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Question About Joseph Smith

Gameface

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Was the guy a fraudster and scam artist before founding a major religion?

That's what I've heard and that's what I have believed. But I don't really know.

Disclaimer, even if it's not clear (that's really the best outcome I anticipate) it doesn't change my view that he never spoke to a supreme being.
 
Not that i know of.

He was 14 when he claimed to have had the first vision.

Although, aren't there different accounts or something? Colton?

Im pretty sure he was known as a pretty upstanding hard working religious farm boy growing up.

It's the stuff that comes after, like destroying the printing press, running for President, and marrying 14 year old girls without his wife's knowledge that makes things real bizarre. I know that sounds anti... But that stuff is just messed up to me and I don't recall it ever being explained in Sunday School
 
So you're not familiar with the accusations of money digging?

Like I really don't know anything here, but anytime I've looked into it I've heard about the money digging.

Hard working farm boy? Yeah, I'm not talking about the version the church sells, I'm talking about what non-LDS people think and hear about Joseph Smith.
 
Ok. Wasn't sure. You normally don't go this mainstream inflammatory.


I have heard so many of these stories it is hard to tell what is the truth. I heard he ran full on scams and conned tons of people out of their money. I also heard that he simply was one of the chain letter forwarders of his day, believing in get rich quick schemes and working it from that angle, not anything purposely trying to scam people but rather believing that hey, I can forward this letter to my friends and they all send me a dollar and down the road I get a big payday. For what it is worth I have also read this kind of thinking ran rampant at that time, the gold rush fever, and he was far from the only person acting like this. It was really common.

I mean, he was a man. A human being. Humans are fallible. He probably got involved in some snake oil type stuff, and because of how strongly people felt about the mormons it gets blown all out of proportion. And at that time word of mouth was far stronger than media, and we know how rumors go.

Think about even as simple a thing as Obama. How many people will call him a muslim or a non-american or whatever for decades after his presidency is over. His detractors will always blow the bad things out of proportion and his supporters will blow the good things out of proportion. The truth always lies somewhere in between.
 
So you're not familiar with the accusations of money digging?

Like I really don't know anything here, but anytime I've looked into it I've heard about the money digging.

Hard working farm boy? Yeah, I'm not talking about the version the church sells, I'm talking about what non-LDS people think and hear about Joseph Smith.

Weren't there silver mines nearby?

Doesnt like everyone in the childhood go on treasure hunts?

All of these accusations from what I gather are pretty weak.
 
Was the guy a fraudster and scam artist before founding a major religion?

That's what I've heard and that's what I have believed. But I don't really know.

I've read a lot of claims to that effect, but the evidence is very minimal. As you might expect, I don't believe it.
 
Weren't there silver mines nearby?

Doesnt like everyone in the childhood go on treasure hunts?

All of these accusations from what I gather are pretty weak.

I don't know about silver mines, but that's my own reaction to the claims of him being a "money digger". So he went searching for buried treasure? So do a lot of kids.
 
He was 14 when he claimed to have had the first vision.

Although, aren't there different accounts or something? Colton?

Yes, there are 4 or 5 different accounts that he wrote. I've read them all, and I've also read several accounts by people that related what he told them orally. They all agree in the fundamentals, but disagree on details. For example, in the canonical account (what we have in the Pearl of Great Price) he said that two personages appeared to him, God and Jesus. In some accounts he just said that God appeared to him and didn't mention Jesus. That type of thing doesn't really bother me; if I were to describe an experience that happened to me to different people and at different times I'd probably emphasize different aspects of the experience and maybe get some of the minor details mixed up.

Im pretty sure he was known as a pretty upstanding hard working religious farm boy growing up.

I agree. In fact, I remember reading an interview with one of his neighbors where the lady said something like "He was such a nice, hardworking, honest boy. It's a shame that he went off the deep end." (She didn't that colloquialism but that was the sentiment.) In other words, if he had never had mentioned visions/Book of Mormon/etc., she would have described him as a nice, hardworking, honest boy.
 
Gameface either really enjoys trolling on any topic related to Mormons or has an extreme hate/dislike for them and is butthurt. Just telling it how it is. :)
 
I don't know about silver mines, but that's my own reaction to the claims of him being a "money digger". So he went searching for buried treasure? So do a lot of kids.

He was actually hired to do that digging. Paid a minimal wage, say like a busboy at a café, did what he was told. Unless Game wants to entertain allegations about the staff at restaurants being con artists, that's about as far as that goes.
 
Yes, there are 4 or 5 different accounts that he wrote. I've read them all, and I've also read several accounts by people that related what he told them orally. They all agree in the fundamentals, but disagree on details. For example, in the canonical account (what we have in the Pearl of Great Price) he said that two personages appeared to him, God and Jesus. In some accounts he just said that God appeared to him and didn't mention Jesus. That type of thing doesn't really bother me; if I were to describe an experience that happened to me to different people and at different times I'd probably emphasize different aspects of the experience and maybe get some of the minor details mixed up.



I agree. In fact, I remember reading an interview with one of his neighbors where the lady said something like "He was such a nice, hardworking, honest boy. It's a shame that he went off the deep end." (She didn't that colloquialism but that was the sentiment.) In other words, if he had never had mentioned visions/Book of Mormon/etc., she would have described him as a nice, hardworking, honest boy.

In the earlier accounts perhaps it was not the main point to teach a concept of the Godhead that would be unfamiliar to many folks. I agree that for the purpose of the account, an essay on the true nature of God might not have been the point.
 
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