huckelberry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 28, 2025 9:07 pm
I remain a bit puzzled. I read Hinkley comments as a repeat of long established mantra of faith. It is what I was taught 30 years before Hinkley was church president. It was not new it was not questioned. It fits DC 130 and 132 it fits Joseph teaching as in King Follet discourse. It hardly needs Pratts pamphlet.
I'm not claiming to have made some new discovery, and I agree that Hinkley comments repeat of long established mantra of faith. If the other points I made don't strike you as significant, well, without simply repeating them I'm not sure what more I can say. The fact that something is generally not questioned doesn't say to me that it is not valid to question it. Quite the contrary.
huckelberry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 28, 2025 9:07 pm
My understanding of LDS view of revelation is that the prophet is led by God in his understanding so ongoing interpretation is the substance not just details of a vision. Hence Hinkley is referencing what the vision means to the church not just the details reported.
I don't see his talk as simply doing that.
huckelberry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 28, 2025 9:07 pm
Yes I see the difference this thread is looking at, it is an interesting observation. I ha e gone over it a few times. Read again the 1838 canonized story. It has a lot of detail that you, Malkie, did not include in your comparison. The details are not directly reporting what you note is missing so you are being correct.
I selected information from both the scripture and the talk to illustrate a couple of points, rather than reproducing the entirety of both.
huckelberry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 28, 2025 9:07 pm
What I see is Joseph being a story teller. He presents some drama and mystery. This invites a hearer into the story. What and who is this vision the hearer ask. At the same time the story is full of clues so the hearer can join in making the identification. This can be more compelling if Joseph wonders who this is an explains the hearer is invited to question. The story as presented uses people's assumptions and familiar images to decide for them. In a sense Malkie simplifying to basic data creates uncertainty that the story is designed to avoid.
Yes - the FV story hints at things, and allows the reader/hearer to fill in the blanks. The reason I introduce the idea of the disinterested listener/reader is to show that it's not always reasonable to expect people to fill in the blanks from your hints, and then simply accept what you're hinting at but are unwilling to state explicitly. Why should anyone, based on Joseph's own words, believe he saw God the Father and Jesus Christ? To me, it's an unwarranted assumption.
To then use these assumptions as the foundation of an unstated claim, and base the validity of a religion on it, seems to me to go far, far beyond what's reasonable.
huckelberry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 28, 2025 9:07 pm
It is clear that Mormon understanding of God was changing during Joseph Smiths life. Perhaps some ambiguity is in the report to allow followers to adjust. I gather Utah Mormons did. Reorganized did not holding to more traditional views of God.
I agree that the Mormon understanding of God was changing during Joseph Smith's life. I see that as problematic because Joseph states that “It is the first principle of the Gospel to know for a certainty the Character of God, and to know that we may converse with him as one man converses with another”. If the Mormon view of the character of their god is so fluid, it seems, once again, like a very poor foundation for a religion.
Thanks for your comments, huckelberry. I know that I can always depend on you for a thoughtful and honest appraisal of whatever you choose to comment on.