Dan Vogel wrote:
It was actually a rewrite of Joseph Smith's June 1829 revelation (D&C 18), which had assigned Cowdery and David Whitmer the task of naming 12 apostles, and that the 12 would then ordain priests and teachers. This revelation essentially cut Cowdery out of the hierarchy, which also ran counter to what he and the Whitmers believed a church government should be like. Cowdery's revelation declared himself to be an apostle, and called him to organize the church by ordaining priests and teachers. Joseph Smith declared it of the devil, but when he organized the church the following year he didn't organize 12 apostles. Instead, he said an elder was an apostle. This was a compromise with OC and his supporters. Not until after Cowdery was made co-president in December 1834 was the Quorum of 12 organized. There is more, but that will do for now. I would much rather pursue the Spalding theory.
Well, I did not mean to imply that each and every "revealed" tenet from Cowdery's document made it into the D&C --
only that it was a precursor to the final text and that it appears to have influenced that final text -- and that the Cowdery
document is steeped in Book of Mormon language and allusions. Clearly he at least expected the contents to be taken seriously by
somebody. My thoughts are that the document may help provide insight into how Cowdery and Smith may have worked
together on "divine" texts, with Smith being the final editor or final voice, but with Oliver providing input nevertheless.
It is not immediately relevant to whether or not parts of the Book of Mormon resemble Spalding's extant writings. However, in
anticipation of the forthcoming word-print analysis, which I am seeing in the preliminary drafts, I feel that the Cowdery
"revelation" and its relationship with the language of certain parts of the Book of Mormon may yet become a subject of interest.
Art and I do not agree on every jot and tittle of theorizing -- which is probably for the best.
I want some solid 1820s information on Oliver before I make so many decisions about him as Art has done. Since he
was a minor during that period, it is difficult to find him in preserved records. If his father was indeed a Mason, Oliver
could have become one also at the reduced age of 18 -- perhaps mention of him will yet turn up in some lodge records.
I am looking into that, for "Kirtland" in Auburn right now.
As for single source or multiple-source hearsay -- I suppose each investigator must come to his/her conclusions. When
the single source is an eye-witness, the whole matter gets even more problematic. There are a dozen different events
where I'm tempted to trust John C. Bennett's eye-witness testimony -- but think it best to match him against the public
records, rather than trusting any confirming second, third, or fourth accounts.
The subject of Spalding has been so belittled over the last 80 years or so, that I cannot expect any LDS or RLDS
archivist or investigator to volunteer hitherto unexamined source documents. I might as well ask them for primary
sources on Ed Decker, or something. Still, I am hopeful that solid evidence will be turned up -- if only somebody
would take the time to look.
Dan Vogel wrote:As I said, I'm trying to examine the Spalding theory as a phenomenon. It's too easy to jump ahead and quote from sources that reflect later developments. Those sources can't be understood in context and assessed for reliability until one knows the developments. One can't just look for similarities. A number of sources "confirm" Spalding's MS was about the lost tribes, but how meaningful is that when that is not what the Book of Mormon is about?
It would be helpful to you, had Patterson said that the manuscript brought to his attention was about Romans, or
was terribly unfinished, or was not the same one that the widow later brought to him -- or anything.
A final thought: Spalding may have written a lost tribes story that superficially resembled the Book of Mormon,
but was not so close a match as some witnesses say. In fact the Mormons used to argue that very possibility in
the years before 1884. It remains a largely unexplored option -- neither Mormons nor Spalding advocates having
much use for such ideas in the wake of the Honolulu discovery.
Dale