This is for encouragement, ideas, and support for people going through a faith transition no matter where you hope to end up. This is also the place to laugh, cry, and love together.
What is it about? Is it Oliver witnessing Joseph and Fanny in the barn? If it is the 3/8 witnesses, I hope it shows them using their spiritual eyes. I have no desire to see this in theaters....
This feels like one of those releases that will be seen by the diehards but talked about by everyone for a short period before it's forgotten.
The trailer makes it look like it will address some of the problems with the stories (it looks like they have clips of historians/apologists talking), but I have a feeling they'll do it in a way that doesn't expose anyone to the real problems.
I'm sure they'll cover the First Vision, but which one? Same with the priesthood restoration... and on and on and on.
LSOF wrote: ↑Wed Jun 02, 2021 5:36 pm
It will be just like God's Not Dead, except with a much smaller and more niche audience.
It will mostly be seen by people who are told, like the people who read the FAIR newsletter, "you need to support this." I predict a massive flop. It won't be like Meet the People Formerly Known as Mormons, where church leaders were pretty much ordering people to go, and stakes were buying out entire theaters.
“The easy confidence with which I know another man's religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also.” -Mark Twain
Jesus: "The Kingdom of God is within you." The Buddha: "Be your own light."
And not to be a jerk, but getting the movie in 350 theaters is extremely cheap and easy right now given that there are only a few new movies currently in theaters and they'd be happy to take anything that could bring in some foot traffic.
I knew that the printer's manuscript showed all of the witnesses' signatures in Oliver Cowdery's handwriting, and some have seen this as evidence that the witnesses never actually signed anything themselves. But I guess the apologetic claim is that they all signed the original manuscript, which was in the cornerstone of the Nauvoo House until water damage destroyed the part that would have included the signatures.
There's a note on the Joseph Smith Papers site that I'm not sure what to make of in light of the above:
Joseph F. Smith and Orson Pratt pointed out to Whitmer in 1878 that the signatures on the witness pages were copied and not original signatures, whereupon Smith suggested “that perhaps there were two copies of the manuscript, But Mr. Whitmer replied that according to the best of his Knowledge there never was but the one copy.” Following an inspection of the manuscript in 1884, James H. Hart reported a conversation with Whitmer, wherein Hart stated “that it looked very much as though it was the original copy,” going on to explain that “it would in fact take considerable more evidence than I had seen to convince me that it was not the original and only written copy.” Whitmer responded in the affirmative, “I know, positively, that it is so.” (J. F. Smith to J. Taylor et al., 17 Sept. 1878; James H. Hart, “About the Book of Mormon,” Deseret Evening News [Salt Lake City], 25 Mar. 1884, [2].)
Thanks for the warning. I will cautiously anticipate which extended family member is excited to see this film and wants to invite me. But why bother when it I anticipate it will be available on DVD for $15 at the FAIR conference this year? And then for free on BYUTV.com next year?
Here is a small scene from the movie involving Fanny Alger (the girl from the barn) and the Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Bank. Don't look for historical accuracy or good acting.
moksha wrote: ↑Sat Jun 05, 2021 1:26 am
Here is a small scene from the movie involving Fanny Alger (the girl from the barn) and the Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Bank. Don't look for historical accuracy or good acting.
Awww man. I was going to look for the historical inaccuracy and bad acting. But the video has been taken down!
Well, I'm better than dirt! Ah, well... most kinds of dirt; not that fancy store-bought dirt; that stuff is loaded with nutrients. I can't compete with that stuff. -Moe Sizlack