V
Vidar
Guest
TOmNossor:
I have been reading many of your posts on this forum. I am not going to argue early Catholic Church history at length with you.
However, I think you are operating on a double standard. Apply the same standard to your own religion, and you will face a few problems.
However, nobody disputes (as far as I know) that David Whitmer left the LDS church on account of novelties being introduced into mormonism.
The understanding of the godhead developed signigicantly during the first 15 years of your religion. What started out as modalism in BOM developed into your present plurality of gods. The Holy Spirit was not even presented as a person in D&C, but as the “common mind” of the Father and the Son.
“Behold, I am he who was prepared from the foundation of the world to redeem my people. Behold I am Jesus Christ. ***I am the Father and the Son. ***In me shall all mankind have light… they shall become my sons and my daughters.” (Ether 3:14)
The oldest first vision account (from 1832) also lends support to this idea. Marvin S. Hill, professor of american history at BYU says about the first vision account:
"It seems to me that everybody has approached the issue from the wrong end, by starting with the 1838 official version when the account they should be considering is that of 1832. Merely on the face of it, the 1832 version stands a better chance of being more accurate and unembellished than the 1838 account… I am inclined to agree that the religious turmoil that Joseph described which led to some family members joining the Presbyterians and to much sectarian bitterness does not fit well into the 1820 context detailed by Backman. For one thing, it does not seem likely that there could have been heavy sectarian strife in 1820 and then a joint revival where all was harmony in 1824. In addition, as Walters notes, Lucy Mack Smith said the revival where she became interested in a particular sect came after Alvin’s death, thus almost certainly in early 1824… An 1824 revival creates problems for the 1838 account, not that of 1832…
"At any rate, if Joseph Smith in 1838 read back into 1820 some details of a revival that occurred in 1824,there is no reason to conclude that he invented his religious experiences… "*Giving priority to the 1832 account**also makes it more understandable why Oliver Cowdery got his story tangled… If initially Joseph said one personage came to him in 1820,*it became easier for Oliver Cowdery to confuse this visit with the coming of Moroni than it would have been a few years later when Joseph taught emphatically that there were three separate personages in the Godhead.
There is far more I could mention. But the point is this: There has been signigicant development in your own religion. Attributing it to ongoning revelation is not good enough. Clearly Joseph Smiths understanding of a lot things developed during his life, and this colored his revelations, even to the point where he had to rewrite and republish them.
If your arguments from history against the Catholic Church invalidates its claim to be founded by Jesus Christ, then the same kind of arguments will invalidate your own church. IMHO, such arguments against the LDS church are far stronger than yours due to the nature and quantity of the evidence.
Vidar
I have been reading many of your posts on this forum. I am not going to argue early Catholic Church history at length with you.
However, I think you are operating on a double standard. Apply the same standard to your own religion, and you will face a few problems.
- There is little evidence that Joseph Smith intended to restore the true Church when the “Church of Christ” (which was it’s original name) was first founded. Rather it seems, he intended to restore a true (local) church which he hoped would influence the other denomenations around him to accept the BOM. His understanding seems to have developed after none of the mainstream churches would accept his claims.
- There is not a trace of evidence for the notion of the Melchisedek priesthood in the first years of the church Smith founded. It was invented later, and the book of commandments was doctored to include a historical event which wasn’t there in the first edition. There is no evidence that anybody had heard of this event before the altered book of commandments (Doctrine and Covenants) was published. This among other things caused David Whitmer to leave the early LDS church.
However, nobody disputes (as far as I know) that David Whitmer left the LDS church on account of novelties being introduced into mormonism.
The understanding of the godhead developed signigicantly during the first 15 years of your religion. What started out as modalism in BOM developed into your present plurality of gods. The Holy Spirit was not even presented as a person in D&C, but as the “common mind” of the Father and the Son.
“Behold, I am he who was prepared from the foundation of the world to redeem my people. Behold I am Jesus Christ. ***I am the Father and the Son. ***In me shall all mankind have light… they shall become my sons and my daughters.” (Ether 3:14)
The oldest first vision account (from 1832) also lends support to this idea. Marvin S. Hill, professor of american history at BYU says about the first vision account:
"It seems to me that everybody has approached the issue from the wrong end, by starting with the 1838 official version when the account they should be considering is that of 1832. Merely on the face of it, the 1832 version stands a better chance of being more accurate and unembellished than the 1838 account… I am inclined to agree that the religious turmoil that Joseph described which led to some family members joining the Presbyterians and to much sectarian bitterness does not fit well into the 1820 context detailed by Backman. For one thing, it does not seem likely that there could have been heavy sectarian strife in 1820 and then a joint revival where all was harmony in 1824. In addition, as Walters notes, Lucy Mack Smith said the revival where she became interested in a particular sect came after Alvin’s death, thus almost certainly in early 1824… An 1824 revival creates problems for the 1838 account, not that of 1832…
"At any rate, if Joseph Smith in 1838 read back into 1820 some details of a revival that occurred in 1824,there is no reason to conclude that he invented his religious experiences… "*Giving priority to the 1832 account**also makes it more understandable why Oliver Cowdery got his story tangled… If initially Joseph said one personage came to him in 1820,*it became easier for Oliver Cowdery to confuse this visit with the coming of Moroni than it would have been a few years later when Joseph taught emphatically that there were three separate personages in the Godhead.
Code:
"*The Tanners make much of the argument that Joseph Smith changed his view of the Godhead. There is a good deal of evidence that his understanding grew on many points of theology... If, as the Tanners argue, Joseph grew in his understanding of the nature of the Godhead,**this does not provide evidence of his disingenuousness*...
"*It seems to me that if the Latter-day Saints can accept the idea that Joseph gained his full understanding of the nature of God only after a period of time, instead of its emerging fullblown in 1820, then most of the difficulties with chronology can be resolved... As James Allen shows, Joseph never cited his vision with respect to the nature of the Godhead. This use of the vision came long afterward*." (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought*, *Summer 1982, pp. 39-41)
If your arguments from history against the Catholic Church invalidates its claim to be founded by Jesus Christ, then the same kind of arguments will invalidate your own church. IMHO, such arguments against the LDS church are far stronger than yours due to the nature and quantity of the evidence.
Vidar