
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Ligne 235 : | Ligne 235 : | ||
<ref>{{Harv|Smith|1842a|pp=707}}</ref> | <ref>{{Harv|Smith|1842a|pp=707}}</ref> | ||
|| | || | ||
*Again, the author's implication is laughable. Joseph is writing an account in 1842, well after his 1838 account (which was canonized), and it is being pointed out that Joseph didn't identify the personages as angels or deities. | *Again, the author's implication is laughable. Joseph is writing an account in 1842, well after his 1838 account (which was eventually canonized), and it is ''again'' being pointed out that Joseph didn't identify the personages as angels or deities. | ||
*From the 1838 account: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
When the light rested upon me I saw two Personages, whose brightness and glory defy all description, standing above me in the air. One of them spake unto me, calling me by name and said, pointing to the other—This is My Beloved Son. Hear Him! | |||
</blockquote> | |||
|} | |} | ||
I'm certain that I hold the high ground here.
“I am only one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can do something. And I will not let what I cannot do interfere with what I can do.”
Edward Everett Hale (1822-1909)
—The Wikipedia editor who uses the pseudonym "John Foxe," during an edit battle on the "First Vision" article (16 May 2007)
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
The importance of the First Vision within the Latter Day Saint movement evolved over time. There is little evidence that Smith discussed the First Vision publicly prior to 1830. |
||
Mormon historian James B. Allen notes that:
|
||
Smith said that he made an oblique reference to the vision in 1820 to his mother, telling her the day it happened that he had "learned for [him]self that Presbyterianism is not true." |
[3] Lucy did not mention this conversation in her memoirs. [4] | |
In the oldest known account of the First Vision, Joseph Smith, Jr., said he "could find none that would believe" his experience. |
||
He said that shortly after the experience, he told the story of his revelation to a Methodist minister |
||
who responded "with great contempt, saying it was all of the devil, that there was no such thing as visions or revelations in these days; that all such things had ceased with the apostles, and that there never would be any more of them." |
||
He also said that the telling of his vision story "excited a great deal of prejudice against me among professors of religion, and was the cause of great persecution, which continued to increase." |
||
There is no contemporary evidence for this persecution beyond Smith's testimony. |
||
None of the earliest anti-Mormon literature mentioned the First Vision. |
||
Smith also said he told others about the vision during the 1820s, and some family members said that they had heard him mention it, but none prior to 1823, when Smith said he had his second vision. |
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
Amateur Mormon apologist Jeff Lindsay argues that Joseph Smith may have referred to the First Vision in the Articles and Covenants of the Church of Christ, written in June 1830 |
||
and first published in 1831. |
||
In describing the beginnings of Smith's Church of Christ, the document says:
|
[13] | |
Lindsay says that the general outline, the heavenly manifestation, Smith's forgiveness and relapse into sin and his subsequent repentance and visit by an angel, is similar to subsequent accounts, |
||
but this 1830 statement does not mention an appearance of Jesus or God the Father and there is no condemnation of contemporary churches. |
|
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
The earliest extant account of the First Vision was handwritten by Joseph Smith in 1832, but it was not published until 1965. |
||
|
[17] | |
Unlike later accounts of the vision, the emphasis of the 1832 account is on the young Joseph's quest for personal forgiveness. The account does not mention an appearance of God the Father, nor does it mention the phrase "This is my beloved Son, hear him." In the 1832 account, Smith also stated that before he experienced the First Vision, his own searching of the Scriptures had led him to the conclusion that mankind had "apostatized from the true and living faith and there was no society or denomination that built upon the Gospel of Jesus Christ as recorded in the new testament." |
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
In several issues of the LDS periodical Messenger and Advocate (1834-35), |
||
Oliver Cowdery wrote an early biography of Joseph Smith, Jr. In one issue, Cowdery explained that Smith was confused by the different religions and local revivals during his "15th year" (1820), leading him to wonder which church was true. In the next issue of the biography, Cowdery explained that reference to Smith's "15th year" was a typographical error, and that actually the revivals and religious confusion took place in Smith's "17th year." However, Cowdery apparently confused Smith's "17th year" (1822) with Smith being "seventeen years old" (1823), and thus he gave the year as 1823. | ||
Therefore, according to Cowdery, the religious confusion led Smith to pray in his bedroom, late on the night of September 23 1823, after the others had gone to sleep, to know which of the competing denominations was correct and whether "a Supreme being did exist." In response, an angel appeared and granted him forgiveness of his sins. The remainder of the story roughly parallels Smith's later description of a visit by angel in 1823 who told him about the Golden Plates. Thus, Cowdery's account, containing a single vision, differs from Smith's 1832 account, which contains two separate visions, one in 1821 prompted by religious confusion (the First Vision) and a separate one regarding the plates on September 22 1822. Cowdery's account also differs from Smith's 1838 account, which includes a First Vision in 1820 and a second vision on September 22, 1823. |
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
On November 9, 1835, Smith recorded an account of the First Vision in his diary that mentioned a vision of two unidentified personages and "many angels" when he was "about 14 years old." Jesus is identified as the Son of God, but neither "personage" is identified with Him. Smith also noted that he had another vision in his bedroom when he was 17. |
| |
Unlike previous and subsequent accounts, there is no mention of all churches being condemned as corrupt. |
|
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
In 1838, Joseph Smith said that eighteen years previous, in the spring of 1820, during a period of "confusion and strife among the different denominations" following an "unusual excitement on the subject of religion", he had debated which of the various Christian groups he should join. While in turmoil, he read from the Bible: "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." |
||
One morning, deeply impressed by this scripture, the fourteen-year-old Smith went to a grove of trees behind the family farm, knelt, and began his first vocal prayer. Almost immediately he was confronted by an evil power that prevented speech. A darkness gathered around him, and Smith believed that he would be destroyed. He continued the prayer silently, asking for God's assistance though still resigned to destruction. At this moment a light brighter than the sun descended towards him, and he was delivered from the evil power. In the light, Smith "saw two personages standing in the air", identified as God the Father and Jesus Christ. One pointed to the other and said "This is My Beloved Son, hear Him." Smith asked which religious sect he should join and was told to join none of them because all existing religions had corrupted the teachings of Jesus Christ. |
||
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has canonized Smith's 1838 account of the First Vision. |
- | Wikipedia Main Article: [{{{link}}}#{{{section}}} {{{article}}}–{{{section}}}] | Wikipedia Footnotes: [{{{link}}}#Notes {{{article}}}–Notes] | A FAIR Opinion |
---|---|---|---|
An 1840 missionary tract by Orson Pratt stated that after Smith saw the light, "his mind was caught away, from the natural objects with which he was surrounded; and he was enwrapped in a heavenly vision."[24] Pratt's account referred to "two glorious personages who exactly resembled each other in their features or likeness", but did not identify them as angels or as God and Jesus, or otherwise. |
| ||
In 1842, two years before his assassination, Joseph Smith, Jr., wrote a letter to John Wentworth, editor of the Chicago Democrat. In the letter, Smith outlined the basic beliefs of the Latter Day Saint movement and included an account of the First Vision. |
|||
Smith said that he was "about fourteen years of age" when he had the First Vision. |
| ||
In language paralleling that used two years earlier by Orson Pratt, Smith said he "saw two glorious personages who exactly resembled each other in features, and likeness, surrounded with a brilliant light which eclipsed the sun at noon-day", |
| ||
but Smith did not identify the personages or note whether they were angels or deities. Smith said he was told that no religious denomination "was acknowledged of God as his church and kingdom" and that he was "expressly commanded to 'go not after them.'" |
|
Main Article | Citations and Notes | Commentary |
---|---|---|
Late in his life, Smith's brother, William, gave two accounts of the First Vision, dating it to 1823, |
||
when William was twelve years old. William said the religious excitement in Palmyra had occurred in 1822-23 (rather than the actual date of 1824-25), that it was stimulated by the preaching of a Methodist, the Rev. George Lane, a "great revival preacher," and that his mother and some of his siblings had then joined the Presbyterian church. |
||
William Smith said he based his account on what Joseph had told William and the rest of his family the day after the First Vision: |
||
|
[34] | |
In an 1884 account, William also stated that when Joseph first saw the light above the trees in the grove, he fell unconscious for an undetermined amount of time, after which he awoke and heard "the personage whom he saw" speak to him. |
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We are a volunteer organization. We invite you to give back.
Donate Now