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Claims made in "Chapter 2: Moroni, Magic, and Masonry" | A FAIR Analysis of: Criticism of Mormonism/Books A work by author: Richard Abanes
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Claims made in "Chapter 4: Smith's Golden Book" |
Page | Claim | Response | Author's sources |
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41, 500 n.2-4 | Joseph used at least two seer stones. |
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42, 500 n.7 | Issac Hale, Emma's father, disapproved of Joseph because of his money digging activities. |
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44 | Joseph was pronounced "guilty" of performing illegal activities with the stone. |
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46, 503 n.18 | Hugh Nibley said, "If this court recored is authentic, it is the most damning evidence in existence against Joseph Smith. |
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46, 503 n.20 | Francis Kirkham claimed that "If any evidence had been in existence that Joseph Smith had used a seer stone for fraud and deception, and expcially had he made this confession in a court of law as early as 1826, or four years before the Book of Mormon was printed, and this confession was in a court record, it would have been impossible for hism to have organized the resorted Church. |
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47, 503 n.22 | Joseph realized that "money-digging alone was bringing in ony about $14 a month, which was not nearly enough to support a family." |
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47, 503 n.23 | Joseph initially "attached no religious significance" to the "golden book" that he told people he would be retrieving. He instead "touted it as a book that would 'tell him how to get money that was buried in the ground.'" |
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48, 503 n.25 | Joseph decided to convert his book into a saga about America's ancient inhabitants as a money making scheme. |
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503 n.25 | Joseph tried to sell the copyright of the Book of Mormon in Canada. |
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48, 503-4 n.29-32 | One of Joseph's early descriptions of Moroni was of a bloody ghost with his throat cut. |
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50-51, n.34-36 | "The Smiths eventually changed Joseph's 'dream' of a ghost to a 'vision' of a spirit (but not yet an angel)...A 'toad-like' creature 'assumed the appearance of a man' and struck Joseph on the side of his head, telling him that it was not yet time to retrieve the plates." |
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51 | "A subsequent version of Smith's ever-changing tale..." |
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51 | "Until well into the late 1800s it was widely understood that Smith found the golden plates not by a dream, or a ghost, or a vision—but by looking into his peep-stone and seeing where they had been deposited. |
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51 | "all of the religious aspects of Smith's adventures came much later." |
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52 | Joseph Smith claimed that the moon was inhabited. |
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52 | Joseph taught the doctrine of "Caucasians advancing to godhood" |
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52 | Joseph taught the notion that "Blacks, Indians, and other people of color are cursed spirits." |
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53, 505-506n47 (HB) 53, 503-504n47 (PB) |
"After all, no one had actually seen the plates, nor would anyoneever see them" |
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505 n.47 | The witnesses only saw the plates through "visionary experiences." | ||
505 n.47 | The eight witnesses only saw the plates as long as they were covered with a cloth of some kind. |
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505 n.47 | Martin Harris said that none of the eight witnesses ever saw the plates, and that he only handled them in a box or under a cloth. |
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505 n.47 | Joseph Smith claimed that the Three Witnesses saw the plates in a vision. |
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505 n.47 | David Whitmer "agreed that neither he, nor the other Three Witnesses, ever physically saw or handled the plates. |
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508 n.59 | "Mormons often try to discredit Anthon by pointing out an alleged discrepancy between his letters, but there exists no such discrepancy. |
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55, 508n60 (HB) 55, 506n60 (PB) |
Scholars have declared that there is no language called "Reformed Egyptian." |
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55, 508 n.62 | Joseph used his "peep-stone" to translate the Book of Mormon. |
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56, 508 n.63-65 | Emma Smith and David Whitmer said that Joseph translated using his seer stone in a hat. |
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