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===One Nation under Gods, page 136 (hardback and paperback)=== | ===One Nation under Gods, page 136 (hardback and paperback)=== | ||
*The author paraphrases Brodie's assertion that "The bank was said to have been established by a revelation from God...." | *The author paraphrases Brodie's assertion that "The bank was said to have been established by a revelation from God...." | ||
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===Endnote 51, page 534 (hardback); page 532 (paperback)=== | ===Endnote 51, page 534 (hardback); page 532 (paperback)=== | ||
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*Tanner and Tanner, ''The Mormon Kingdom'' vol. 1, 14. | *Tanner and Tanner, ''The Mormon Kingdom'' vol. 1, 14. | ||
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{{main|Kirtland Safety Society}} | {{main|Kirtland Safety Society}} | ||
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#{{note|rigdon.1}} Vault-Ms 76, box 2, fd 2, Special Collections, BYU; cited in Van Wagoner, ''Sidney Rigdon'', 196. | #{{note|rigdon.1}} Vault-Ms 76, box 2, fd 2, Special Collections, BYU; cited in Van Wagoner, ''Sidney Rigdon'', 196. | ||
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[[fr:Specific works/One Nation Under Gods/Use of sources/Warren Parrish and Kirtland Safety Society "revelation"]] | [[fr:Specific works/One Nation Under Gods/Use of sources/Warren Parrish and Kirtland Safety Society "revelation"]] |
Joseph owned 144 acres in Kirtland | A FAIR Analysis of: One Nation Under Gods A work by author: Richard Abanes
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Joseph Smith's Narcissism |
Warren Parrish would apostatize, and later claim on 15 February 1838 (a little more than one year after the fact):
Fortunately, there is a contemporaneous account from Wilford Woodruff, who wrote in his diary on the very day that Joseph spoke -- 6 January 1837:
The similarities and differences in these accounts are striking. In both reports, Joseph said that the Lord has spoken to him in "an audible voice." Parrish was present at the event described by Woodruff. Yet, Woodruff indicated that Joseph did not tell them what the Lord had said, other than to make a conditional promise if they were all obedient.
Why should we believe the later, hostile report of Parrish (who had something to gain by lying) when it doesn't match the contemporary report written before there was any problem with the bank?
The Kirtland Safety Society was in serious trouble by the spring of 1837. Joseph Smith had resigned from it by 8 June 1837. Yet, in the same month of June, Parrish was called to testify in the case of Grandison Newell vs. Joseph Smith. Newell put Parrish on the stand but
So, by this date Parrish knew that the bank was in serious trouble. He was also hostile to Joseph (on May 29 he would bring high council charges against him for "lying...extortion...and...speaking disrespectfully against his brethren behind their backs."[4]) He was in court under oath, called by the prosecution because they thought he would help their case against Joseph Smith, and yet he said he knew nothing in Joseph's conduct or character which suggested his profession as a man of God was unfounded.
Why did Parrish not tell the court about the supposed "revelation" which he would cite about eight months later? Quite simply because (as the Woodruff diary shows) Joseph reported the contents of no such revelation. This points to a February 1838 fabrication by Parrish. Would Parrish lie? He later brought charges against Sidney Rigdon for, among other things, "expressing an unbelief in the revelations of God, both old and new."[5] To charge Sidney Rigdon—former Campbellite preacher, student of the Bible, and stirring biblical orator—with disbelieving the revelations of God is laughable nonsense. It is one more bit of evidence that Parrish's word, by this point in time, cannot be trusted.
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