The Thriller
Well-Known Member
Have any of you read any of these books on Joseph Smith? What did you think? Did any of you read both? Which one was better?
I guess I need to read "Rough Stone Rolling", but hey, I could probably write a worse book myself, if I wanted to. I studied the whole primary evidence base. My neighbor as a kid, two houses away, is the LDS Church historian today. You will never find a more honorable and decent human being. His little sister was the nicest person in her class, one year younger than me, but I fell in love with a little smart redhead. Otherwise, might have had such a good life I didn't ever need to become a philosopher.
The thing about the LDS faith is the way it does work for people who love God, and their fellow humans. I'll take that LDS fact over any other faith humans have ever had.
Odd. As you know, I'm devout LDS and I highly recommend Rough Stone Rolling. If anything, it strengthened my own belief. And it does a fantastic job of placing things in proper historical context, cutting through LDS folklore, and giving a sense of Joseph Smith as a real person. I even gave a copy of the book to a newly baptized friend of mine as a gift. (He thought it was fantastic, too.)Be cautious.
I literally personally know 7 people that were devout LDS that left after reading Rough Stone Rolling.
Not hating... please don't take it that way.
Like everything, it all depends on your personality and experiences, I suppose. The biggest problem that many of my younger friends feel is that they were lied to about church history, and if they lied about this they probably lied about the rest. The walls crash down fast once your perspective shifts.Odd. As you know, I'm devout LDS and I highly recommend Rough Stone Rolling. If anything, it strengthened my own belief. And it does a fantastic job of placing things in proper historical context, cutting through LDS folklore, and giving a sense of Joseph Smith as a real person. I even gave a copy of the book to a newly baptized friend of mine as a gift. (He thought it was fantastic, too.)
Odd. As you know, I'm devout LDS and I highly recommend Rough Stone Rolling. If anything, it strengthened my own belief. And it does a fantastic job of placing things in proper historical context, cutting through LDS folklore, and giving a sense of Joseph Smith as a real person. I even gave a copy of the book to a newly baptized friend of mine as a gift. (He thought it was fantastic, too.)
Odd. As you know, I'm devout LDS and I highly recommend Rough Stone Rolling. If anything, it strengthened my own belief. And it does a fantastic job of placing things in proper historical context, cutting through LDS folklore, and giving a sense of Joseph Smith as a real person. I even gave a copy of the book to a newly baptized friend of mine as a gift. (He thought it was fantastic, too.)
Genuinely curious how knowing about Joseph Smith marrying other men's wives strengthens your testimony?
I appreciate you saying that.
I have no opinion as I've not read it.
Rough Stone rolling definitely humanizes (with all the negative and positive attributes) Smith. I can see how this kind of thing would be very jarring for people who grew up learning about him through movies, his best quotes/revelations, and church manuals that were lacking in depth and context. I think this is the effect that any "anti-mormon" info has. Most of it has at least a basis in truth, but much of what you conclude depends on interpretation. As somebody who has studied a lot of historical accounts in another area for part of my degree it always amuses me when people just believe any single source alone. There are almost always several versions of events, different interpretations, contextual issues that are left out of a particular argument,etc. Rough Stone rolling puts a positive, mostly fair-minded spin on most events from what I've seen. I think it tries to explain the plausible explanations for some of the more delicate subjects, so at times becomes a bit apologetic. It does try quite hard to be fair, or at least inclusive of the major criticisms where much of the more critical literature is not quite as restrained in point of view. As somebody who enjoys less opinionated accounts I was a little disappointed overall with that part of it. Though again the critical things I've read have almost all been much worse in this regard, and previous positive portrayals have been perhaps the least informative. It's hard for people to be completely objective about this kind of topic.
As to b-line's question I think that if you can still believe (or in the LDS parlance if you can "gain a witness") of all the tenets of the faith (including that Smith was a prophet, church is guided by revelation etc) after seeing some of the warts then theoretically your testimony would be stronger, and less likely to be threatened by extra-doctrinal issues in the future.I mean, it's plausible that any number of acceptable things contributed to Smith marrying the wives of other men. And even if he was completely in the wrong in this instance it doesn't necessarily legitimize his claims. But I agree that much of the info should at least cause an hones, open person to have serious questions.
Genuinely curious how knowing about Joseph Smith marrying other men's wives strengthens your testimony?
Which one is better? I know fanie, the author of "No Man Knows My History" was exed after its publication. But that was after she had already written it. And in a different time period when I think the church was less forthcoming.
I understand your intended meaning, but that last paragraph leaves a lot to be desired. I call myself a Christian. I don't believe any religion has cornered the market or has some exclusive license to loving their fellow humans. Yes, I know you didn't say that it does.. but it would read that way to a non-believer.
One of the major things that turns people off to any religion is the air of pretentiousness about "having" something in the way of being "good" that they couldn't possibly have without religion.
I know you, babe, don't believe that's true... but MANY do.. or at least communicate in a way that comes across the same.
No one needs the LDS church or any religion whatsoever to be a good, kind, loving, nurturing friend, parent, child, or neighbor.
Unfortunately, most believers don't seem to act in a way that seems to believe that's true... and it's a turnoff.