viewtopic.php?f=5&t=1591
The first Joseph Smith account of the Grove Vision is in the Kirtland letter book. Yes, this is the version Joseph F. Smith cut out of the letter book and hide in his safe because the account didn't match the accepted narrative. This account was hidden and only recently made publicly available.
The letter book account is undated. The church dates this account to 1832. This dating has always been a head scratcher to me, since the dating seems to be out of order with Joseph's evolving theology.
Specifically, in Oliver's 1834 history the Gold Plate Vision was the First Vision, and yet Joseph never corrected the confusion even though this false narrative was widely circulated by the “Messenger and Advocate” in Kirtland in 1834. Why would this be the case if Joseph knew the Grove Vision story in 1832? maybe the Grove Vision story wasn't known to Joseph in 1834?
The church admits http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper- ... cal-)intro
“In the early 1830s, when this history was written, it appears that JS had not broadcast the details of his first vision of Deity. The history of the church, as it was then generally understood, began with the gold plates. John Whitmer mentioned in his history “the commencement of the church history commencing at the time of the finding of the plates” ,
In other words no one seems to know about the Grove Vision and everyone accepted what got the ball rolling was the Gold Plate Vision, until when? The letter book account of the Grove Vision was also never publicly known about.
The first account of the Grove Vision is in the Kirtland letter book starts here http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper- ... erbook-1/7
The Kirtland letter book #1 can be seen here http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper- ... tterbook-1
The format of the letter book is 3 blank pages, an index page (a table of contents, unnumbered, appears to be an insert on different kind of paper), a blank page, the JS history pages numbering 1-6, and then letters numbering 1,2,3....... The Joseph history section and the letter section page numbers restart at 1.
- The Joseph Smith history account is undated
- The church claims the account is written in Joseph's own handwriting and scribe Frederick G. Williams.
Williams did not start acting as a scribe until Feb 1832, and moved to Far West and was excommunicated in 1837.
- It is not clear if the Joseph Smith history in the letter book was a copy, or was the original. The church's historian's opinion seems to weigh towards an original.
- The history abruptly ends
The church's arguments for the historical 1832 dating of the Joseph Smith letterbook history are here http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper- ... ical-intro
Summarizing the church's key points for the 1832 dating of the Joseph Smith history:
- 1. The book was first used to record Joseph's history in 1832, later re-purposed to record letters in chronological order starting in late 1832. Joseph's history appears on pages preceding the first letters.
- 2. Williams claims “I commencd writing for Joseph Smith Jr July 20th 1832 as may be seen by S Rigdon permission dated as above.”
- 3. The changing lexicon regarding the priesthood, the Joseph Smith history refers to the first (lesser) priesthood as the “holy priesthood”, but after the Sept 1832 priesthood revelation the term “holy” only referred to the higher priesthood.
- 4. Williams appointment as a scribe and the priesthood revelation lexicon change place the date between July 1832 to Sept 1832.
An alternative hypothesis is that the letter book was first used to record letters and the Joseph Smith history was added sometime later on some blank spare pages that were at the start of the letter book. These blank pages were intended for logs, indexes, table of contents, as new letters were added, etc..
Some points backing this idea up are:
- The page numbering of the history section and the letter section restarts at 1, possibly indicating the Joseph Smith history was added after the letter section had already been started and pages were numbered.
- The Joseph Smith history abruptly ends, almost as if the author ran out of pages to write on (the next page is the beginning of the letter section).
- Fredrick Williams produced an index see http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper- ... erbook-1/5 of what was in the letter book at that time. With the last entry being dated Jan 1833. This index DOES NOT include the JS history narrative. It is entirely missing, implying the history was written sometime after Jan 1833. Cue apologetic response of “lack of evidence is …”.
Looking at each of the church's points
- 1. The ordering of the pages may not matter since there are other explanations, such as the ordering of each section restarts at 1, the author of the Joseph Smith history appear to run out of space, and the index produced by Williams implies the Joseph Smith history was not there in Jan 1833.
- 2. Williams does not specify what he was writing in July 1832, there were numerous other revelations, letters etc.. being dictated by Joseph at the time. This just establishes the earliest possible date.
- 3. The changing lexicon regarding the priesthood, after the Sept 1832 priesthood revelation the term “holy” only referred to the higher priesthood.
In Oliver Cowdrey's 1834 history, see https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Letters_ ... s/Letter_I page 8, Oliver is describing the restoration of the Aaronic Priesthood.
“ when we received under his hand the holy priesthood, as he said, "upon you my fellow servants, in the name of Messiah I confer this priesthood and this authority, which shall remain upon earth, that the sons of Levi may yet offer an offering unto the Lord in righteousness! “”
Oliver clearly uses the word “holy” in 1834 to describe the lesser priesthood. Oliver the 2nd elder of the church apparently did NOT get the memo, not to use the word “holy”.
- 4. The dating of 1832 for the Joseph Smith history account boils down to the use of the word “holy” which is a very weak argument, there are bound to be other cases where Oliver, or other leaders , or Joseph himself use the word “holy” when talking about the Aaronic Priesthood. How do we not know that Joseph's use of the word “holy” in the letter book account was not a mistake made by Joseph similar to Oliver's mistake?
Seems to me, that to be honest the church should not claim a dating of 1832 for the first Joseph Smith First Vision account, but a range of dates from 1832 to 1837.
I'm of the opinion that the church MUST date the Joseph Smith letter book account to 1832 in order to negate Oliver's 1834 history.