Re: The Mormon Issue No One Will Address
by
RyanBell
10/16/2007, 6:32 PM #
Dennis St. John is wrong on every one of his factual claims.*
First, he alleges that Mormons in some unspecified period in the past hunted down and killed those who left their ranks. This is one of the most ridiculous and baseless fabrications I have ever heard. I defy anyone to produce a shred of evidence that the Mormon Church ever ordered any dissenter or deserter killed.
Second, he opines that "Anyone who does any intelligent and dilligent research knows that Joe
Smith was a charlatan, for far too many reasons to list here." It is beyond dispute that many people think Joseph Smith was a charlatan. It is further beyond dispute that his life was and remains controversial. However, it is absolutely false that anyone who has looked into the man's real history must conclude that he was a fraud. One example is Columbia's Richard Bushman, the world's foremost expert and biographer of Joseph Smith, who also happens to be a faithful Mormon. As it happens, there are many thousands of educated and intelligent Mormons who have read everything there is to know about Joseph Smith, good, bad, and ugly, and have still remained devoted to the religion he began in 1830. This argument derives from the well-worn myth that Mormonism is demonstrably false and anyone who believes it is willfully blind, an old chestnut I responded to in a post here. While it can't be proven that Joseph Smith was a prophet, it certainly can't be proven that he was not.
Finally, Dennis claims that
All of the "witnesses" to his supposed revelations from the angel
Moroni apostasized before they died, denying everything. They are still
listed in all copies of the Book of Mormon, despite their defection.
This is patently false. There were eleven witnesses who claimed to have viewed the plates from which Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon. Three of the most prominent witnesses left the Church at one point or another over disagreements they had with Joseph Smith (two later returned). Remarkably, not one of those three who had fallen out with Smith ever denied their earlier statements about having seen the ancient plates, despite the obvious incentive of discrediting the 'Prophet' who had staked his reputation on them. Contrary to what Dennis says, no witness to the Book of Mormon ever recanted.
Finally, as for the quote he closes with "I don't care how you bring 'em, just bring 'em young," attributing it to an unnamed Mormon leader, I can't confirm without more specific information, but it sure smells like B.S. to me.
For further information on these topics, visit www.romneyexperience.com.
*The exception being that yes, during the 1850's the United States did send an army part of the way to Utah to threaten the Mormons, who had emigrated there from Illinois, in response to rumors that the Mormons planned to secede from the union.