MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Sat Aug 26, 2023 2:47 am
malkie wrote: ↑Sat Aug 26, 2023 12:29 am
That a son has a father is not radical at all. I just don't see that this fact is significant/relevant to what we are discussing.
Who is the father? Joseph doesn't tell you. All he says its that one called the other his son - Joseph apparently had no way of knowing who either one was - nor, for that matter, if the statement about sonship was true - it was just a claim by an unknown personage. So the possibilities are wide open at this point.
I see your point of view expressed above as a nonstarter. After the vision Joseph said:
I had actually seen a light, and in the midst of that light I saw two Personages, and they did in reality speak to me; and though I was hated and persecuted for saying that I had seen a vision, yet it was true. . . . I had seen a vision; I knew it, and I knew that God knew it, and I could not deny it, neither dared I do it; at least I knew that by so doing I would offend God, and come under condemnation”
Having not said earlier who the personages were in his vision, after the vision he once again fails to identify them! What does he say?
"I had seen a vision; I knew it, and I knew that God knew it." Not: I saw God in my vision. Why so obtuse? It's almost as if he's afraid to say it, and so dances around, making folks guess what he means.
As you mentioned Joseph was somewhat dumbfounded as he experienced the vision. He didn’t fully comprehend it. His understanding grew as he had time to process what had happened and he had other spiritual manifestations/experiences. But he knew for a fact that
God knew he had seen a vision. I don’t think God would be offended if Joseph had see Satan. He would be concerned though.
That the Son appeared and Joseph referred to him as ‘Lord’ in addition to Joseph later confirming that there were two personages that appeared, and that he would later have a healthy fear of offending God, tells me that indeed, it was the Father and the Son that appeared to Joseph Smith.
If he was telling the truth.
And yet the truth, if that's what he was telling, does not mention God and Jesus. His calling the son "Lord" could mean either he was being deferential to a superior being, or he
assumed, without proper identification, that this was a Lord. We simply cannot tell from what Joseph says, because he is not being open about it.
I find your ‘no evidence’ based on Joseph not explicitly naming both of them by name to be a bit discombobulating. The inference and the mention of multiple beings, one of them being the Son, is enough for me.
The narrative doesn’t allow for your interesting interpretation that it was Satan that appeared. That’s WAY out there.
Yes, I'll give you that - it's out there, but not impossible, based on the lack of specificity in Joseph's description, meaning that
one must infer who he saw, because he is certainly not telling us, and that makes other inferences possible. You are determined to stick to the one that is consistent with your established beliefs, and seem to be unwilling to consider seriously that there are so many holes in the story that other possibilities exist.
But I do understand that by hook or by crook the First Vision has to be explained away somehow. Everything rests on it.
And yet I'm not trying to "explain away" the FV - merely pointing out that when Joseph had lots of opportunity to tell us explicitly who he saw, he completely fails to mention your preferred explanation. You're satisfied, as you have said. Good for you. Please allow that other reasonable people can be justified in seeing more than one possible explanation - yours is not the only explanation, and, unfortunately it is one of the weakest possible, because it goes beyond the plain non-specific words, and insists on only one highly specific resolution of the question.
Regards,
MG
The
inference (as you say) and the mention of multiple beings, one of them being the Son, is not enough for me - not when there was plenty of opportunity to be explicit, and tell the world that he had seen God and Jesus.
Let me ask you: if someone (let's call him Bob) told you that he had had a vision, and saw two personages, one of whom called the other his "beloved son", would you accept that, if Bob was telling the truth (not yet established), the two personages must have been God and Jesus, even if Bob didn't say that that's who they were?
If Bob then said that
God knew that he (Bob) had had a vision, would you take that as confirmation that God knew that Bob had had
a vision of God and Jesus, not just what he stated: that he had had
a vision?
If Bob wrote about his vision several times, and in none of these accounts said that he met God and Jesus, only two "personages" (or perhaps one), at some point would you not start to wonder who Bob really saw. Or would you continue to believe, in spite of Bob's lack of identification of them, that the personages were God and Jesus?