But this isn't an accurate statement Drifting either.So the entire Book of Mormon was produced without the use of the Urim & Thummim but with Joseph's face in a hat reading words off a rock.
And I am asking why this is so important. I think it is a relevant question. In fact, I want to know why it is of such import that we have visual depictions (I assume, of course, that you want to insist on the visual aspect because we do have other versions that aren't visual that do discuss this method). So what makes this such a sensitive issue for just the visual depictions.Show me where the Church teaches or depicts visually that method.
This is a completely nonsensical argument. If the church feared that this would become common knowledge, then it wouldn't have such a clear description published in the Ensign by an apostle. More than that, I really question on a fundamental level what it is that you think the church is afraid of? Do you think the church is afraid of introducing some sort of supernatural element into the equation? If that were true, then why all the pictures of angels? Why does the church over-emphasize the fact that Joseph couldn't translate on his own for beans - that he could only produce the Book of Mormon with divine assistance? At what point, as I noted, did the face in the hat somehow become a bigger element in the narrative than the angel? I think that the obsession over this isn't based on any coherent narrative.The fact that you can't proves the point that the Church is fearing this becoming common knowledge. Worse, the Church forwards a gross deception by not articulating it this way when teaching about the translation.
You do that. But most of them are already told this. They don't convert people by explaining its history - they convert people who read it and receive a witness from the Holy Ghost.Good to know, i'll let the Missionaries know.
That's right. But then, and I think this is rather a part of this discussion - such a depiction would be problematic - because, after all, it wouldn't be as useful in attempting to depict what was going on. You see this event in what seems to be such a single dimension that you completely ignore everything else. And yet, it is one of the most insignificant parts of the events being described. I think that the perspective you present is badly flawed.But not one with Joseph's face in a hat.....
It isn't. And you haven't justified this. This is a depiction of an event. What is the event being depicted? The translation of the Gold Plates through the power of God. There are, of course, other things missing (depending on the description you want to use). We don't see the curtain. We do see the plates (which generally weren't even in the same room when the seer stone was being used). But, such a depiction of Joseph with his face in a hat offers so little context as to make it practically useless for the purposes that I assume that the church uses the art that they do use. At the same time, we come back to your emphasis on the art. And if there was only art you might have a point - but, there isn't. The church certainly has never tried to suggest that this translation was done in any normative sense, with lexicons and grammars ....So if its irrelevant why does the Church teach and depict an incorrect method?
It seemed an easy enough question. Why can't you answer it?No I can't.
Perhaps you would be much more clear about what you mean when you say "deception". Deception involves involves an intention to convince someone that you believe something that you do not. What is it that the church is trying to teach that is deceptive?So why does the Church persist in perpetrating this deception?
Ben M.