The Three Witnesses ... all initially describe their experience
with the angel and the plates as subjective and visionary rather
than objective and concrete.
This paper examines the culture, credibility and relevant testimony
of the eleven men the LDS Church presents as witnesses to the Book
of Mormon. It draws extensively from early sources, both Mormon
and non-Mormon, in an attempt to provide an honest and balanced
portrayal of the Witness phenomenon. A careful analysis of the historical
evidence reveals serious problems.
The Three Witnesses, Oliver Cowdery, Martin Harris and David Whitmer,
all initially describe their experience with the angel and the plates
as subjective and visionary rather than objective and concrete.
Their elaborations on the encounter, their departure from the LDS
Church, as well as other events in their lives, raise questions
about their level of discernment and their credibility as witnesses.
The testimony of the Eight Witnesses is more objective but is plagued
by its own set of problems. All eight had close personal ties to
Joseph Smith's family four were David Whitmer's brothers,
a fifth was married to a Whitmer sister, and Joseph's father and
two brothers made up the remaining three. These close ties to Joseph
Smith, coupled with discrepancies between the witnesses' published
Book of Mormon statement and later personal statements, as well
as the question of coercion on the part of Joseph Smith, all raise
questions of their credibility as well.
The Witnesses & the Historical Record
For some people, the fact that eleven men would sign their names
to a written statement and never denounce the Book of Mormon is
sufficient evidence for believing the Book of Mormon is of divine
origin. But is the testimony of these eleven men a solid foundation
for faith in the authenticity of the Book of Mormon? A careful investigation
reveals there are a number of historical details which raise questions
about the objectivity and credibility of these witnesses. To gain
an objective perspective on the reliability of the witnesses and
the strength of their testimony, three criteria will be used to
evaluate the historical facts:
- Were they discerning men of sound judgment not easily swayed
by tales of the fantastic or supernatural?
- Were they without conflict of interest, and were their characters
and reputations unquestioned?
- Did their later statements regarding the plates ever vary, deviate
or detract from their original statements?
What Makes a Credible Witness?
In every period of history there are those individuals who tend
to be credulous and suggestible. Such people desire to be a part
of the fantastic or supernatural, and their very desire leaves them
vulnerable to deception or manipulation. Research done on the period
of American history from the late 1700s to early 1800s shows this
time period to be no exception.
Like today, a certain segment of the population desired and pursued
subjective and mystical experiences in a quest for spiritual significance.
Tales of spirit apparitions, buried treasure and the ability to
see things with "spiritual eyes" that cannot be confirmed
with the physical senses, were "reality" for those who
lived through them. Experiences perceived with "second sight"
were taken seriously and held as undeniable fact. But should testimony
of this nature be presented as undeniable empirical evidence?
In an article published in the American Quarterly, Alan
Taylor cites many incidents where 18th and 19th century treasure
seekers claimed to have seen spirits and handled treasure that sank
from their grasp. Alan Taylor in his article "The Early Republic's
Supernatural Economy: Treasure Seeking in the American Northeast,
1780-1830" comments:
These supernatural encounters were very "real" to those
who experienced them. Childhood exposure to treasure tales and
their careful performance of elaborate ceremonies at the digging
site created a nervous expectation to see the extraordinary. (Taylor
1986, 14)
Magic circles, incantantions, and a strict code of silence once
the digging commenced were all part of the ceremony. Any spoken
word would break the spell and the whole night's efforts be lost.
Taylor gives several examples including the following:
In 1814 a party of Rochester, New York treasure seekers barely
escaped with their lives when the conducter exclaimed, 'Damn me,
I've found it!' With that, a local newspaper recorded, 'the charm
was broken! the scream of demons the chattering
of spirits and hissing of serpents rent the air, and the
treasure moved.' (Ibid, p. 12)
While many of the fantastic descriptions are viewed as folklore
and tall tales, Taylor cites evidence that does not fit a simple
explanation of fraud. Treasure seekers often impressed contemporary
audiences with their sincerity and "utter conviction that their
supernatural encounters had been real. Waitsfield, Vermont's nineteenth-century
chronicler wrote of a local treasure seeker, 'The most ridiculous
part of this matter, is the fact well attested, that Mr. Savage
believed all this, as long as he lived, and was never ridiculed
out of it.'" (Taylor 1986, p. 13)
In the years immediately preceding any mention of the gold plates
and the Book of Mormon, both Joseph Smith, Jr., and his father,
Joseph Sr., were money diggers like those described above. They
openly shared their supernatural abilities to see treasure and other
things not visible to the natural eye. William Stafford, a neighbor
and fellow treasure seeker gave the following account:
Joseph, Jr., could see, by placing a stone of singular appearance
in his hat, in such a manner as to exclude all light; at which
time they pretended he could see all things within and under the
earth, that he could see within the above mentioned caves,
large gold bars and silver plates that he could also discover
the spirits in whose charge these treasures were, clothed in ancient
dress."[1]
It is evident the Smith's believed what Joseph saw in his stone
for they made attempts to retrieve this treasure. In the same affidavit
Stafford recalled one time the made a circle on the ground and put
hazel sticks around the circle to keep off evil spirits. A steel
rod was added to the center of the circle, a trench dug and then
"the older Smith consulted his son who had been 'looking in
his stone and watching the motions of the evil spirit.'" However,
they had made a mistake in how they started the whole operation,
otherwise they would have gotten the money. (Joseph Smith's New
York Reputation Reexamined, Rodger I. Anderson, SLC, Signature
Books, 1990, pp. 143-145)
As noted earlier, money digging and treasure seeking were generally
accompanied by anticipation of the supernatural. Participants were
emotionally excited and desired that something extraordinary would
happen. We find this same pattern of anticipatory desire preceding
the experience of the Three Witnesses.
While Joseph Smith was dictating the Book of Mormon to Oliver Cowdery,
he read off a section that declared there would be three special
witnesses who would be allowed to see the plates and then "bear
witness" to the Book of Mormon. Joseph Smith's History of
the Church states,
Almost immediately after we had made this discovery, it occurred
to Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer and the aforementioned Martin
Harris (who had come to inquire after our progress in the work)
that they would have me inquire of the Lord to know if they might
not obtain of him the privilege to be these three special witnesses;
and finally they became so very solicitous, and urged me so much
to inquire that at length I complied (History of the Church,
Vol. 1, pp. 52-53).
Joseph then produced a revelation for Oliver, David and Martin
which stated that if they relied upon God's word and did so with
a full purpose of heart they would "have a view of the plates,
and also the breastplate, the sword of Laban, the Urim & Thummim,
... and the miraculous directors which were given to Lehi"
(Ibid, p. 53). It would only be by their faith that they would be
able to obtain a view of them.
This is very convenient. Joseph dictates the part of the Book of
Mormon that mentions three special witnesses while all three are
there with him. These men beg Joseph to ask God if maybe they aren't
the ones. When he finally gives in, Joseph immediately gets a revelation
that says, if they have faith, rely on God's word and have full
purpose of heart, they will see not only the plates but numerous
other wonderful things.
So they go to the woods and first spend a prolonged time in prayer.
Nothing happens. They pray more. Nothing happens. Martin Harris
volunteers to leave the group because he senses the others think
he was the reason nothing was happening. As soon as Harris leaves,
the others claim to see the angel and plates, though there is no
mention of any of the other items that had been promised. According
to Joseph Smith's history, Joseph then goes to find Harris, and
while praying together, Harris cries out, "Tis enough, tis
enough; mine eyes have beheld; mine eyes have beheld;" (Ibid,
p. 55).
It becomes clear that all three of these men desired this prestigious
position of being the special chosen witnesses. They were emotionally
primed by what Joseph claimed to translate and then by the revelation
Joseph gave that emphasized their need for faith. The vision only
came to Oliver and David after a prolonged time in prayer and the
departure of Martin Harris.
It would appear from this account and Doctrine & Covenants
17, that the idea of three witnesses to the Book of Mormon is a
new discovery made by Joseph and Oliver in June of 1829 while producing
the Book of Mormon. Yet, three months earlier in March of 1829,
Joseph received a revelation for Martin Harris which stated that
Joseph had the gift to translate the Book of Mormon but that God
would grant him no other gift, and that God would call and ordain
three special witnesses to whom God would give supernatural power
to "behold and view these things as they are."
The revelation went on to say that no one else but the three would
have the power to receive this same testimony. It is possible that
Joseph did not refer back to this March 1829 revelation regarding
the witnesses because by June he already had in mind to add eight
additional witnesses besides Cowdery, Whitmer and Harris. Adding
additional witnesses would go against the earlier revelation that
there would be three and only three witnesses and that Joseph should
not show the gold plates to anyone else (D&C 5:3, 12-14).
There is another conflict with the story as recorded by Joseph
in his official history. Supposedly all three men saw the angel
and gold plates the same day. But, Harris provided this information
in an interview with Anthony Metcalf:
I never saw the golden plates, only in a visionary or entranced
state. I wrote a great deal of the Book of Mormon myself, as Joseph
Smith translated or spelled the words out in English. Sometimes
the plates would be on a table in the room in which Smith did
the translating, covered over with a cloth. I was told by Smith
that God would strike him dead if he attempted to look at them,
and I believed it. When the time came for the three witnesses
to see the plates, Joseph Smith, myself, David Whitmer and Oliver
Cowdery, went into the woods to pray. When they had engaged in
prayer, they failed at the time to see the plates or the angel
who should have been on hand to exhibit them. They all believed
it was because I was not good enough, or in other words, not sufficiently
sanctified. I withdrew. As soon as I had gone away, the three
others saw the angel and the plates. In about three days I went
into the woods to pray that I might see the plates. While praying
I passed into a state of entrancement, and in that state I saw
the angel and the plates. (Anthony Metcalf, Ten Years Before
the Mast, n.d., microfilm copy, p. 70-71.)
Visionary Reality
Like Martin Harris, each of the three witnesses to the Book of
Mormon willingly accepted visionary or second sight experiences
as objective, unquestionable reality. The testimony of these witnesses
contain qualifications which indicate there was a spiritual, visionary
dimension to the encounter with the plates and the angel. It should
be understood that this was not unusual for those who were actively
seeking such experiences.
However, this visionary aspect of the experience is seldom explained
to investigators of Mormonism. In Mormon "faith-promoting"
literature, references to the witnesses "handling" the
plates are prominently featured, but they are not put into a context
of a visionary handling of the plates.
Martin Harris himself claimed to have sat with the plates, and
"held them on his knee for an hour and a half, ..." ("Testimony
of Martin Harris" in the Latter Day Saints Millennial Star,
34:21, August 20, 1859, p. 545; also in George Reynolds, "Myth
of the Manuscript Found," in Juvenile Instructor, 1883,
as cited in Case Against Mormonism , Vol. 2, p. 40, Jerald
and Sandra Tanner, SLC, 1968).
Did he truly sit with plates said to weigh 45-60 pounds on his
lap, or did this occur in the realm of vision and imagination? We
may not know for sure, but it is interesting that when Mormon apologist
Richard Anderson quoted this testimony of Harris from the Millennial
Star he chose to omit with an elipsis, Harris' claim to have held
the plates on his lap.
It is possible Anderson himself recognized this detracted from
Harris' credibility. Regardless of how one interprets this event,
There is ample historical evidence the witnesses shared a subjective,
visionary mindset.
Martin Harris
Of the Three Witnesses, Martin Harris was probably the most affected
by this mystical and magical outlook. Contemporaries of Harris had
some of the following to say about him:
"a visionary fanatic" - said Rev. Jesse Townsend,
"Marvelousness" was his "predominating phrenological
development," - Pomeroy Tucker (a man who appeared to like
and respect M. Harris) who also said he was given to a "belief
in dreams, ghosts, hobgoblins, 'special providences,' terrestrial
visits of angels, [and] the interposition of 'devils' to afflict
sinful men"
"There can't anybody say a word against Martin Harris. Martin
was a good citizen ...a man that would do just as he agreed with
you. But, he was a great man for seeing spooks." - Lorenzo
Sauders, one who claimed to know the Harris family well. (Ronald
W. Walker, "Martin Harris: Mormonism's Early Convert,"
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, vol. 19 (Winter 1986):
34-35).
Another example comes from John H. Gilbert, one who participated
in the printing of the Book of Mormon. He provides this information:
Martin was something of a prophet: He frequently said
that "Jackson would be the last president that we would have;
and that all persons who did not embrace Mormonism in two years
would be stricken off the face of the earth.: He said that Palmyra
was to be the New Jerusalem, and that her streets were to be paved
with gold. Martin was in the office when I finished setting up
the testimony of the three witnesses, (Harris Cowdery
and Whitmer) I said to him, "Martin, did you see those
plates with your naked eyes?" Martin looked down for an instant,
raise his eyes up, and said, 'No, I saw them with a spiritual
eye.' (Wilford C. Wood, Joseph Smith Begins His Work, Vol.
1, 1958, introduction. This is a photomechanical reprint of the
first edition [1830] of the Book of Mormon. It also contains biographical
and historical information relating to the Book of Mormon.)
Martin Harris shows signs of being an unstable person in terms
of his religious convictions. G.W. Stodard, in an affadavit dated
Nov. 28, 1833 states:
I have been acquainted with Martin Harris, about thirty years...
Although he possessed wealth, his moral and religious character
was such, as not to entitle him to respect among his neighbors....He
was first an orthadox Quaker, then a Universalist, next a Restorationer,
then a Baptist, next a Presbyterian, and then a Mormon. By his
willingness to become all things unto all men, he has attained
a high standing among his Mormon brethren. (Howe 1834, 260-261)
This religious instability continued even after Harris joined the
Mormon Church. The Mormons admitted as much in 1846:
One day he [Martin Harris] would be one thing, and another day
another. He soon became deranged or shattered, as many believed,
flying from one thing to another, as if reason and common sense
were thrown off their balance. In one of his fits of monomania,
he went and joined the 'Shakers' or followers of Anne Lee. He
tarried with them a year or two, or perhaps longer... but since
Strang has made his entry into the apostate ranks, and hoisted
his standard for the rebellious to flock too, Martin leaves the
'Shakers,' whom he knows to be right, and has known it for many
years, as he said, and joins Strang in gathering out the tares
of the field. ( Millennial Star, vol. 8, November 15, 1846,
p. 124.)
The same article goes on to state:
...if the Saints wish to know what the Lord hath said of him,
they may turn to the 178th page of the Book of Doctrine and Covenants,
and the person there called a 'wicked man' is no other than Martin
Harris... (Ibid)
Mormon writers have admitted Harris' instability. E. Cecil McGavin
states, "Martin Harris was an unagressive, vacillating, easily
influenced person," (Tanner 1968, 33) and Mormon apologist
Richard Anderson though questioning "five religious changes
before Mormonism," does make several references to his "religious
instability." (Anderson 1981, 111, 167-ff)
While Mormon missionaries and popular literature of the LDS Church
both point out Martin Harris' eventual return to the Mormon Church
as a baptized member in full fellowship, and attribute this information
as coming from David Whitmer (Videocassette 1 - The Three Witnesses,
produced by Brigham Young University,) there is evidence he was
neither mentally stable nor in full fellowship. Rather, he was said
to be "feeble both in body and mind" and "was persuaded
by persistent importuning to join his destinies with the Utah Mormons."
The report in the Des Moines Daily News of October 16,
1886 went on to say that "Whitmer entertains no doubt whatever
that this singular action upon the part of Harris was wholly chargeable
to the enfeebled condition of his mind..." (Tanner 1968, 31)
Phineas H. Young, writing to Brigham Young from Kirtland, Ohio
records, "Martin Harris is a firm believer in Shakerism, says
his testimony is greater than it was of the Book of Mormon."
(Gunnell 1955, 52)
W.C. Gunnell in his dissertation on Martin Harris also notes regardingM.
Harris' eventual rejoining of the church that "Martin's motives
in being baptized at that time are not known, but the data of later
events would indicate a lack of sincerity." (Gunnell 1955,
52) The previously cited interview conducted by A. Metcalf further
substantiates this, and states,
Harris never believed that the Brighamite branch of the Mormon
church, nor the Josephite church, was right, because in his opinion,
God had rejected them; but he did believe that Mormonism was the
pure gospel of Christ when it was first revealed, I believe he
died in that faith. (Metcalf, 73)
When Metcalf asked Harris why he had rejoined the church and taken
the Mormon Temple endowments he answered that "his only motive
was to see what was going on in there." (Ibid, 72)
Martin Harris as a witness appears to be neither completely competent
nor reliable. He was greatly influenced by a magical mindset and
able to blend the mystical and material to the point where both
were equally real. There is considerable evidence as to his religious
instability, as he jumped from one group or person to the next.
Mormon scripture refers to him as "a wicked man" and Mormons
referred to his "monomania" or "mad fits," as
his wife called them. Mormon historians likewise have had to admit
he was an "vacillating, easily influenced person."
Much emphasis is placed on the assertion that the BOM Witnesses
like Harris, never denounced the Book of Mormon or denied their
testimony of seeing an angel. But given what we know of Harris,
is his lack of denial of great significance? He does not appear
to be a man of sound judgment or discernment and was easily swayed
by tales of the supernatural, especially in a religious context.
There is no evidence he ever denied his testimony of Shakerism or
his experiences with that group.
His experience with the angel was visionary and was seen with
"a spiritual eye" so it is unverifiable and quite likely
was real to him. He had little reason to renounce the Book of Mormon
for its message was consistent with the restorationist mindset of
many people in the nineteenth century.
As the primary financial investor in the Book of Mormon he had
a vested interest in supporting its authenticity.
These factors would be more likely to lead to continued affirmation
of his testimony rather than a denial of it. Throughout his life
and especially toward the end, his role as a BOM witness attracted
considerable attention as numerous people came to ask him questions
and hear him speak. His testimony later in life appears to be less
visionary and contain few if any qualifications about its subjective
nature.
A deadbed account of Martin Harris in the LDS periodical The
Instructor speaks of his reaffirmation of seeing an angel with
gold plates. After speaking of the gold plates Harris went on to
describe a money digging incident that took place after Joseph found
the plates. Harris is quoted as saying:
Three of us took some tools to go to the hill and hunt for more
boxes of gold or something, and indeed we found a stone box. We
got quite excited about it and dug carefully around it, and by
some unseen power it slipped back into the hill. We stood there
and looked at it and one of us took a crow-bar and tried to drive
it through the lid and hold it, but the bar glanced off and broke
off one of the corners of the box. Sometime that box will be found
and you will see the corner broken off, and then you will know
I have told you the truth. ("The Last Testimony of Martin
Harris," by E. Cecil McGavin in The Instructor, October,
1930, Vol. 65, No. 10, pp. 587-589)
It is evident Martin Harris was something of a celebrity toward
the close of his life. He seemed to enjoy speaking of the encounter
with an angel, and the more the story was repeated, the more concrete
it became while the subjective aspects of the incident seemed to
diminish.
This does not prove nor disprove the authenticity of the events
recounted by Harris. It does, however, confirm that with the passage
of time these events became more real and more concrete for Harris
so that his later testimony is understood in light of earlier qualifications.
This evidence creates some serious problems for the manner in
which the LDS church presents the person and life of Martin Harris.
He does not appear to be a man of discernment or sound judgment
and was easily swayed by tales of the fantastic and supernatural.
He had a vested interest in the success of the Book of Mormon and
his reputation was questioned by the Latter-day Saints themselves.
Harris added elements to his story of the angel and his connection
with Joseph Smith as he told it through the years, allowing it to
become less visionary and subjective and more concrete. For example,
Martin Harris, claimed in an interview that before his experience
as one of the three witnesses he told Joseph Smith, "Joseph,
I know all about it. The Lord has showed me ten times more about
it than you know." (Interview with Martin Harris in Tiffany's
Monthly, 1859, p. 166). While quite likely a sincere man, he
would appear to be neither reliable nor credible as a witness.
Oliver Cowdery
Oliver Cowdery and Joseph Smith were third cousins (Oliver Cowdery:
The Elusive Second Elder of the Restoration, Phillip R. Legg,
p. 17), and Cowdery also shared what must be considered a magical,
mystical mindset. D. Michael Quinn in his book, Early Mormonism
& the Magic World View, states, "Cowdery's use of a
divining rod, however, does suggest that before 1829, he may have
also had at least some knowledge of and experience with astrology
and ceremonial folk magic" (p. 35).
Quinn's and other extensive research has turned up some interesting
facts. William Cowdery, Oliver's father was closely associated with,
if not a member of Vermont's Wood Scrape, and participated in folk
magic. Quinn has linked him closely with Nathanael Wood's "Fraternity
of Rodsmen." (Quinn 1987, 84-86)
Alan Taylor also discovered this connection in his research on
the previously cited "Treasure Seeking In the American Northeast,"
and states:
In 1799 a seer named Wingate arrived in Middletown as a guest
of the Woods and of William Cowdry [sic] in adjoining Wells, Vermont.
The Woods began to feature divining rods in their rituals, insisting
that the rods' jerks in answer to their questions represented
divine messages. (Taylor 1986, 24)
Oliver Cowdery followed his father's lead in folk magic practices
with his own occultic use of a divining rod. This has been documented
by RLDS Church Historian Richard P. Howard.
For example, the 'divining rod' was used effectively by one Nathanael
Wood in Rutland County, Vermont, in 1801. Wood, Winchell, William
Cowdery, Jr., and his son Oliver Cowdery, all had some knowledge
of and associations with the various uses, both secular and sacred,
of the forked witch hazel rod. Winchell and others used such a
rod in seeking buried treasure;...when Joseph Smith met Oliver
Cowdery in April 1829, he found a man peculiarly adept in the
use of the forked rod... (Howard 1969, 211-214)
This is further supported by research done by Marvin S. Hill of
the Mormon Church's Brigham Young University who, along with confirming
Cowdery's use of a rod also stated, "Some of the rodsmen or
money diggers who moved in Mormonism were Oliver Cowdery, Martin
Harris, Orrin P. Rockwell, Joseph and Newel Knight, and Josiah Stowell."
(Hill 1972, 78)
Jerald and Sandra Tanner point out an interesting and important
change Joseph Smith made in one of his revelations as he attempted
to cover up Cowdery's ability to work with a divining rod. Here
is a comparison of the original revelation as found in the Book
of Commandments with the altered version as it now appears in the
Doctrine and Covenants.
Book of Commandments
Now this is not all, for you have another gift, which is the
gift of working with the rod: behold it has told you things: behold
there is no other power save God, that can cause this rod of nature,
to work in your hands... (7:3)
Doctrine and Covenants
Now this is not all thy gift, for you have another gift, which
is the gift of Aaron; behold, it has told you many things; Behold,
there is no other power, save the power of God, that can cause
this gift of Aaron to be with you. (8:6-7)
LDS historians have attempted to justify the extensive involvement
of the founders of the Mormon church in occultic and folk magic
practices by claiming this was simply part of the culture of the
time. This may be true to some extent, but laws in both New York
and Vermont made divining illegal and the better educated ridiculed
it in books and newspapers of the day. Furthermore, it does not
change the fact that God has clearly condemned such practices as
well as those who are involved in them (Deuteronomy 8:10-11).
True prophets of God in biblical times, rather than going along
with their cultures (which often were engaging in these things)
stood against the common culture and condemned such activities.
We do not find Joseph Smith taking any such stand against occultic
practices, as would be expected of a true prophet of God.
Cowdery, in conjunction with his magical involvement, appears to
have shared a visionary mindset similar to other Mormons. Brigham
Young, second president of the Mormon church, at a special conference
on Sunday, June 17, 1877 told of an incident from the life of Oliver
Cowdery. On more than one occasion they were able to enter into
the hill Cumorah and see many wonderful things. Young explained:
When Joseph got the plates, the angel instructed him to carry
them back to the hill Cumorah, which he did. Oliver says that
when Joseph and Oliver went there, the hill opened, and they walked
into a cave, in which there was a large and spacious room... They
laid the plates on a table; it was a large table that stood in
the room. Under this table there was a pile of plates as much
as two feet high, and there were altogether in this room more
plates than probably many wagon loads; they were piled up in the
corners and along the walls. The first time they went there the
sword of Laban hung upon the wall; but when they went in again
it had been taken down and laid upon the table across the gold
plates; it was unsheathed and on it was written these words: "This
sword will never be sheathed again until the kingdoms of this
world become the kingdoms of our God and his Christ." I tell
you this as coming not only from Oliver Cowdery, but others who
were familiar with it... Carlos Smith was a young man of as much
veracity as any young man we had, and he was a witness to these
things. Samuel Smith saw some things, Hyrum saw a good many things,
but Joseph was the leader. (Journal of Discourses 1878, 19:38)
This is another example of having second sight, and was claimed
not only by Joseph and Oliver but others of their friends and neighbors
as well. Some of those who did not claim to have this ability did
believe that other people possessed such gifts. According to Lucy
Smith, this was the reason Josiah Stowell hired Joseph for treasure
hunting on his property. He firmly believed Joseph "could discern
things invisible to the natural eye. (Smith 1958, 92).
For this reason the witnesses could make statements like those
of Oliver and Joseph where, through the power of second sight, or
with the eyes of understanding, they claim to enter a mountain and
handle plates, putting them back on a table. None of this, however,
is subject to objective or empirical scrutiny, so, statements like
Cowdery's oft quoted "I beheld with my eyes and handled with
my hands the gold plates from which it was translated," (Millennial
Star 1859, 544) should at least be considered in this context
of visionary second sight.
A statement made by Brigham Young furthers this type of understanding.
Some of the witnesses of the Book of Mormon, who handled the
plates and conversed with the angels of God, were afterwards left
to doubt and to disbelieve that they had ever seen an angel. One
of the Quorum of the Twelve a young man full of faith and
good works, prayed and the vision of his mind was opened, and
the angel of God came and laid the plates before him, and he saw
and handled them, and saw the angel. (Journal of Discourses
1860, 7:164)
First we have the "vision of his mind opened," and then
a handling of the plates with the aid of an angel. The question
to ask is, would he, when retelling the story of the angel and plates,
always qualify his statement "I handled the plates" with
the disclaimer that this was in a vision? Not likely, which would
provide us with many of his friends and family that could testify
that Bro. So and so of the Quorum handled the plates. I believe
that in a similar manner, many of the friends and relatives of the
Book of Mormon witnesses could make statements to the effect that
"so and so told me that they handled the plates," without
mentioning that it was a visionary experience.
This quote by Brigham Young is also significant for it provides
evidence that some of the witnesses had doubts. Young may or may
not be referring to some of those who signed their name to the Book
of Mormon, but this is of secondary importance. The point is, some
who had an experience with an angel and gold plates later had reason
to doubt the veracity of the experience, and this detracts from
the reliability of those who founded their faith and testimony on
the visionary and subjective.
Adding futher confusion to what actually happened with the Three
Witnesses is testimony by Joseph Smith that Oliver Cowdery actually
saw the gold plates in a vision before the Three Witnesses event.
In a history of his own life and work Joseph Smith writes,
...[the] Lord appeared unto a young man by the name of Oliver
Cowdery and shewed unto him the plates in a vision and also the
truth of the work and what the Lord was about to do through me...
(Jessee 1984, 8)
It would appear then that David Whitmer was the only witness to
see the gold plates for the first time on the day mentioned by the
Three Witnesses statement. Oliver Cowdery had already seen them
once before, and Martin Harris, according to his own statements,
did not see them until three days later. Most Mormons do not know
this, and it is quite unlikely to be incorporated into the material
presented by the Mormon missionaries.
Cowdery & Conflict of Interest
The close association of Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery during
the production of the Book of Mormon raises the question of whether
or not Cowdery was free of any conflict of interest as a witness
to the Book of Mormon. Did he have anything to gain by endorsing
the supernatural origins of the book? Is there any indication he
was a willing participant in a deliberate deception? Recently published
historical evidence reveals problems with the common LDS view that
the Aaronic Priesthood was given to Oliver and Joseph by John the
Baptist and the Melchizedek Priesthood was conferred upon Joseph
and Oliver by the biblical apostles Peter, James and John in 1829.
Cowdery and Smith both testified repeatedly that they were together
when an angel (later identified as John the Baptist) appeared to
them, as did Peter, James and John at a later date. Both of these
ordinations are mentioned in Doctrine & Covenants 27:6-13. D.
Michael Quinn, a researcher and writer on the area of LDS history,
discovered that:
A closer look at contemporary records indicates that men were
first ordained to the higher priesthood [in June of 1831] over
a year after the church's founding [on April 6, 1830]. No mention
of angelic ordinations can be found in original documents until
1834-35. Thereafter accounts of the visit of Peter, James, and
John by Cowdery and Smith remained vague and contradictory. (The
Mormon Hierarchy - Origins of Power, D. Michael Quinn,
Signature Books, 1994, p. 15.)
Here is a chronology of key events that can be historically documented:
Book of Mormon published in March of 1830; Church of Christ organized
in April 1830; June 1831 conference Joseph Smith announces there
was a "high priesthood."
Up until this time, according to Quinn's research, apart from Joseph
being the "first elder" and Oliver being the "second
elder" there were different priesthood offices in the church,
ie. priest, elder, teacher, but no discernable difference in status
or level of authority (The Mormon Hierarchy, p. 28). The
announcement of a "high priesthood" now implied that all
previous authority was of a lower status. At this June 1831 conference
Joseph conferred this "high priesthood" on Lyman Wight.
Wight then "ordained" Joseph Smith to the "high priesthood."
At this time there is no indication Joseph mentioned any kind of
angelic source for this new development in church authority, nor
is the new priesthood named either Aaronic or Melchizedek.
This continued to be the case for the next few years. Quinn makes
the important observation that:
Until Cowdery's 1834 history and retroactive changes in the 1835
Doctrine and Covenants, there was nothing in Mormonism to attract
converts who expected a literal restoration of apostolic authority.
Charisma [spiritual sign gifts like healing and prophecy] and
the voice of God [coming through Joseph Smith] were the only bases
of authority that early Mormon converts knew until the publication
of Cowdery's history in 1834 (Mormon Hierarchy, p. 32).
An interesting picture begins to emerge. Historical data indicates
that starting in 1834, Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery together
began introducing the idea that they had been given divine authority
by God via an angel. Quinn found that the first public discussion
of an angelic restoration came from Oliver Cowdery in 1834.
Cowdery's history of Mormonism, written with the assistance of
Joseph Smith, speaks of an angel from heaven, (but later identified
as John the Baptist), restoring "the Holy Priesthood."
Cowdery claimed that he and Joseph were pondering who had authority
and were waiting for a command to be baptized when an angel appeared
and said,
upon you my fellow servants, in the name of Messiah I confer
this priesthood and this authority, which shall remain upon earth,
that the sons of Levi may yet offer an offering unto the Lord
in righteousness! (Messenger and Advocate, Vol. 1, No. 1, October
1834).
Though no prior mention of such an event can be found, starting
in 1834, both Joseph and Oliver claimed the angel appeared to them
in 1829, and gave them "the holy priesthood." Mormon people
today understand "the holy priesthood" to refer to the
higher or Melchizedek priesthood, and it is very possible that this
was Cowdery's intent in his 1834 history, since Smith, in 1831,
only announced one "high priesthood." This has generally
been linked to what was later called the Melchizedek priesthood.
But when Cowdery first mentions this "holy priesthood"
in October of 1834, he links it to Levi, who, in the Old Testament,
was an Aaronic priest.
Later material provided by Cowdery and Smith changes both the
identity of the messenger and the priesthood that he confers. For
example, Oliver Cowdery originally spoke of an unnamed angel, but
later the angel becomes John the Baptist according to the testimony
of Joseph and Oliver. What is conferred upon them is no longer "the
holy priesthood" associated with Melchizedek, but the Aaronic
priesthood. Quinn notes that Cowdery's history speaks of only one
angelic visit and the conferring of only one priesthood (Mormon
Hierarchy, pp. 15-16).
Prior to the publication of the 1835 Doctrine and Covenants, Joseph
had not claimed to receive any revelations that mentioned priesthood
authority. Yet, when the 1835 D&C was published, not only was
there new material on divine priesthood authority, some of the earlier
revelations published in 1833 had been altered.
A careful comparison of what is now section 27 of the Doctrine
& Covenants with how it was originally published in 1832 in
The Evening and the Morning Star and then in the 1833 Book
of Commandments (Section XXIII, p. 60), reveals the original revelation
was considerably shorter.
This revelation, as first given by Joseph Smith in 1830, only
had 7 verses prohibiting the purchase of wine or strong drink from
the Saint's enemies. When published in the 1835 D&C, it unexplainably
had 9 additional verses.
These spoke of Moroni, John the son of Zacharias, the Aaronic
priesthood as the "first" priesthood, and an additional
ordination of Joseph and Oliver by Peter James and John, who gave
them "keys of your ministry" and "keys of the kingdom."
Quinn notes, without providing an explanation, that "the added
text cannot be found in any document before 1835, nor can any similar
wording or concept be found prior to 1834." (Ibid, p. 16).
Historical evidence suggests one logical explanation for these
changes. Cowdery and Smith, who were in charge of the edits to the
1835 D&C, together developed the idea of an angelic source for
their authority sometime after 1833. Cowdery, writing his history
in 1834 with Joseph's assistance, added the story of the appearance
of the angel.
Then, together they added extra material to a revelation Smith
had already given in 1830, to make it look like the appearance of
both John the Baptist and Peter James and John had been known since
1830 and not 1834 as was truly the case. Their attempts at altering
history and adding a supernatural element did not go unnoticed.
David Whitmer, one of the three Witnesses along with Oliver Cowdery
and Martin Harris, broke off his association with Cowdery, Smith
and the church, because they had dared to alter what was said to
be a revelation from God (Address to All Believers in Christ,
pp. 56ff).
There is little attempt to explain where Cowdery or Smith derived
the sudden appearance of Peter, James & John in D&C section
27, and how they become the source for the both the high priesthood
and the concept of "keys" that today play such an important
part in Mormon theology. There appears to be nothing in the earlier
writing of Smith or Cowdery that associates keys with these three
New Testament apostles. Quinn noted that no similar wording or concept
can be found prior to 1834.
However, correspondence between Oliver Cowdery and W. W. Phelps,
published in the Messenger and Advocate from October 1834
to July 1835 provides both a link to Cowdery and Smith and a source
for these new theological developments. Cowdery first writes of
an angelic ordination in October of 1834 (Messenger and Advocate,
pp. 15-16).
In the April 1835 Messenger and Advocate Cowdery writes
to Phelps regarding Moses' awareness of blessings for the Gentiles,
drawing Phelps' attention to Moses' prayer in Deuteronomy 32:43
("Rejoice O ye nations, with his people!", p. 111.)
In the July 1835 issue of Messenger and Advocate, Phelps
responds to Cowdery and suggests and develops the idea of Moses
conferring special keys to Peter James and John on the Mount of
Transfiguration (pp. 145).
In the same letter Phelps also gives a detailed exposition of
the importance of "blessing" and connects this with the
conferring of keys to Peter, James and John. Is it merely coincidence
that later this same year Cowdery and Smith introduce the ideas
of priesthood blessings that bring about the "keys"
of authority through the Melchizedek priesthood?
Cowdery and Smith would later claim they received these from Peter,
James and John. Some of these appear as part of "unannounced
changes and expansions of revelations" in the 1835 Doctrine
and Covenants which was accepted at a special conference in August
of 1835 (Quinn, Mormon Hierarchy, p. 623).
Quinn observed that by late 1835 Cowdery was writing about two
angelic minstrations and also a blessing given him by Smith which
spoke of Smith and Cowdery being ordained "by the hand of the
angel in the bush, unto the lesser priesthood and after received
the holy priesthood under the hands of they who had been held in
reserve for a long season, even those who received it under the
hand of the Messiah" (Ibid, p. 17).
These historical discoveries about the development of priesthood
authority and the altering of previously given revelations suggest
that Cowdery and Smith were working together to introduce a divine
element into the story of Mormon origins. Cowdery's close collaboration
with Smith in these areas raises serious questions regarding whether
or not there truly were any divine angelic visitations, and also
casts doubt on Cowdery's status as an unbiased, reliable witness
to the divine origin of the Book of Mormon.
Osa 2
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