Page
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Claim
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Response
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Author's sources
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398
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Mormon leaders claim that "Joseph Smith's" 'History of the Church' is the "most accurate history in all the world."
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- Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 2, p.199
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400-401
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The History of the Church was not written by Joseph Smith himself. Many instances in original documents which referred to Joseph in the third person were changed to first person to make it appear as if Joseph wrote them. |
- Presentism or anachronism: This technique of historical writing was standard for the time period. There was no secret that this is how it was done. The Tanners count on their audience not knowing this, and do not disclose it even though they cite an article which discusses it in detail (see BYU Studies (1971) on p. 405 below.
- Authorship of History of the Church
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403-404
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Much of the History of the Church was completed after Joseph Smith's death. This means that Joseph Smith's history is not "authentic."
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- Presentism or anachronism: This technique of historical writing was standard for the time period. There was no secret that this is how it was done. The Tanners count on their audience not knowing this, and do not disclose it even though they cite an article which discusses it in detail (see BYU Studies (1971) on p. 405 below.
- Authorship of History of the Church
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- Brigham Young University Studies, Summer 1971, pp.466, 469, 470, 472
- Letter from George A. Smith to Woodruff, April 21, 1856, as cited in Brigham Young University Studies, Summer 1971, pp.470-72"
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405
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The "Rocky Mountain prophecy" was added to the history of the Church sometime after the original was written.
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- Misrepresentation of source: Many of these sources do not support the argument:
- The BYU Studies article from 1971 is Dean Jessee's account of the authorship of the History of the Church. It says nothing about adding a "Rocky Mountain Prophecy," and the Tanners neglect to provide the perspective on authorship practices in 19th century history that Jessee provides. They thus hide the material that answers their objection. Readers can fortunately access it here.
- The History of the Church article contains the prophecy mentioned, and has a footnote about the source for it.[1]
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- History of the Church 5:85
- Joseph Smith's Manuscript History, Book D-1, page 1362
- Brigham Young University Studies, Summer 1971, p.469
- Davis Bitton, Joseph Smith in the Mormon Folk Memory, The John Whitmer address, delivered at the Second Annual Meeting of the John Whitmer Historical Association, Lamoni, Iowa, September 28, 1974, unpublished manuscript, p.16"
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408
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The angel that gave Joseph Smith the plates was originally identified as "Nephi" rather than "Moroni." History of the Church changed it to "Moroni."
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- Times and Seasons, vol. 3, p.753
- History of the Church, vol. 1, p.11
- Millennial Star, vol. 3, p.53
- 1851 edition of the Pearl of Great Price
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415
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- Most of Joseph Smith's history was written by his scribes and modified to read as if it were written in the first person, therefore this history must be a forgery.
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- Presentism or anachronism: This technique of historical writing was standard for the time period. There was no secret that this is how it was done. The Tanners count on their audience not knowing this, and do not disclose it even though they cite an article which discusses it in detail (BYU Studies (1971).
Authorship of History of the Church
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- Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Winter 1972, p.76
- Paul R. Cheesman, An Analysis Of The Kinderhook Plates, March, 1970, Brigham Young University Library
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