Shulem wrote:mentalgymnast wrote: The Book of Abraham was canonized. I never had any argument with the fact that Joseph Smith's handprints are on the Book of Abraham.
Indeed, it can't be argued that the book is canonized, that's a fact. It can, however, be argued that there are more than just Smith's handprints on the Book of Abraham. As far as the world is concerned, the book is a product from the mind and thoughts of Smith -- writing words on paper with an ink pen. The saints take it further and believe God revealed the contents of Abraham's original work to Smith's mind through the Spirit of direct/divine revelation.mentalgymnast wrote: The Book of Abraham contains/teaches essential doctrines of the church that I believe make sense in my mind and heart.
I can appreciate that. People have a right to feel good about what they believe.mentalgymnast wrote: I see the Book of Abraham as a book of scripture in the same sense that I would see Isaiah in the Old Testament as being a book of scripture.
I don't care about Isaiah or biblical records. Those works are of a different class altogether than the collective works of Mormonism. But I get it that you consider the Book of Abraham to be on par with Isaiah.mentalgymnast wrote: Do they both have their controversies attached to them? Sure. Did the writer(s) of Isaiah have their own humanness mixed in with the Isaiah text? Sure.
Isaiah and Joseph Smith were human. They put their thoughts to paper and called it scripture. Not everyone believes it and for good reason.mentalgymnast wrote: I believe that Joseph may have also had his own handprints in the Book of Abraham also.
Why do you say, "may"? There really is no "may" about it. The entire Book of Abraham presentation in the Times and Seasons came from the mind of Joseph Smith. Whether he wrote it down or dictated, it came from the mind of Joseph Smith. Forget the handprints. We are talking about thoughts from the human mind transformed into words. Now, if you want to claim that a higher power such as the Holy Spirit was helping him with his thoughts that takes it to a different level. But, the Book of Abraham came from the translator Joseph Smith. That's a proven fact. What's not proven is that some other higher power helped him think up and express the content.mentalgymnast wrote: The way that it was serialized in Nauvoo and the time constraints/deadlines for publication and the public's need for more...entertainment value(?)...would all weigh on those producing the Book of Abraham narrative/text.
Don't forget that Joseph Smith proclaimed a revelation from God to the Twelve that the printing press management was under direct care from the Holy Spirit, thus God was at the helm.Joseph Smith, History of the Church wrote:I received the following revelation to the Twelve concerning the Times and Seasons.
Revelation
Verily thus saith the Lord unto you, my servant Joseph, go and say unto the Twelve, that it is my will to have them take in hand the editorial department of the Times and Seasons, according to that manifestation which shall be given unto them by the power of my Holy Spirit in the midst of their counsel, saith the Lord. Amen.mentalgymnast wrote: If there are elements that are controversial and/or found to be fabricated/imagined in order to increase 'audience appeal', that would not surprise me in the least.
What do you mean by, "If"? Are you not already convinced that there are controversial matters about the production of the Book of Abraham which are difficult to explain let alone defend? I'm surprised that you would not be surprised to learn that there could be fabricated/imagined elements added into the Book of Abraham presentation of the Times and Seasons to increase audience appeal. I'm honestly surprised you'd entertain that notion considering the power of the Holy Spirit was in the midst of their counsel.mentalgymnast wrote:
That being said, I don't know that this would negate the possibility of Joseph having received revelation within the Book of Abraham narrative that teaches essential eternal truths in more detail...such as the pre-mortal spirit of man...first/second estate...etc.
You don't know? Obviously your testimony of this particular aspect is on shaky ground. I can appreciate that. I get that you're happy with the premortal doctrine and certain eternal things mentioned in the book, so you'll just take the whole thing as is and hope for the best. I understand your position.mentalgymnast wrote: And yes, I know some of these 'eternal truths' were being tossed around at the time and were 'in the air'. But that doesn't surprise me either that Joseph Smith and his companions would bring in 'truth' from wherever it might have sprung up in that fertile environment at the time.
I understand that. Things do tend to get around and people borrow from others to make their own stuff. You remind me of Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant who confessed in an interview to a little bit of honest thievery in producing great music.
See this 32 second clip:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdLYtJbbFNomentalgymnast wrote: At the end of the day, I think Joseph believed that the scroll text that he was using to 'translate' helped him understand and deliver the 'world of Abraham' as a revelatory text couched in story/narrative that he may also have involved himself in as an author.
I understand your position. Whether Joseph Smith actually "believed" or not is debatable. There is a lot of evidence to show otherwise, or that he was committing fraud, knowingly.mentalgymnast wrote: Think of the Kinderhook Plates and the work that Don Bradley has done. Joseph was involved 'as a man' in that short translation snapshot he came up with. We don't have any evidence either way that he would have continued that project.
We will agree that the Kinderhook incident is not a faith promoting story or one the church likes to talk about. As an LDS apologist it made me cringe.mentalgymnast wrote: He did continue the Book of Abraham project and I see it as a mix of midrash/revelation/story. With God and man in the mix.
Ha, you remind me of Lucifer, you know: "We teach a religion made of the philosophies of men, mingled with scripture".mentalgymnast wrote: It happened in the Old Testament (New Testament also?)...why not the Book of Abraham?
Anyway, that's pretty much where I'll have to let the chips fall at this point. I can see where you're coming from and I don't fault you for that.
The chips are falling, my friend. Just not where you want them!
Pass the popcorn.
