Polygamy Porter wrote:So entertain my inquiry Ray, You believe the Book of Mormon to be the divine word of a God? Do you believe that Joe was not a charlatan? So you believe that one book authored(in part) by old Joe to be divine, but what about the other books that he wrote like the Book of Abraham, Moses, D&C???
It is what I believe, yes. I believe that for people in a spiritual frame of mind (who want to live that way) it's a real spiritual booster. Now don't get me wrong, I am no holy man, I live a very worldly life now and wouldn't qualify to be a Mormon, much less go to the temple. But I cannot forget how the Book of Mormon was my anchor in stronger times. It gave me the strength to resist temptation and to live a far better life. So to me it's not a fraud, and I believe it came to Joseph Smith through a process of automatic writing, not translation. However, for all those who consider it a fraud, that's their choice. I don't try to convince them otherwise. I don't contribute to FARMS or any apologetics.
"Joe" was not a charlatan, in my opinion. Dan Vogel has outlined how he believes Joseph Smith was a "pious fraud". I've had some discussions with Dan about this, and he has said that painting Joseph Smith as an outright fraud is too simplistic. It does not account for other aspects of his character. If anything I think Joseph had some delusions and misconceptions, and he was far from perfect, but I do not believe that he deliberately set out to deceive people. I think he
really believed in what he was doing. To give an example, I knew a lady in 1981 who predicted that the second coming would occur in 1992. She was adamant that this was a specific revelation to her. I believed she was wrong, and told her so. In December 1992, after I was out of the church, I wrote her and asked if she still believed her prophecy. She wrote back saying, "1992 is not over yet". Would you say she was a fraud? I think she believed this until ten seconds before midnight on December 31st 1992. The "fraud" labels are sometimes too explicit and thrown about flippantly, especially in the religious arena.
I don't feel about the other standard works as I do about the Book of Mormon. I like selected portions of the D&C, and also believe that section 121 is inspired. I think if Joseph had stopped with the Book of Mormon that would have been sufficient. That to me, is "pure Mormonism". I am with David Whitmer on this. I believe the church evolved into a religious bureaucracy, which was criticised even by Nibley. From sacred grove to sacral power structure.
I am also not an apologist for anything. I have my personal beliefs in regard to the Book of Mormon, and I keep them to myself (unless when asked questions like these). Remember too that the RLDS do not believe the Book of Mormon is history, yet they have a fairly vibrant spiritual community who are not over-zealous. Believe it or not, people can find worth in a book that isn't literal history. I think too that the cause of all the disaffection in Mormonism comes from this literalism, and from either re-writing history or by acts of omission, for example there are records that state Moroni appeared to Joseph Smith in a dream. This would explain how he could have this vision while sleeping in a roomfull of his siblings, but it's not something you're going to hear widely discussed in Sunday School, because they don't want to hear it. The mind becomes attuned only to what builds faith in the literalism. And that is the problem. I don't believe Mormonism is the "only true religion", but I don't believe it is as demonic as some portray it. I'm not angry about giving 13 years of my life to it. I'm not angry "they" didn't give me the full picture. I studied and discovered the facts for myself. In 1975 I was a "religious seeker", and did not have a critical mind because I was searching for "religious truth". I could have, but didn't go to libraries to check up and see if what the missionaries told me was true. I could have gotten hold on Tanner materials then if I wanted, but I had different needs then, and was not interested. I did this eight years after I joined. So was that the church's fault. If you think so, you are really kidding yourself. There is something called personal accountability for our lives and our choices. When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.