Drifting writes:
You may not agree with me but you cannot show me anything from the materials used in...
Primary teaching
Seminary teaching
Institute teaching
Sunday School teaching
Investigator teaching
...that mentions anything other than the mechanism of using the spactacles and breastplate known as the Urim & Thummim as the method of translating the Book of Mormon.
I think we continue to talk past each other. These don't describe the mechanism. Mostly they quote the JSH. I don't think that is inappropriate. I think that what you are asking for is in fact inappropriate within the context of these lessons. We aren't going to move beyond this point.
So, on the subject of how the Book of Mormon was translated what do you think the Church ought to do?
I think the Church does a fine job. I am far less interested (and most people I know who have the remotest interest) are far less interested in this detail than they are in discussing what I might term the real method of translation - which is discussing the reliability of the translation, discussing the issue that has come to be known as loose or tight translation, to talk about idioms in the text and the reliance of the text on various potential sources. These are dealing with the method of translation. Whether Joseph sees writing in the interpreters found with the plates or in his seer stone, and whether he used a hat to block the light to make it easier to see - that is not a part of the method of translation. It is a non-issue caused by wanting to examine the Book of Mormon as an artifact as opposed to a text that provides religious and theological discourse. In the limited space in the church curriculum as a teacher, I would be opposed to having to spend time on this discussion. It is that simple. I would rather spend my time discussing the text. I can find this other information as I need to. It isn't a problem.
Bearing in mind that Elder Jensen believes something needs to be done and, arguably, if the Church did a better job of presenting an honest account of its history and doctrine then boards like this probably wouldn't be so popular.
I also agree with Elder Jensen - but I am also absolutely certain that he would agree with me (against your point of view) that the curriculum courses are not the place to put this. Particularly this insignificant issue. This isn't something that is intentionally being hid. It something that simply isn't necessary or even that significant in carrying out what the church sees as its mission.
In following through with this, I find a certain amount of absurdity in the suggestion that people will lose their testimony after finding out that Joseph Smith saw an angel, dug up the gold plates, and translated them using his seer stone as opposed to finding out that Joseph Smith saw an angel, dug up the gold plates, and translated them using a pair of magic spectacles. You even seemed to agree with me on this. So I don't think this is an issue of embarrassment. I don't think its terribly coherent to charge that the church is hiding one inconvenient truth (in you view) with another. I think in this particular example, there is simply the desire to create a distorted view to continue an assault on the church.
What is the significant value of articulating the lesser used method of using the Urim & Thummim as opposed to the more prevalent rock in a hat process?
It isn't articulated. That's part of the point. The manuals tend to stick with as authoritative sources as they can (in this case the JHS). But the manuals don't actually describe Joseph looking through the Urim and Thummim at a text. At the very best we get statements that say that Joseph used the Urim and Thummim to translate (which he did). I think that you have over-read what is there, interpreted in ways that weren't intended, but which suit your argument. And in doing so, you completely miss whatever point the manual was trying to make. It might be even an intentional misreading.
At the point those sources make the claim to be God's one true Church led and inspired by Christ himself.
I am not following you here. I think this is just an attempt to cry angel - to avoid making a serious response. None of the manuals make the claim to be absolutely true. None of them claim to be written by Christ himself. And in fact, whether there was a hat or not seems to have absolutely zero bearing on the question of whether or not the Church is led by inspiration and is a "true Church" (whatever that phrase actually means). But once more, you have succeeded in shifting the dialogue away from a reasonable question about what the church should be obligated to provide in the context of carrying out what it views as its mission.
Ben M.