S
Synneve
Guest
So am I.I am thankful that discerning truth is not just for those with the longest degrees and honors list.
Of course he does.God uses the simple to confound the wise.
But you raised the issue of reading, and you announced that everything you’ve read paints Joseph Smith as a self-serving fraud. I don’t doubt for a moment that everything you’ve read about him paints him so. But, plainly, you’ve haven’t read much, and you’re unwilling to read much, and your denunciation of “propaganda” comes across as deeply ironic, and your professed devotion to “facts” seems very hollow:
Indeed.If you think those books are great, thats wonderful for you. I have not read those books and I have NO interest in reading them.
I didn’t say that I hadn’t read it. I have read it. And very much on that topic besides.If you think the website you have not read is “propaganda” before you even read it, thats your perrogative. And it’s what I expected.
(Which is, perhaps, not precisely what you had expected.)
If you think that most of the items you listed are primary sources, you apparently don’t know the meaning of the term primary source. Your list consists almost entirely of secondary sources.But I am curious what bones you have to pick with the Bibliography of the site - a fine collection of primary sources:
What do I think of them? I think they’re worth reading. I’ve read them. In fact, I own all of them. And the author of In Sacred Loneliness has been a friend of mine for nearly thirty years.
I think they’re all part of the conversation. As are such items as
mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=10&num=2&id=291
mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=10&num=2&id=290
and, most recently,
mi.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=20&num=2&id=721
None of which, it goes without saying, you’ll be willing to read. But at least one or two others here may want to inform themselves before pronouncing on this subject. At a very minimum, it’s safer that way.