Thanks, Tom. I find to be both interesting and revealing the gist he provides of what I said:
Okay, I'm willing to put up with that and go forward. But there was a more
interesting criticism that struck me. From someone whose intelligence I respect,
and he's a former believer. He's now quite out of the church. But he says, "I just
don't have the stomach for this kind of hero worship that they're doing of Brigham
Young. It's a cult of personality. Why defend him?" He says, "I study..." He's in
Classics. "I study Julius Caesar and write about him and write about Constantine. I
have nothing invested in whether they were nice or anything like that. I just let the
chips fall where they may. Why should Latter-day Saints care about whether
Brigham and Joseph and people like that were honest, decent people?”
It's important to defend the character of the early witnesses to the Restoration
because a lot depends upon whether they're credible. If Joseph Smith was a
known habitual liar, well, that kind of weakens our confidence in him, right?
Brigham Young proclaims revelation. He does, more than you might think. Is he a
believable person when he talks about his witness of the truth? Is he believable? I
think much rests on that.
I still disagree with him. Either something is true, or it is not. To say that we need to have confidence in the person who said it is an admission of sorts that our trust resides in people, not in truth. I notice he does not mention my reference to
Brigham Young's (!!!!) own belief that Joseph Smith's character did not matter in the end BECAUSE HE TAUGHT THE TRUTH.
What is so hard about that?
I get that all of this fuss is a concession to those who are incapable of separating the truth from the flawed human beings who speak it. Concessions MUST be made because, frankly, most people are incapable of doing that. It is a very human weakness to have. And so I share this criticism of the hero worship while recognizing the needs of most people and that this will drive the kind of thing we are talking about: hero worship and defense of personalities.
"He disturbs the laws of his country, he forces himself upon women, and he puts men to death without trial.” ~Otanes on the monarch, Herodotus Histories 3.80.