ForeverAdam:
Paul G,
I read through the article you linked. I agree that Smith began formulating certain elements (i.e. two distinct personages) in the current version of the “First Vision” story in the 1840s (or maybe a little earlier), but the fact that so many (the tide began to change in the 1870/80s) of the early LDS leaders spoke of God sending angels to Smith in the “First Vision” and no mention of the Savior (at least in many of their accounts), suggests that there was more than one version of the “First Vision” account, which bespeaks a possible change in its content. Sorry, but the view that “angels” could mean God sounds like special pleading just as the FARMS view that people of Smith’s time referred to heavenly beings as “salamanders” when the Hoffman forgeries were in vouge.
In Christ,
Adam
The first vision account of 1832 mentions only one person, “the Lord” Jesus Christ. LDS apologists claim that this can be reconciled to the official 1838 version. An 1820 revival does not fit well with the available historical data, as I pointed out above.
The fact that the 1832 version of the first vision mentions only one person is probably due to the fact that Joseph Smith did not yet believe that there were three distinct persons in the godhead at the time he wrote it.
This is consistent with the book of Mormon, and other revelations written up until this point, which present the Father, Son and Spirit as modalites of the same God, not seperate and distinct persons.
When Smith’s view changed, he doctored his revelations to make room for his new view. The first vision account was rewritten to include two personages. The book of Mormon was edited. Where the original called Mary the “Mother of God”, the text was changed to say “Mother of the Son of God” in 1837 (If I remember correctly there are atleast four changes where “God” is replaced with “Son of God”.
The book of Moses creation account from the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible says “God” created the heavens and the earth. In the later book of Abraham account it says “the Gods”.
When the lectures on faith were written and published in the Doctrine & Covenants, the Holy Spirit was called the “common mind” of the Father and the Son, not a seperate person. And it stated that the Father was a personage of spirit, while the Son had a body of flesh and bone. It was later removed from the D&C.
What most mormons do, is read back into the early revelations concepts that were invented by Joseph Smith later. And Smith himself had no problem with altering revelations already received according to his new views, interpolating hundreds of words into a single text. Names of people he had seen in heaven in his “visions” were crossed out and replaced with others when they left the LDS church, new ideas about prieshood were added into already published revelations, even his own ordination etc…
What I find ironic is that such evidence is far stronger than anything I have seen the LDS apologists in here, bring against the Catholic Church.
I find this to be characteristic of religious organisations like the mormons and the Jehovah’s witnesses. They are extremely good at finding weaknesses in the religious belief systems of others, but are blind to their own, even though they may be ten times worse.
Vidar