why me wrote:...
That was quite a risk to take for a conman, knowing the risk of loss. However, if Smith was a conartist I just can't see him not having a copy of the manuscript. And he certainly would not give out his only copy.
...
Con men who are convinced that they are acting under the
direction of supernatural powers are, no doubt, a breed unto
themselves.
If we were to make a list of the most famous frauds, who
actually believed that God was directing their actions, whose
name would go at the top of that list?
Mohammed?
Lucia dos Santos?
Simon bar Kochba?
Father Divine?
Sun Myung Moon?
Muhammad Ahmad?
Ann Lee?
Richard Brothers?
Joseph C. Dylkes?
If Joseph Smith, Jr. truly believed that he was conducting his
religious fraud under Divine direction, he would have had no
qualms about bringing forth the Book of Mormon, no matter
the setbacks.
Mormons say that an angel came to him in 1828 and took
away his plates and his urim and thummim -- and yet the con
man prevailed in the end. I suppose that he knew that he
would always prevail -- right down to the summer of 1844.
Why else would a con man put his own family -- his own
mother and father -- his own person in mortal danger at
Far West, Missouri in 1838, with Missouri Militia rifles loaded
and aimed across the Mormon barricades?
More likely Joe just could not remember how Martin spelled
out the names of all of those kings, from Nephi's son on down
to Mosiah's father -- and thus had to discard the "lost"
Book of Lehi. Strange, that God did not intervene and help
Joe produce an exact duplicate of that "lost" book, eh?
UD