A
Arandur
Guest
If you’re interested in other influences, you should check out Alexander Campbell and (to a lesser degree) the history of the millenialists, the predecessors of the Seventh Day Adventists (Millerites, I think), who shared some quite similar ideas regarding restorations and end times with JS and his followers. Campbell, at least (and I think the Millerites, as well), is referenced often in restorationist apologetic works that I’ve seen, weaksauce though Campbell is (“having the appearance of Godliness, but denying the power thereof”). They commonly lift wholesale Campbell’s justifications of a need for a restoration–including the idea that miracles and the Gifts of the Spirit and all sense of Divine inspiration/revelation had been absent from Christianity for more than a millenia. This is blatant igorance of the lives of the Saints, the miracles (even contemporary miracles and Saints), and the Holy Spirit’s action within the Church. It was a solution without a problem, based on a denial of all evidence.
You might also consider that JS was simply responding (in his youth) to the spirit of the times, which was rife with many competing revivalist movements and a desire by some to have all the uncertainties and competing claims resolved by some God-wrought intervention–sending of a prophet or revelation. He was simply meeting the demand of the times, and caught up in the same desire himself.
Furthermore, as View of the Hebrews (which was far from the only other work to suggest an Israelite/Lost Tribe connection with the Native Americans) gives evidence, there was a fascination at the time with the Americas and the mystery of their past (and the past of the Native Americans). We can see this even today in the commonly-believed notion that the MesoAmericans were expecting a “bearded white God-man” very like Christ when the conquistadors first arrived, and that they thought the conquistadors were that man (Queatzalcoatl). Scholars have since shown that this was a fabrication, one that the conquistadors and the colonizing Spanish wanted to believe. Yet shouldn’t we have been suspicious of such a thing–and any use of such an idea to justify a new religious movement and alternative history like JS’s BoM–simply from the symbolism? I mean, the winged serpent god, really? Should we have believed that was a good thing, to assume that such a vision of their god was equal to He who would crush the Serpent, our God who has the Serpent killed and raised on a rod, our Lord who comes again to cast down the deception of the great multi-headed Serpent of Revelation?
On the theme of influences…consider that the American Republic was still new. Its ideals were a thing of wonder and reverance, its new identity a source of much moralizing about essential manifest destiny. At the same time, there was the tension that the Anglican church, embraced by so many colonists, was now associated with the tyrant thrown off (the King of England).
So here arises, by popular demand, the solution to all these problems: a religion claiming to have a God-appointed and inspired Prophet who would restore miracles and prophecy and new scripture. It offered a fanciful and Anglo-centric (in terms of the ideas of the British) explanation of the mysterious history of America. It was a highly nationalist religion–a good replacement for the nationalist Anglican church–that preyed upon the newfelt pride of the young Republic, building up throughout the BoM distinctly American ideals and carrying that through with ideas of the coming of Zion and paradise in the very heart of America, and that this new religion should also command and direct the state itself as a theocracy–or a “theocratic democracy,” as the restorationists would prefer to put it (JS, of course, ran for president and had instituted a militia and civil law for his followers). You can see that in the structure of the restoration churches’ governing bodies–taking many structural ideas and explicit ideals from the United States government. And then it took all this with a call to “Go West” and settle new lands, with the communal support for doing so and a sense of purpose.
It’s no wonder those messages all rolled into one played well among their audience.
You might also consider that JS was simply responding (in his youth) to the spirit of the times, which was rife with many competing revivalist movements and a desire by some to have all the uncertainties and competing claims resolved by some God-wrought intervention–sending of a prophet or revelation. He was simply meeting the demand of the times, and caught up in the same desire himself.
Furthermore, as View of the Hebrews (which was far from the only other work to suggest an Israelite/Lost Tribe connection with the Native Americans) gives evidence, there was a fascination at the time with the Americas and the mystery of their past (and the past of the Native Americans). We can see this even today in the commonly-believed notion that the MesoAmericans were expecting a “bearded white God-man” very like Christ when the conquistadors first arrived, and that they thought the conquistadors were that man (Queatzalcoatl). Scholars have since shown that this was a fabrication, one that the conquistadors and the colonizing Spanish wanted to believe. Yet shouldn’t we have been suspicious of such a thing–and any use of such an idea to justify a new religious movement and alternative history like JS’s BoM–simply from the symbolism? I mean, the winged serpent god, really? Should we have believed that was a good thing, to assume that such a vision of their god was equal to He who would crush the Serpent, our God who has the Serpent killed and raised on a rod, our Lord who comes again to cast down the deception of the great multi-headed Serpent of Revelation?
On the theme of influences…consider that the American Republic was still new. Its ideals were a thing of wonder and reverance, its new identity a source of much moralizing about essential manifest destiny. At the same time, there was the tension that the Anglican church, embraced by so many colonists, was now associated with the tyrant thrown off (the King of England).
So here arises, by popular demand, the solution to all these problems: a religion claiming to have a God-appointed and inspired Prophet who would restore miracles and prophecy and new scripture. It offered a fanciful and Anglo-centric (in terms of the ideas of the British) explanation of the mysterious history of America. It was a highly nationalist religion–a good replacement for the nationalist Anglican church–that preyed upon the newfelt pride of the young Republic, building up throughout the BoM distinctly American ideals and carrying that through with ideas of the coming of Zion and paradise in the very heart of America, and that this new religion should also command and direct the state itself as a theocracy–or a “theocratic democracy,” as the restorationists would prefer to put it (JS, of course, ran for president and had instituted a militia and civil law for his followers). You can see that in the structure of the restoration churches’ governing bodies–taking many structural ideas and explicit ideals from the United States government. And then it took all this with a call to “Go West” and settle new lands, with the communal support for doing so and a sense of purpose.
It’s no wonder those messages all rolled into one played well among their audience.