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Hugh Nibley rpcman
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Tällä sivulla on Hugh Nibleyn lievästi sanoen vääristelevä arvostelu Fawn M. Brodien Joseph Smith-elämäkerrasta No Man Knows My History sekä rpcmanin kommentit Nibleyn tekstiin. Sivu on hieman kesken.Tämä on luultavasi heikoin näkemäni kirja-arvostelu. Mikäli tämä on kirkon paras oppinut, silloin kirkko on vaikeuksissa. Nibley viittaa Brodieen seksistiseen sävyyn "leidinä" läpi koko arvostelun. Luettuani hänen arvostelunsa jäin miettimään, eikö sen julkaisematta jättäminen olisi ollut parempi? Lyhyesti sanoen Nibley ei vastannut Brodien parhaisiin argumentteihin tai lähteisiin. Myönnän kernaasti, että Brodien työssä on joitakin puutteita, ja Nibley huomauttaa niistä. Perustavasti voi sanoa, että arvostelu, joka ei käsittele avain- ja pääkohtia, ei ole paljon mistään kotoisin minun mielestäni. Kuka tahansa voi osoittaa joitakin puutteita melkein mistä kirjasta tahansa, mutta se ei merkitse, että pitäisi hylätä sataprosenttisesti kaiken, mitä tuo kirjailija kirjoittaa. Hugh käytti myös suuren osan vastineestaan (ja muista esseistään teoksessa "Tinkling Cymbals and Sounding Brass") tehden henkilöön kohdistuvia hyökkäyksiä, ivaten niitä, jotka eivät ole samaa mieltä hänen uskonnostaan, ja olemalla inhottava sen sijaan, että olisi kumonnut mormonismia vastustavat vahvat kohdat. Tämä kai on hänen tyylinsä, mutta sellaisesta ei tule oikein kunnon vastinetta. No Ma'am, That's Not History by Hugh Nibley
PrefaceWhen the writer first read Mrs. Brodie's book 13 years ago he was struck by the brazen inconsistencies that swarm in its pages, and so wrote this hasty review. At that time he had no means of knowing that inconsistency was the least of the author's vices, and assumed with other reviewers that when she cited a work in her footnotes, she had actually read it, that when she quoted she was quoting correctly, and that she was familiar with the works in her bibliography. Only when other investigations led the reviewer to the same sources in ensuing years did the extent of Mrs. Brodie's irresponsibility become apparent. While a large book could (and probably should) be devoted to this remarkable monument of biographical mendacity, more than a decade of research abetted by correspondence with Mrs. Brodie's defenders has failed to discredit a single observation made in our 1946 review, which is printed here with only a few typographical corrections. What Brought This OnPeople are still trying to explain Joseph Smith. That is as it should be, for no man who claims as much as he did should go unchallenged. Joseph Smith's own story is by no means the only possible explanation of his career; for everything in the universe there are as many explanations to hand as the mind is willing to devise. Only one rule must be observed; it is the old "law of parsimony," which states that of all explanations of a thing that one must be given preference to the exclusion of all others which is the simplest, i.e., the freest from contradiction, requiring the fewest qualifications and the least elaboration of explanation.
The latest explanation of Joseph Smith is Mrs. Brodie's. It is not animated by violent hatred. That fact is reassuring but, strangely enough, irrelevant. The average man is as free from prejudice as Rhadamanthus when it comes to tensor analysis or the interpretation of Sumerian text--but that does not qualify him to speak on either subject, and if Mrs. Brodie preserved the calm of a Nestor we would still have to judge her explanation strictly on its own merits, and not assume that she must be telling the truth because she is not mad at anybody. Brodie takes an awful beating from the law of parsimony. Far simpler and more to the point are the thumping biographies of an earlier day, that simply announced that the man Joseph Smith was a complete scamp, and there an end--simple and direct. With that same admirable simplicity and directness, these authors ran headlong into a brick wall of contraditions, and that was their undoing. Altogether too much is known about Joseph Smith to let the "total depravity" theory get by. So Mrs. Brodie will qualify it by introducing into the picture an element which she thinks solves everything: Joseph Smith was a complete impostor, the New Light teaches, but he meant well. He was just an easy-going rustic with irresponsible ways and an overactive imagination. That takes care of everything.
But as soon as we get down to cases, the new and humane interpretation of the prophet, far from improving things, makes everything much worse. Brodie's Joseph Smith is a more plausible character than the consummate fiend of the earlier school in that his type is much more likely to be met with on the street any Tuesday afternoon. But he is actually much less plausible as the man who accomplished what Joseph Smith did.
Some kind of an inspired super-devil might have got away with some of the things he did, but no blundering, dreaming, undisciplined, shallow and opportunistic faker could have left behind what Joseph Smith did, both in men's hearts and on paper.
Brodie's task is to fit the recorded words and acts of one Joseph Smith to her idea of a well-meaning but not too reliable oaf. To do this the words and acts in question must be changed around a bit: there must he a good deal of critical interpretation and explaining in the light of the answer she wants to get. All this is pardonable if it does not go too far. But how far does it go? That is the all-important question which can be answered only by consulting the book itself.
After a glance at those learned pages we shall be able to point out a real and solid contribution which Mrs. B. has made to the advancement of knowledge. It is in view of that contribution that we are moved to discuss a work that might otherwise have been gravely misunderstood. We believe in giving credit where credit is due-but not elsewhere and for that reason take the pains to point out a few interesting aspects of Mrs. Brodie's celebrated biography.
A Little Discourse On MethodMrs. Brodie begins her study with the observation that though there is no lack of documents for the history of Joseph Smith, these documents are "fiercely contradictory." In that case it is necessary for a writer to pick and choose his evidence. Now by the simple process of picking and choosing one's evidence, one may prove absolutely anything.
For which reason it is important to ask what principle Mrs. B. follows in making her choice. This is not hard to discover. Our guide first makes up her mind about Joseph Smith and then proceeds to accept any and all evidence, from whatever source, that supports her theory. The uncritical acceptance of evidence from all sources gives her work at first glance an air of great impartiality. At the same time she rejects any and all evidence, from whatever source, that refutes her settled ideas.
Thus (p. 18) she flatly rejects the sworn affidavit of fifty-one of Joseph's neighbors because their testimony does not suit her idea of the prophet's character.
We would applaud such strong-mindedness were it not that on the very next page she accepts the stories of the same witnesses regarding "seer stones, ghosts, magic incantations, and nocturnal excavations." Now scandal stories thrive notoriously well in rural settings, while the judgment of one's neighbors regarding one's general character over a number of years is far less likely to run into the fantastic. Yet Brodie can reject the character witnesses as prejudiced while accepting the weirdest extravagances of their local gossip.
In the same spirit, Dogherry and Howe, Bennett, Jackson and Law, all "unreliable witnesses to say the least" become reliable sources whenever their testimony supports Brodie, and hopelessly prejudiced when it does not.
"The press accounts" (there is only one such "account") of the charlatan Walters "stated significantly that when he left the neighborhood his mantle fell upon young Joseph Smith." (19). What is "significant" about it? What is meant by the vague figure of speech more than that one scamp was succeeded by another?
Even Dogherry does not do more than insinuate that Joseph was one of Walter's audience of yokels. Why should his bitter enemies not come out and say he was Walter's disciple if he was--why nothing but an extremely non-committal hint and a veiled figure of speech if they had anything at all to go by? Yet this is the whole evidence for one of Brodie's proudest discoveries. For her it is an absolute certainty (31) upon which she repeatedly insists, that Walters was Joseph's most particular teacher.
"No two of Joseph's neighbors had the same version of the story" of the plates, we are told (37) What does one do in that case? One simply accepts or rejects the stories according to one's own fancy. This is fun until one runs up against flatly contradictory evidence that cannot be sidestepped or ignored. Regarding the claims that no one ever saw anything but an empty box, Brodie sagely observes (80): "It is difficult to reconcile this explanation with the fact that these witnesses, and later Emma and William Smith, emphasized the size, weight and metallic texture of the plates." Yes, how do you reconcile them? Here is Brodie's method: "Exactly how Joseph Smith persuaded so many of the reality of the gold plates is neither so important nor so baffling as the effect of this success on Joseph himself." Whereupon she drops the question for good. There may be ten thousand things more important and more baffling than the problem of disproving the plates, but that fact has no bearing on the problem and can hardly pass for a solution in a book "where honesty and integrity presumably should count for something." She is simply side-stepping the issue, and the law of parsimony screams bloody murder: it must have an explanation of those plates, but such is not forthcoming from our oracle.
The Hebraic origin of the Indian is an idea which seems to have come chiefly from Ethan Smith's View of the Hebrews (46). Though this possibility quickly becomes a dead certainty for Brodie "it may never be proved that Joseph saw View of the Hebrews before writing the Book of Mormon." Since there is nothing in his own words to give him away, that for Brodie is the proof that he was careful to cover up his traces. What proves the stealing of the Book of Mormon from Ethan Smith is the presence of "striking parallels" between the two.
This brings up a very important aspect of the Brodie method, namely the use of parallels as an argument. It has become the favorite device of non-Mormon writers.
Oriental literature bristles with parallels to the Book of Mormon that are far more full and striking than anything that can be found in the West.
There are "outside" parallels for every event in the Old and New Testaments, yet that does not prove anything.
Of recent years literary studies have shown parallels not to be the exception but the rule in the world of creative writing, and it is well known that great inventions and scientific discoveries have a way of appearing at about the same time in separate places. A scholar by the name of Karl Joel has recently amassed a huge amount of material on the subject, and though we need not accept his conclusion that the same sort of thing that is happening in one place at a given time will be found to be happening all over the world at that moment (!), still his vast volumes present a great wealth of undeniable parallels. The fact that two theories or books present parallelism, no matter how striking, may imply a common source, but it certainly does not in itself prove that the one is derived from the other. We know (thanks to Brodie) that there was a great and widespread interest in the Indian problem in Joseph's day, and we also know that these people of that day had a way of referring everything to the Bible; in that case it is hard to see how anyone could have avoided the Indian-Hebrew tie-up.
Mrs. Brodie sees parallels everywhere.
To cite a few of her howlers, there is the case of a herdsman who kills a number of rustlers with a sword (not a sling). Now herdsman have been fighting with rustlers since the dawn of time, but for Brodie this is simply a direct steal from the story of David and Goliath. Again, the barges of the Jaredites "contained everything which the settlers might need on the new Continent," (71), like any Chinese Junk, Viking ship, or the Mayflower itself; in fact ships have a way of carrying with them whatever the personnel will need. Brodie, however, knows that the whole thing is a dishonest adaption of Noah's ark. Certain fortifications of earth and timbers mentioned in the Book of Mormon resemble those in western New York. Also, we add, in Russia, England, Africa, France, China and everywhere else. Such structures are universally common to a certain type of war-like culture.
At one place in the Book of Mormon, atheism is denounced; since there were atheists on the frontier, Brodie knows that the whole idea is simply an adaption of the local scene. The fact that atheism has been an issue in sundry civilizations since the world began, means nothing to our author she chooses her parallels as she chooses her evidence, where it suits her.
Sidney Rigdon once in an article "openly quoted" from Thomas Dick's "Philosophy of a Future State." That to Brodie proves that Joseph Smith "had recently been reading the book" (171).
Dick mentions the old familiar doctrine that the stars may be inhabited by intelligent progressive beings. So Brodie knows that all the prophet's "later teachings" on the subject "came directly from Dick."
He could not very well have got his earlier teachings from Dick, though his later teachings are simply a continuation of them. Yet as soon as a work appears that resembles what he is doing, Brodie immediately pounces upon it as the prophet's only source.
If she would show how the doctrine of progress was stolen from Dick, the lady [the lady? He wrote this over 30 years ago but still. . .] should not have been at such pains to show that progressivism had been a basic part of its background from the first.
A useful form of parallel is the "identical anecdote." To prove Joseph Smith's dishonesty in operating the bank "several apostates at different times related an identical ancedote" about money-boxes (196). Now identical anecdotes can be assumed to indicate a common source, but no more: they say nothing as to the nature of that source or its reliability. For Mrs. Brodie the fact that they are identical proves not that they are commonly derived, but that they are actually true! What kind of history is that?
The greatest possible wealth of "identical anecdotes" attests the orgies in the temple, and yet Brodie does not hesitate to scout the lot as absolutely worthless, identical or not. How infinitely weaker is the "whispered talk" (214) which attests the activities of the Danites?
Yet Mrs. B. accepts it, forsooth, because it is "fragmentary (to say the least) but consistent." The stories once current about the nocturnal orgies of the early Christians and the child-eating rites of the Jews were not too fragmentary and were remarkably consistent--only they weren't true.
"Bald parallels with Masonic rites" (65) the lady finds particularly crude. [the lady?] How did he dare it? Why didn't he disguise it? (279ff). The answer is that to those who know both, the resemblance is not striking at all; it is not nearly so striking as the resemblance between the church Joseph Smith founded and the other churches, and yet even though the Mormon Church and these institutions present one parallel after another, they are really totally different in form and meaning.
Speaking of parallels, however, one cannot pass by one of the most remarkable studies in religious parallel ever written. The name of the most learned man who ever made a study of the Mormons, and one of the best-informed men who ever lived, does not appear in Mrs. Brodie's pages. At the end of the last century the great tradition of European scholarship in the grand style culminated in the person of Eduard Meyer. If he did not have the stature of some earlier scholars, it is certain that he was in a position to survey and assimilate more of the learning of the past than any human being before or since his day. To his famous rotunda at the University of Berlin flowed, as it has never flowed since, all the learning of the ages for his examination and exploitation. No other man ever combined the learning both of the East and the Classical world in a work of such high and lasting authority as Meyer's "Geschichte des Altertums"--the ultimate and, in fact, the last general history of antiquity to be the work of a single mind. Now this man had a particular interest in ancient religions, and it occurred to him that in Mormonism he might study at first hand how a real religion gets started. So impressed was he by the possibilities of such a study that he packed up and went to Utah in 1904, to devote a year of his priceless time to studying the Mormons. Few churches have had the good fortune to be examined at first hand by a man of such vast learning and complete impartiality. For in keeping with the high "Wissenschaft" of his day, Meyer himself professed no religion. He was neither partial nor hostile to the Mormons, who as far as his feelings were concerned might have been beings on another planet or a heap of ants. Meyer's entire Ursprung und Ceschichte der Mormonen is a study in parallels, comparing the new religion with revealed religions of the past. While grandly contemptuous of Joseph Smith's low coefficient of "Kultur," the great savant illustrates at length the "exact identity" of his church both in "atmosphere" and sundry particulars with that of the Early Christians. A "striking and irrefutable" parallelism supports Mormon claims to revelation, "with perfect right" they identify themselves with the apostolic church of old. The similarity extends to the faults as well as the virtues of the prophet and his followers--they may be matched "at every point" by the faults and virtues of the ancient prophets and the ancient church. We shall have occasion to refer to Eduard Meyer a number of times below, not because he was favorably disposed (he is in fact far less sympathetic than Brodie), but because with his infinitely greater knowledge he reaches such totally different conclusions. He is a necessary "control" in testing our author. Incidentally, the faithful need not be too utterly crushed by Brodie's erudite announcement (256) that the word "Nauvoo" is purely a figment of Smith's imagination,
since no less an Orientalist than Meyer himself is naive enough to be taken in by the prophet's ruse. He observes (Urspr. U. Gesch. p 142, n.2) that the word is a plain transliteration of the Hebrew nava, which is feminine (the proper gender for place-names) and happens to mean "the beautiful." Mrs. Brodie can put her stuffed mourning dove back into its box now: her philology is of the same brand as her history.
Evolution At Any Price[or distorting Brodie to save the faithful] Of all Mrs. Brodie's preconceived ideas the most fundamental is her certainty that Joseph Smith did not receive revelations. That sudden and dazzling enlightenment which is the essence of religious experience of the highest sort is unthinkable in his case.
All his own statements on the subject are to be discarded out of hand. To Brodie "there are few men who have written so much and told so little about themselves." Which is simply to say that though Joseph Smith tells a great deal about himself Brodie does not choose to believe it.
Instead she will cling to the theory that all the prophet's thought and action was the result of a slow and gradual evolution. This is an easy mechanical rule-of-thumb that may be employed to make any thesis sound very scientific. The first objection to it Brodie ignores entirely, namely, the well-known fact that great religious conviction is usually born of sudden insight.
Other religious leaders may have their moments of inspiration, but in Joseph's case everything is slow and gradual.
Barring this objection, how does Mrs. Brodie support her evolutionary theory? To begin with, there was no "first vision." True, such visions "were the common folklore of the area" (22) and Joseph was the most imaginative youth in the world, still he had no such vision-not even a false one! The proof is that the newspapers say nothing about it.
The argument of silence is always a suspicious one, yet how much more suspicious when we are told (14) that there are no detailed descriptions of the revivals in Palmyra and Manchester when they were at their wildest?
If the press ignores the revivals at their wildest why should it not ignore a mere episode of the movement? Joseph Smith specifically says it was the ministers who united to persecute him--it was persecution from the pulpit (not as Brodie insinuates, a sort of militant mob movement).
But, says Brodie, these same newspapers '"in later years gave him plenty of unpleasant publicity." In later years he was an important public figure with a large following--their silence at this time merely proves his own statement that he was "an obscure boy" and anything but news.
If Joseph Smith claimed to have had a vision in 1820 "the newspapers took no notice of such a claim either at the time it was supposed to have occurred or at any other time." (23). Therefore we can only conclude that no such claim was made, either in 1820 "or at any other time." The last clause nullifies the whole argument, for if the silence of the newspapers is proof of anything, then Joseph Smith never at any time claimed to have had the vision, which Brodie knows is false.
However, she hastened to corroborate the silence of the press with the testimony of Master Dogberry: "It is well known that Joe Smith never pretended to have any communion with angels until a long period after the pretended finding of his book." Even if Dogberry were a reliable witness (which he definitely is not) we can only ask, "well known" to whom? Why, indeed, to the thousands of people to whom the prophet never mentioned his visions.
A million people in London and Paris could have sworn affidavits that Joseph Smith never told them a thing about the angel; the entire city of Peking and large areas of the Central Sudan could honestly report that they had never been informed of Moroni's visit. That Joseph Smith should not noisily divulge the great and sacred things he had been ordered to keep secret does not seem possible to Brodie.
If the first vision was so "soul shattering" how, she asks triumphantly, could it have "passed totally unnoticed in Joseph's home town." It never occurs to her that there are things, especially if they are of a transcendent and "soul-shattering" nature, which one does not run off to report to the press and the neighbors. Joseph reported his vision only to his family and to a minister he thought he could trust. It was the minister who caused the trouble.
What was the first vision, then? A remembered dream, says Brodie, "created sometime after 1834," for "dream images came easy to this youth"--in 1834, that is, but not in 1820!
As a final clincher to her argument of silence against the first vision, our author points out that in 1820 Joseph was not religious at all: "he reflected the irreligion and cynicism of his father," he was merely a "likable ne'er do well," (16) "immune to religious influence of any sort.' (24). Later on, after the first vision has been thus debunked and forgotten, in order to prove something else, Brodie flatly refutes all these judgments as worthless: "It is clear that he was keenly alert to the theological differences dividing the sects and was genuinely interested in the controversies." (26). Now it is his version she is accepting, and that in the teeth of all testimony to the contrary. If that much of his story turns out to be true against positive testimony, what about the rest of the story? There is no contemporary mention of Joseph's religious propensities, and yet those propensities are real, Brodie decides; the same sources fail to mention his most intimate and hidden religious experience-therefore such an experience never occurred, Brodie decides!
The next major issue is the Book of Mormon. "For a long time," we are told (38), "Joseph was extremely reluctant to talk about the plates." Extremely reluctant indeed; why didn't he simply let the matter drop? Be' cause "once the masquerade had begun, there was no point at which he could call halt." (41)
Why not? Everyone would have been glad to forget the business. If his own family believed implicitly in the plates they never saw, they certainly would believe in any explanation he might give for their disappearance: they willingly accepted his story later that the angel had taken the plates back. And was Joseph of the super-resourceful imagination, devious, cunning, agile and "utterly opportunistic" in the matter of the Book of Mormon, the one to be at a loss for explanations? Why did he hang on to the plates that no one could see, that only made trouble, that he hated to talk about? Surely he of all persons could think of a better game than that. And at the time, remember, he had absolutely no conception of the Book of Mormon-to-be, according to Brodie.
The writing of the first one hundred and sixteen pages was "painfully slow . . . for Joseph had yet to learn how to write," (53) a long and difficult process at best. Yet less than a year later we find him tossing off a 275,000 word manuscript in three months.
This feat simply proves to Brodie that Joseph Smith's stupidity has been deliberately exaggerated: he was really rather smart.
Only she resolutely refuses to face the problem she has raised: Here was a man of twenty-two giving free rein to a "completely undisciplined imagination," an imagination that "ran over like a spring freshet" in a riot of "intense color and luxuriant detail," a wild, unbridled fancy that was "not to be canalized by any discipline";
the man sits behind a curtain and dictates to a semi-literate peasant
on the other side ("none of Joseph's secretaries knew the rudiments of punctuation").
He simply dictates: he takes no notes and holds no conferences, for he must impress his secretaries and not appeal to them for aid--once a sentence is spoken "revision was therefore unthinkable" says Brodie. What a hilarious document this will turn out to be! What an impossible tangle of oriental vagaries, what threads and tatters of half-baked narrative losing themselves in contradictory masses what an exuberance of undisciplined fancies flying off at wild tangents! What a wealth of irrelevant sermonizing at unexpected moments (as in the Koran), what a collection of bizarre conceits and whopping contradictions it must be! Surely all one needs to do is to cite a page of the stuff--any page--to expose the whole business; a few obviously faked passages will do the trick far more simply and effectively than the laborious chapters Mrs. Brodie devotes to it. Why the laborious chapters? Because the inevitable flaws of a book produced in the manner Brodie describes strangely fail to appear!
Instead of an opium dream, we find an exceedingly sober document, that never flies off at tangents, never loses the thread of the narrative (which is often quite complicated), is totally lacking in oriental color, in which the sermons are confined to special sections, and which, strangest of all, never runs into contradictions. Joseph might get away with his "outrageous lying" (27)
in little matters, but what outrageous liar can carry the game to the length of the Old Testament without giving himself away hundreds of times? Brodie doesn't say.
Early in her hook the lady prepares us for the Book of Mormon by making much of Joseph's gaudy imagination, and especially of his skill in holding everybody spellbound for hours by his exotic and colorful tales. Why then is the Book of Mormon, his best effort, simply "chloroform in print," lacking all the qualities for which the author was remarkable?
Why does the language, with its strained and remarkably Semitic structure in no way resemble his own vigorous and extravagant prose?
To prove that the Book of Mormon was the product of gradual evolution Mrs. Brodie maintains with great insistence that until the first one hundred and sixteen pages were finished it was not a religious book at all but "merely an ingenious speculation," (55)
a mere "moneymaking history of the Indians" (83); as to the plates themselves "no divine interpretation was dreamed of" (38).
Yet all along these plates had been too holy to be seen, nay, according to Brodie, Joseph maintained that the very sight of them would strike one dead! And it never occurred to him for a moment that such a singularly holy document might have even the slightest religious significance!
To demonstrate how the book evolved, Brodie observes that it improves in style and story as it goes along. That is her version: to others the first part of the book is by far the most interesting.
Anyway, as he was finishing it up, the prophet, being worried about the scientific aspects of what he had produced, decided, according to Mrs. Brodie, to add another book to it. In this book, designed specifically to correct the unscientific tone of the rest, he was far more careless than ever before, mentioning all sorts of domestic beasts "when it was known even in his own day (and very well to a man of his sly researches) that Columbus had found the land devoid of these species."
In criticizing the Book of Mormon or any of the other writings of Joseph Smith it is necessary first of all to find out what these writings say. The theories and doctrines which Mrs. Brodie exposes are not found in these books, but are picked up from various people's ideas about them. The Book of Mormon has suffered particularly from a glib jumping at conclusions by its attackers. The book describes the doings of "a lonesome and solemn people" who do not claim for a moment to be the sole inhabitants of the hemisphere. When Brodie talks of Mound-builders and Mongolians she is not talking about the Book of Mormon at all; she is setting up a straw-man for her "science" to "disembowel."
Having finished the Book of Mormon Joseph Smith was "rapidly acquiring the language and even the accent of sincere faith". He had no sincere faith, you understand; what he had been through in the past had been merely drill to improve his "accent." (80).
Next "he slipped into" the role of prophet "with ease, without the inner turmoil that preceded the spiritual fervor of so many great religious figures of the past." (84)
The fact that Joseph is the only prophet, true or false, who never once gave evidence of doubting his calling, closely engaged the attention of the great Eduard Meyer, to whom the explanation is obvious: the prophet had a vision--a real vision--right at the outset of his career.
If we do not accept that interpretation, we must follow Mrs. Brodie's psychological gymnastics.
Joseph Smith was a deceiver, she decides, and "the casual reader will be shocked by his deceptions . . . in the field of religion, where honesty and integrity presumably count for something." (84)
He had no honesty or integrity; instead he had a "highly compensated" but "very real" sincerity, however he had no real faith.
And so now you know. "What Joseph created," our authority tells us (100) "was essentially an evangelical socialism which made up in moral strength what it lacked in grandeur." So, you see, the completely undisciplined imagination, devoid of honesty and integrity and lacking, moreover "the diligence and the constancy to master reality" produces an organization noted for its lasting stability and characterized by great moral strength! What kind of reasoning is that? If there is anything which should mark a brainchild of Brodie's "Joseph," that would be a tendency to grandeur and a lack of moral strength: just the opposite is found to be the case.
Next in the process of Joseph's evolution an amazing thing happens. He performs a miraculous healing. "Joseph must have been overwhelmed by this miracle," says our shrewd informant, "for he had no idea how common were such occurrences." (86). No idea! And that after Brodie has been at pains to tell us (14) how he had grown up in a world of "faith healers and circuit-rider evangelists" and camp-meeting miracles. Miracles of this sort had been his everyday fare from infancy and yet in 1830 he has no idea that faith cures are common occurrences. His performance is not half as overwhelming as Brodie's discovery.
Shortly after this Joseph founds the church and "with an insight rare among the prophets of his own generation, he did not make a complete break with the past. He continued the story, he did not present a new cosmology." (91).
In her summing up, however, our author takes the prophet severely to task for this "insight" and speaks bitter words: "Within the dogma of the Church there is no new Sermon on the Mount (why should there be? The old one is good enough.) no new saga of redemption . . ."
Joseph Smith, according to her, should have brought a new saga of redemption; she is actually disgusted with the man because he makes no attempt, absolutely none, to displace Jesus Christ!
She is equally disgusted when at this time he speaks through revelation, depending on God rather than "standing squarely on his own feet." (92). This to her can only mean that he is "still troubled by a sense of inadequacy."
This sort of forced and predetermined reasoning makes one wonder, [just as we are all wondering about your forced and predetermined reasoning Hugh ;) ] but no more so than her observations on the coined word "telestial" and the idea of a third degree of glory which is as that of the stars. It is almost unbelievable that anyone presuming to write on religion should not be perfectly familiar with this very well-established and ancient doctrine--it is regular old stock-in-trade in ancient times, though the sources were not accessible to Joseph Smith.
They are accessible to Brodie, if she is competent to judge of religious matters, and true or false, the doctrine is anything but the fantastic aberration she makes it out to be. (118).
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2000-10-13 2002-06-12 |