huckelberry wrote: ↑Sat Oct 25, 2025 6:38 pm
Limnor wrote: ↑Fri Oct 24, 2025 8:34 pm
I’ll go back to the point about the trouble malkie has pointed out with the FV.
If ongoing revelation can alter (or build upon the scaffold of) historical events, then how could anyone have confidence that the story of the discovery of the book was a fact or something built upon?
Prediction: within ten years the Book of Abraham will be considered a catalyst for revelation not based on factual writings of Abraham, and in twenty years, the Book of Mormon will be considered similarly, without the LDS Church collapsing.
Limnor, I can see a point to noticing how the idea of revelation can facilitate change. That is after all what LDS uses to offer corrective to traditional beliefs and problems like people thinking every body not baptized or professing Jesus or believing creeds go to hell. Revelation is also the basis of LDS covenants and ongoing authority. The claim to revelation by the church leader is based upon the Book of Mormon , particularly how it was received, a real historical record of Jesus appearing in the America's and establishing his church...
I think Limnor's point is that if the claim to revelation is based on the Book of Mormon and other founding stories (like the first vision), then using said power of revelation to change the story of the Book of Mormon, the first vision, etc., would call into question that claim.
I agree, it's like when a mopologist wrote in an Interpreter article that he had absolute, definitive proof that J. Smith was intended to be the leader of the Restoration. I was curious to see this 'proof', but it turned out to be nothing more than a verse from the Book of Mormon, which was written by Smith. Using circular logic like that, or more specifically, using the conclusion you're trying to prove as your starting assumption in the proof, is simply not a valid argument.
If this is why or how the LDS church changed the first vision into what contemporary leaders wanted it to be, we are by definition not dealing with Smith's vision of a church anymore. (Not that I think Smith's "vision" was anything more than a vehicle for an immoral conman to get what he wanted, but that's a different topic.)