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=An analysis of Wikipedia article "Joseph Smith, Jr." (Version 19 May 2009)= | |||
== Life == | == Life == | ||
=== Early years === | === Early years === |
A FairMormon Analysis of Wikipedia: Mormonism and Wikipedia/Joseph Smith, Jr. A work by a collaboration of authors (Link to Wikipedia article here)
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1827 to 1830: Organizing the Church |
The name Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.. Wikipedia content is copied and made available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |
- | Wikipedia Main Article: years Joseph Smith, Jr.–Early years | Wikipedia Footnotes: Joseph Smith, Jr.–Notes | A FAIR Opinion |
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1A |
Joseph Smith, Jr. was born on December 23, 1805, in Sharon, Vermont to Joseph and Lucy Mack Smith, a poor farm family. In Joseph's early teen years, they moved to western New York—a region of intense religious activity during the Second Great Awakening—where they continued to farm just outside the town of Palmyra. Although Smith never joined a church during his youth, he did read the Bible and was also influenced by the folk religion of that time and place. |
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- | Wikipedia Main Article: Vision Joseph Smith, Jr.–First Vision | Wikipedia Footnotes: Joseph Smith, Jr.–Notes | A FAIR Opinion |
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2A |
As he later recorded the experience, Smith said that as a fourteen-year-old in 1820 he had received a theophany, an appearance of God to man, an event that Latter Day Saints commonly call the First Vision. Smith said that he had been concerned about what religious denomination to join and prayed in a nearby woods (now called the Sacred Grove). There he had a vision in which he saw God the Father and his Son, Jesus Christ, as two separate, glorious, resurrected beings of flesh and bone. They told him that no contemporary church was correct in its teachings and that he should join none of them. Smith recorded several different accounts of this experience, |
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2B |
and the version of the First Vision later canonized by the LDS Church was not publicly revealed until 1842. |
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- | Wikipedia Main Article: plates Joseph Smith, Jr.–Golden plates | Wikipedia Footnotes: Joseph Smith, Jr.–Notes | A FAIR Opinion |
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3A |
Meanwhile Smith participated in a "craze for treasure hunting." |
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3B |
Beginning as a youth in the early 1820s, Smith was paid to act as a "seer," using seer stones in mostly unsuccessful attempts to locate lost items and buried treasure. |
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3C |
Smith's contemporaries describe Smith's procedure for using seer stones to hunt for treasure as placing the stone in a white stovepipe hat, putting his face over the hat to block the light, and then "seeing" the information in the reflections of the stone. |
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3D |
His preferred stone, which some said he also used later to translate the golden plates, was chocolate-colored and about the size of an egg, found in a deep well he helped dig for one of his neighbors. |
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3E |
During this period Smith said he experienced a visitation from an angel named Moroni |
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3F |
who directed him to a long-buried book, inscribed on golden plates, which contained a record of God's dealings with ancient Israelite inhabitants of the Americas. This record, along with other artifacts (including a breastplate and what Smith referred to as the Urim and Thummim), was buried in a hill near his home. On September 22, 1827, Smith said that after four years of waiting and preparation, the angel allowed him to take possession of the plates and other artifacts. Almost immediately thereafter local people tried to discover where the plates were hidden. |
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3G |
Smith left his family farm in October 1825 and was hired by Josiah Stowel, of nearby Chenango county, to search for a Spanish silver mine by gazing at his seer stone. |
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3H |
In March 1826, as a result of his using his seer stone to search for the silver mine, Smith was charged with being a "disorderly person and an impostor" by a court in nearby Bainbridge. |
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3I |
Smith also met Emma Hale during this period and married her on January 18, 1827. Emma eventually gave birth to seven children, three of whom died shortly after birth. The Smiths also adopted twins. |
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Wikipedia references for "Joseph Smith, Jr." |
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