I think most observers accurately reported what they saw (or heard from other people), but they embellished because of mistaken assumptions. Joseph and Oliver were talking about the translation, while others were describing a demonstration that they incorrectly inferred was the translation. I wrote a book to explain all of this in detail. 

https://smile.amazon.com/Man-that-Can-Translate-Interpreters/dp/1944200797/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=a+man+that+can+translate&qid=1578644060&sr=8-1




Source: About Central America

One thought on “January 2020 Ensign-more to discuss

  1. Truth comes from the scriptures and prophets, not intellectuals and scholars interpretation of hearsay statements. It reminds me so much of 2 Nephi 9:28-29.

    28 O that cunning aplan of the evil one! O the bvainness, and the frailties, and the cfoolishness of men! When they are dlearned they think they are ewise, and they fhearken not unto the gcounsel of God, for they set it aside, supposing they know of themselves, wherefore, their hwisdom is foolishness and it profiteth them not. And they shall perish.
    29 But to be alearned is good if they bhearken unto the ccounsels of God.

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