Marcus wrote:What is so interesting to me about this is that the actual story of the rock in a hat apparently had to be hidden because it wasn't enough of a story for church leaders to get behind? Or maybe it was simply too close to Smith's previous cons.
that's a good question. I don't have a good answer. There may be more than one gradient, the first gradient is mysticism. The story must be grand and mystical. Another gradient might be familiarity, for lack of a better term.
Mormons are used to recycling their mythology in a certain way and deviations sound "weird". Well, their version is just as weird, they're just familiar with it. Example: On my mission, we used to joke about investigators having misinformation about Mormonism like, "Joseph Smith found the silver plates in a cornfield". And that sounds so silly, no wonder people don't believe it! But finding gold plates in a hill will sound just as silly to an unbiased outsider as finding silver plates in a cornfield. To those whose lives center around the narrative, the narrative, no matter how silly, sounds normal.
Another example: Even the Urim and Thummim is weird to Mormons. We talk about the seers stone -- where did that come from? A river? lame! The Urim and Thummim were included with the plates and have a connection to the Bible. They are like fine and mysterious gems with magical properties carefully handed down from the time of Moses. I was resistant to the seer stone because one would think Joseph Smith was using these precious jewels from the very breastplate of Moroni that came with the plates. The way I envisioned it, Joseph would sit back in his chair at night and carefully hold a gem between his eye and the plates. Somewhat like holding one of those small magnifying glasses to study a gem. this was a dignified visual, for me.
However, one day on my mission, someone gave us an anti-Mormon tract that had a drawing of the Urim and Thummim on the front that looked like big disco glasses with the gems as lenses. This was a serious punch to the gut because I immediately knew they were right: this is the very description from the Pearl of Great Price, I just never had stopped to think about it. So yeah, Joseph sitting there wearing +5 birth control glasses to translate wasn't going to do it for me and so I just let it go to the shelf and didn't think about it again.
Social distancing has likely already begun to flatten the curve...Continue to research good antivirals and vaccine candidates. Make everyone wear masks. -- J.D. Vance