Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 am
Ahh, ok, you are the guy I want to have the throw down with.
Sorry, I'm unlikely to satisfy that desire for you. I suspect I agree with you too much for that to happen.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 amI agree that all people should have forgiveness in the next life. I make no exception to that rule. Thus, in that way I will give Brother Joseph a break.
I'm not talking about the next life. I'm pretty skeptical it exists. Even if it does, it's unknowable and I'm not likely to accept someone else's word on it, so it's pretty pointless to concern myself with it.
You may have missed my qualifier, though. I said, "I can forgive Joseph his sins, as I hope mine might also be forgiven, when he or I turn from them." I don't know that Joseph turned from his sins. Maybe he might have turned from them if he had lived longer.
Mostly, though, I'm not interested in setting myself up as judge for Joseph. It's not worth my energy. Sure, he did lots of things wrong, but so did lots of other historical people. From a historical perspective it's interesting, but as an expenditure of personal energy, it doesn't gain me much.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 amBut, I disagree that his conduct and misdeeds is fundamentally insignificant to how we are expected to live our life today.
I assure you Joseph's conduct and misdeeds are quite insignificant in how I expect to live my life.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 amSo much of today's church is
based on his integrity. Here are three things that we need to take his word for it when we orient our life around the current church:
- The First Vision
- That he was really translating (i.e. were words really appearing on the stone)
- that he was receiving revelation from God which is now found in the D&C
Quite separately from Joseph's conduct and misdeeds, those things clearly didn't happen in the literal, simplistic way the modern church claims they did. It's a little unclear or inconsistent what Joseph actually claimed on some of those, but the modern church's narrative on them is clearly wrong.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 amThose three things encompass a lot of stuff. We literally just have to take his word for it that they happened as he said it happened.
Let's stop right there. How did Joseph say it it happened? We would need to establish that first. In the case of the First Vision, we have several different accounts, which don't exactly cohere. The only thing that's really clear is that Joseph claimed to have had a spiritual experience that mightily affected his life. I'm inclined to accept that claim, as it's not particularly unusual. All the rest of it is subject to later interpretation, by Joseph or others.
I'm unclear on just what Joseph said about how he translated, other than that it was by the power and gift of god. Or his muse. Or something like that. From what I know about writing in general, and automatic writing specifically, I think the description that the words appeared in the mind of the author is not particularly unusual.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 amThis places a lot of focus on his character right? Now, if I am to orient my life around a man, why wouldn't I want him to reflect
my ideals, which are 21st century ideals? And if he doesn't reflect those ideals, why can that not be be a fundamental issue? How does it not matter that he was quick to lie about things, when we are taking his word for other things? How does it not matter that a big part of the current church focuses around sexual purity and monogamy, and Joseph was neither?
Oh, heavens, what a silly idea! Orient my life around a man? Why would I do that? (Though admittedly, I've oriented my life around a woman, but that's the sort of thing monogamous straight men tend to do.) It would take at least a major god, not even a minor one, for me to want to orient my life around. It would have to be a god worth worshiping, certainly not one that demands my worship.
Besides, is it really possible to orient your life around Joseph as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints? It seems that the Church holds up a distorted idolatrous image of Joseph, but long ago abandoned Joseph's ideas and practices. In some significant ways, it is more Brigham's church than Joseph's, but it's really mostly the modern institutional church. And as far as I'm concerned, it's clearly got flaws and isn't worth orienting my life around.
Emower wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2017 8:53 am
If the church wants to go ahead and disavow Joseph Smith and all that crap, and say hey, just focus on the 21st century church for your instruction, fine. But they dont, and they wont, which makes it a fundamental issue does it not?
While I agree that's a valid criticism of the modern church, there is plenty more to criticize them about. From my perspective that's more a symptom of their fundamental flaws than the fundamental flaw itself.