A Response to Paul Trask, Part Way To Utah
By B. Mildred Smith
I read the Paul Trask book, Part Way To Utah, at the request of Bob
Bobbitt for the purpose of answering some of Trask’s charges that were not
based on truth. Because of the length of the book and the many subjects
treated, it would take volumes for me to answer every detail of the claims of
the book. I have, however, documented answers to most if not all of his most
serious errors. For my material to be of maximum value, one reading it should
have the Trask book at hand for reference.
In general, Trask follows the pattern of all such
critics. He depends heavily on secondary and tertiary sources for information
and uses extensive propaganda techniques. The propaganda techniques included
are sometimes those he initiates and often the nature of the sources on which
he depends. These sources include the works of the Tanners in Utah and of Fawn
Brodie, the author of No Man Knows My
History. Carol Hodges Hansen, author of
RLDS Christian?, read each of Trask’s chapters and offered “untiring
encouragement”, according to his acknowledgements. He has used some of the same
erroneous materials she used in her book, but has avoided making some of the
glaring errors that she made. (*Approximately thirty pages of response to Carol
Hodges Hansen’s book, RLDS Christian? are
available on request to B. Mildred Smith, 315 Zion’s Ridge, Lamoni, Iowa 50140.
The same material is now also on this web site.)
Trask begins his dissertation with a fairly accurate
story of the beginnings of the Restoration movement and of the differences
between the Utah “Mormons”, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and
the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. He does make a
rather insignificant error in his introduction when he says, “the only
difference between the names of the “Mormon” and the RLDS churches is the
addition of the word, Reorganized.” Then on page 7 he makes the inexcusable
error of designating Joseph Smith as the one who introduced “radical new
doctrines such a polygamy, baptism for the dead and eternal progression.” This
error he perpetuates throughout his work.
Trask assumes the introduction of polygamy and
baptism for the dead by Joseph Smith without documentation. He uses for his
source for “eternal progression” (Adam-God Doctrine), Times and Seasons 5:613-614. This is a report of the King Follett
sermon published after Joseph’s death from the statement of several men who
supposedly reported it from longhand notes and memory. The report has been
discredited by Russell Ralston in his book, Fundamental
Differences, pp. 111-112, and by Aleah Koury in his Truth and the Evidences, pp. 27-29. In both books one finds
documentation of the testimony of James Whitehead, Joseph Smith’s private
secretary from 1842 until his death, declaring that there was no mention of
such a doctrine in the sermon. Whitehead’s testimony was given under oath at
the trial in which it was determined that the RLDS church was the rightful
successor to the original church as organized in 1830. In both books (Ralston,
Ibid. p. 112) one will find the caveat written in the Utah church history
concerning the report as published saying such reports “are very likely to
contain inaccuracies and convey wrong impressions.”
Trask’s insistence that Joseph introduced polygamy
in Nauvoo might be understandable if the “Mormon” view was the only one
available to him; but in so doing he ignores: (1) the actions of Joseph and
Hyrum in publishing against the doctrine (Times
and Seasons, Vol. 5, p. 423, Feb. 1,1844, Reprinted in RLDS Church History Vol. 2, p.731 and in Ralston, Fundamental Differences, pp. 192-193);
(2) the action which removed from the church those who were teaching it (Church History, Vol. 2, p. 584 and pp.
781-782. Also Ralston, Ibid. pp. 192-193); (3) the published statements of the
Women’s Relief Society and of the Elders of Nauvoo denying that it was being
taught or practiced with church approval (Times
and Seasons, Vol. 3, pp. 939-940, October 1, 1842 quoted in RLDS Church History, Vol. 2, pp. 597-598
and, with further information, in Ralston, Fundamental
Differences, pp. 190-191); (4) the statement on marriage, written because
the church had “been reproached with the crime of fornication and polygamy”
printed as Section 101 of the 1835 Doctrine
and Covenants (now section 111 of the RLDS edition and contained in the
Utah edition until after their section 132 requiring polygamy was adopted); (5)
the basic law of the church that provided for one wife only (Section 13 of the
1835 edition, 42 of the present RLDS edition); (6) the nefarious way in which
the Utah Doctrine and Covenants Section
132, commanding polygamy as a divine institution and directly contradictory to
the previous instruction, was first introduced to the Utah membership in
August, 1852, more than eight years after Joseph’s death but attributed to him
to gain its acceptance (Ralston, Ibid. p. 179); (7) the very strong condemnation of the practice of polygamy
found in the Book of Mormon (Jacob
2:33-39 RLDS 1908 Edition). In addition, Trask had access to the research of
Richard and Pamela Price on the subject if he had chosen to investigate it. He
was content to reference only the very prejudiced and untruthful conclusion of
Fawn Brodie in her infamous book, No Man
Knows My History.
That Joseph did speculate on baptism for the dead is
documented by two letters and one document that some considered a revelation.
These were placed in the 1844 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants after Joseph was dead. It is interesting to
note that in the document considered by some to be a revelation, there is no
command to teach or practice the principle, but there are definite
limitations on when and where it might be practiced. Neither was there
indication of any benefit that might accrue to those who were involved. A more
complete discussion of the subject is available in Russell Ralston, Fundamental Differences, pp. 209-265.
Joseph Smith’s involvement with the Masonic Lodge is
a matter of history. Whether it had any relationship to the quotation that
Trask used from Fawn Brodie is a matter of conjecture. It is my personal view
that he made some very serious mistakes in this area as is indicated by his
putting the completion of the Masonic Temple ahead of work on the Lord’s Temple,
which was never completed.
The contention on page 8 that Joseph left a
leadership vacuum is supported only by Trask’s lack of understanding of the
basic law of the church. The fact that Brigham Young violated that law does not
justify placing the blame on Joseph or the law. For a full discussion of this
subject, documented by 101 references, see Ralston, Fundamental Differences, pp. 14-75.
Trask, Page 9 - says Brigham Young was voted in
as president of the church. Brigham was voted in as the president of Brigham
Young’s new church by his apostles only and was never the true successor to
Joseph Smith, Jr. His assumption of leadership did not follow or even
approximate the pattern set down in the law of the original church. See
Ralston, Fundamental Differences,
especially pages 30-32.
The discussion of the events leading up to the
introduction of women into the Priesthood, the pronouncement of Wallace B.
Smith that placed McMurray in the Presidency of the RLDS church, and other
current events (pp. 12-14) is very perceptive. We have considered copying it
for distribution among persons who cannot understand why we are in a
Restoration congregation. It is when Trask begins to discuss the beginnings of
the Restoration that he resorts to propaganda methods, secondary and
tertiary references, false testimony and innuendo as the
basis of his erroneous conclusions. His assertion, page 17, that the
leadership of the churches have suppressed objective historical evidence and
thus kept their membership in ignorance of the facts may have been true of the
Utah Mormons, but does not fit the Reorganization, in spite of some current
literature that erroneously indicates that it is factual.
Norma Hiles in The Gentle Monarch (Israel A. Smith) which has been acclaimed by the
Temple School and history department of the church, declares that during the
early 1950s no one was allowed to see documents held in the Historian’s office
that were not favorable to the prevailing understanding of the early history of
the church. Delbert D. Smith was at Iowa State College, Ames, 1949-1951, doing
his research for his thesis using the Nauvoo period as his focus. He received a
letter from Sam Burgess, Historian of the church during the very period she
indicates, inviting him to come to the church history department and research
all that they had, including those items that were “anti”.
Trask calls the familiar story of Joseph’s early
experiences and the coming forth of the Book
of Mormon “myth” but has the story essentially correct. On page 19 he calls
the difference in naming the angel in Joseph’s history “Nephi” and in the Doctrine and Covenants “Moroni” a
contradiction. I see it as a simple misstatement in the history, with all of
the evidence pointing to Moroni as the correct name for the messenger.
Page 21- Trask validates Fawn Brodie as the author
of the best work ever written on Joseph. He does so without taking into
consideration that the documentation she used was largely from secondary and
tertiary sources, many of them written by avowed enemies of Joseph and his
work. Many testimonies she used were of persons who had adopted the aberrant
lifestyle of the Mormon faith and now tried to recite events that occurred
nearly a century before involving those
who were now dead and could no longer testify for themselves.
Brodie says that no mention of those
early events can be found in any family writings of that time period. That
is absolutely not true. It seems very strange that Fawn Brodie and Paul
Trask can find all the negative suppositions of the past but cannot find such
an obvious piece of evidence as the letter Lucy Mack Smith wrote to her
brother, Solomon Mack and his wife, January 6, 1831. That letter is published
in the Scrapbook of Mormon Literature,
published by Ben E. Rich, Vol. 1, pages 543-545, according to Inez Smith Davis.
The quotation from the letter and its history are found on page 58 of Inez
Smith Davis, Story of The Church,
Seventh Edition, Herald Publishing House, Independence, Mo.,1964.
Brodie also tries to establish that there is no
record of others in the area knowing anything about the events surrounding the
coming forth of the Book of Mormon
before the plates were actually found. Lucy Mack explains in her book, Joseph Smith and His Progenitors, on
page 91 of the volume republished in Lamoni, Iowa in 1912, that the family
followed Joseph’s instruction to speak of the particulars only among themselves
for the sake of safety. It is a matter of record, however, that it was during
this time that Josiah Stoal (Stowel) heard something that caused him to come to
Palmyra to hire Joseph to help him try to find a silver mine. Also Emma’s
father heard tales that caused him to try to keep Emma from marrying Joseph (RLDS History p.17). Enemies have tried
to show that these tales came from occult practices of the Smiths, but the
evidence is that the tales were perverted reports of the actual experiences of
Joseph with an angel who had told him of buried plates to which he would
eventually have access. Joseph records that he told a trusted Methodist
minister of his vision who denied that there was anything as visions and
revelation in these days and called it all of the Devil. It was from that
telling that persecution began. (RLDS
Church History, Vol. 1, p.10)
After the plates were received, there is ample
evidence that the fact was well known before the book was published. Francis W.
Kirkham in his New Witness for Christ in
America, documents newspaper reports of 1829 that give distorted
descriptions of the plates and the instruments used for translating them. One
was printed in the “Rochester New York Daily Advertiser and Telegraph”,
August,1929, the month that the manuscript of the Book of Mormon went to press. See Delbert D. Smith, How The Plates of the Book of Mormon Were
Translated, Paragon Publications, Mt. Ayr, IA. 50854, 1996, pp. 14-15.
Mrs. Brodie’s conclusions quoted at the base of page
21 uses the typical language of a propagandist who has no proof of her
conclusions. She says apparently the events Joseph records did not fix
themselves in the minds of his family members. (This flies in the face of the
extensive reports of Joseph’s mother, Lucy Mack Smith, and of Joseph’s brothers
and sisters whose writings were readily available to Brodie and to Trask but
they chose not to consider them.) Brodie says Joseph’s vision was probably
an elaboration of a dream or it may have been sheer invention. These
terms, “apparently”, “probably”, “may have been” are all terms cherished by the
propagandist who has no proof of his or her theories which he/she determines to
promote even though they have no foundation.
Trask’s criticism of the reports of the First Vision
is adequately refuted by Bob Bobbitt’s examination of the subject and by Byrna
Zerr’s In Behalf of Joseph. Consult
them. It is interesting to note that Trask offers a sample of what he says is
Joseph’s own writing in 1832, showing the bad spellings, awkward punctuations,
strike overs, above the line insertions, etc. If this is really the extent of
Joseph’s literary competence in 1832, three years after the Book of Mormon was completed, how does
he explain his contention that Joseph wrote the Book of Mormon from his own knowledge?
Page 23 - Trask sees a conflict in D&C 83 and
Joseph’s report of his vision. There is a great difference between a vision (A
supernatural sight perceived through unusual means) and a physical meeting of
two persons. Joseph saw two persons in a vision. Even if it had not been so,
the power of Godliness and the authority of the Priesthood reside with God, and
He can use that power to show Himself to whomever He chooses, even as He showed
Himself to Jacob (Genesis 32:30) and to Moses (Exodus 33:11) and to others.
Page 24 - Trask says Joseph’s claim to have seen the
Father and the Son at the same time is at variance with orthodox theology and
is a distorted concept of God. Who was the one John saw take the book out of
the hand of God who was sitting on the throne in Revelation 5:7? Surely if John
could see both God and Jesus in one setting, there is no reason God could not
show them both to Joseph in the same manner.
Page 24 - Trask says Joseph and his family were
steeped in the occult but then offers no evidence of his charge except
to reference persons whose material is steeped in propaganda devices without factual
evidence. For example, where did Pastor Walters find the unprinted portion of
Lucy Mack’s book? No indication is given. And what did Lucy mean if she really
wrote it? A tongue-in-cheek statement in response to unjust accusations would
fit the situation perfectly! Walters’ footnote gives a clue to his lack of
proof by his use of the propaganda device, “the Smiths may have been encouraged” in occult lore. The statement has
as much validity in fact as a statement of mine would have if I said Paul Trask
may have been an infidel, except that the Smiths are dead and cannot defend
themselves while Trask is alive and could.
I have volumes of responses to charges of occultism
that I garnered from the work of Carol Hodges Hansen and from materials sent to
me by Apostle David Brock. In all of them, there was not one iota of
evidence to support the contention of rampant occultism in Joseph or his
family. (The responses to Hansen’s materials are at this web site and those
provided Apostle Brock are available from Mildred Smith). One interesting fact
is that Hyrum Smith was one of the trustees of the school district that
hired Oliver Cowdery to teach (See Lucy’s book, p.151). This would not have
been possible had the family been involved in the occult as Trask, the Tanners
and Brodie assert!
Page 25 - The book attributed to Lucy Mack Smith was
published less than two years before her death at the age of 79. Whether all
her memories of dates and sequence of events are accurate cannot be verified.
If, however, Joseph really did give the family details of the life of the
Nephites before he received the plates, it must be remembered that he was
instructed by Moroni one full night in 1823, again the next day and once a year
every year thereafter until he received the plates in 1827. We do not know what
Moroni told him, but he had ample time to reveal many details of life among the
Book of Mormon peoples in those
conversations. That the conversations Mrs. Smith notes occurred in 1823-24 is
an assumption not justified by the facts in her book.
Trask’s ignorance of the Book of Mormon is displayed in his statement (p. 26) that Joseph
could concoct the Book of Mormon
story without help from the brass plates. Joseph did translate the Book
of Mormon without help from brass
plates. He never claimed to have possessed or read or translated or
received information about the Book of
Mormon peoples from brass plates!
The plates from which he translated had the “appearance of gold”! The brass plates were carried
from Jerusalem. They contained the scriptures and the genealogy of the people;
but there is no indication Book of Mormon
authors recorded anything on them.
William Stafford’s account of Joseph sacrificing a
sheep makes for a titillating story, but if it is true, invalidates all the
other stories of the Smith family practicing the occult for profit. Stafford is
reported as saying, that he believes, this is the only time the Smith family
ever made money digging a profitable business. The suggestion that Smith
called for human sacrifice is clearly fictitious. Such a demand would have
brought immediate action on the part of authorities which action did not occur.
The Chase story (p. 27) comes from E. D. Howe’s, Mormonism Unvailed, which has long been
shown to be full of contradictions, false and vindictive information, much of
it provided by D. P. Hurlbut who had been evicted from the church. After
confessing to “unchristian like conduct with the female sex”, declaring
repentance and being forgiven, he went about bragging that he had fooled
Joseph’s God, or the spirit by which he was activated! This led to his being
expelled (Times and Seasons, Vol. 6,
pp. 784-785 and RLDS History Vol. 1,
pp. 294-296), but most of all shows, by his own admission, that D. P. Hurlbut
was a liar and a fraud. No serious Historian would accept stories from Mormonism Unvailed as credible history.
Trask gives no evidence that Joseph retained Chase’s stone, or that there ever
was such a stone.
Page 27 - It is very interesting that Trask and
those with whom he consorts, are willing to take one small portion of Lucy
Mack’s testimony but intentionally leave
their readers in the dark about the rest of her statement, although it
follows immediately in her book! On page 103 of her book as republished by the
RLDS church, pages 91-92 in the edition from which Trask’s source quotes, Lucy
does say that Mr. Stoal, who incidentally, was already digging for a
rumored silver mine (RLDS History
Vol. 1, p.17) was interested in Joseph because of what he had heard of his
abilities to discern things invisible to the natural eye. What Tanners, Brodie
and their ilk fail to let their
readers know is that Lucy’s next
words are, “Joseph endeavored to divert him from his vain pursuit, but
he was inflexible in his purpose, and offered high wages to those who would dig
for him .... After laboring for the old gentleman for about a month, without
success, Joseph prevailed upon him to cease his operations; and it was from this circumstance
of having worked by the month at digging for a silver mine, that the very prevalent story arose of Joseph
being a money-digger.” It is unfortunate that well intentioned people
like Paul Trask are deceived by persons whose material he has trusted, if that
is what happened in this case.
Joseph says Stoal’s hiring occurred in
October,1825 (Times and Seasons, Vol.
3 and reported in RLDS History, Vol.
1, p. 17). Instead of being evidence of Smith family occultism, the whole story is evidence that
Joseph’s story of the angel’s visit was known in 1825 even if in perverted
form. Of course the Tanners, Fawn Brodie and others like them do not want you
to know the whole story, so they give a prejudicial and partial quote!
Trask further distorts the facts by saying that
Joseph dug for the silver mine for Stoal for several months, and then was
arrested on a warrant from Stoal’s nephew. Both Lucy and Joseph say it was
about a month before the silver mine project was given up, but Joseph continued to be employed by Stoal, and
was so employed as late as January 1827, the date of his marriage to
Emma Hale, in whose home he was a boarder while employed by Stoal. (Ibid.
p.17). The purported arrest and conviction Trask reports occurred in March of
1826. It is very strange that Mr. Stoal continued
to employ one arrested, jailed, brought to trial and convicted of a
crime perpetrated against him for
almost a year after that conviction. It is also strange that when Mr.
Stoal was really called to testify against Joseph in 1830, he submitted no
evidence to convict him (RLDS History,
Vol. 1, pp. 94-103). If there was such a trial in 1826, it is only right that
Joseph would truthfully admit to having been “employed in looking for mines”,
for that was the avowed reason for Stoal employing him in the first place. As
for the rest of the “confessions” they have all the marks of being fraudulent!
It is clear that Mr. Stoal did not consider Joseph’s actions criminal or his
employment would have been terminated immediately!
Page 28 - Trask says historical evidence indicates
that Joseph actually used a peep-stone to find the plates. In evidence, he
places an interview Martin Harris was supposed to have given Tiffany Monthly in 1859. If Martin
Harris gave that purported interview, and it was reported correctly, he
contradicted his testimony given to Joseph Smith in 1829 (RLDS History, Vol. 1 p. 19) and repeated in September 15, 1853
when he was interviewed by D.B. Dille whose letter was published in the Millennial Star, reprinted in the Myth of the Manuscript Found and again
in the RLDS History, Vol. 1 pp. 51-53.
In both accounts Martin Harris, while recounting the facts of the occasion on
which he took a transcript of characters of the plates to professor Anthon of
New York, says that when Anthon asked how the young man knew the plates were
there, Martin said an angel of God
had shown them to him. The Tiffany account further states that Joseph and his
family had told Martin that the stone from Mason Chase’s well had been used to
find the plates. That is a fabrication
the evidence of which I challenge anyone to produce!
Trask then gives an entry from Hosea Stout’s diary
which, if authentic, is only hearsay.
Trask says Stout said of the stone, “It
is said to be ... .” If he had seen such a stone, he would have said, “It is ... .” The account of
Joseph’s arrests and trials of 1830 is correctly referenced in RLDS History, Vol. 1, pp. 94-103. That
is why it seems strange that Trask gave such incorrect information about them.
Trask is mistaken in the number of trials and the number of witnesses called
against Joseph. It was not one but two trials and not 12 witnesses but many
more, so many that neither Joseph nor Mr. Reed, one of the non-members who
defended him, even tried to list them all. The charge was not of having claimed
to have found the plates by use of a peep-stone, but of “being a disorderly
person; of setting the country in an uproar by preaching the Book of Mormon,” etc., etc. During the
trial he was accused of being a “money digger”. They called Josiah Stoal, two of Mr. Stoal’s
Daughters, Jonathan Thompson, Newel Knight, and numerous others to
witness against Joseph but could find no evidence on which to convict him.
Joseph was exonerated of all charges,
and it is worth one’s time to read the reports of the court procedures as found
in the RLDS History cited above,
especially the report of Mr. Reed found in RLDS
Church History, Vol. 1, pp. 101-103.
Note that this is the exact reference given by Trask
who then so grossly misrepresents the information given there. This is one of
the most frequently used techniques of the propagandist. They site a correct
source of information then distort what it says to suit their purposes feeling
confident their readers will trust them enough that they will not consult the
reference.
It was a young Presbyterian named Benton who swore
out the first warrant against Joseph. Whether Dr. Benton whom Trask quotes is
the same Benton or even a relative is not indicated. Where Dr. Benton gets his
statement that “during the trial it was shown that the Book of Mormon was brought to light by the same magic powers by
which he pretended to tell fortunes, discover hidden treasures, etc.” is not
reflected in the judgement of the court and can only refer to the fact that
there was the power of God involved in the book’s coming forth that Benton and
others who tried unsuccessfully to convict Joseph could not understand.
Pages 29-33 - The effort to prove that the Book of Mormon was not translated from
metal plates by the use of the Urim and Thummim depends heavily on Jim
Lancaster’s Saints’ Herald article of
1962 which is dependent on secondary, tertiary and uncreditable witnesses and
deplorable scholarship. It is largely answered in Delbert D. Smith, How The Book of Mormon Was Translated
previously noted.
For an example, the quote at the bottom of page 30
says “a woman” wrote to Emma. Two questions arise: (1). What woman? Anonymous
letters are not considered valid evidence. (2). Was Emma’s supposed response
genuine or another forgery?
There is at least one forged letter reported. The
December 9,1845 New York Sun printed
a letter over what was supposed to be Emma’s signature in which she is supposed
to have renounced faith in Joseph and doubted his claims. Emma promptly wrote
the paper flatly denouncing the letter as a forgery. Her letter to the Sun was printed in Times and Seasons, January 15,1846, p.1096 and reprinted in RLDS Church History, Vol. 4, p. 267. The
letter to which Trask refers, which Lancaster used as evidence, does not even
carry a name. It could well be such a forgery.
If, on the other hand, the letter Emma is supposed
to have written to “a woman” is authentic, then Emma was mistaken. Although she
handled the plates while they were covered with a cloth and assisted by writing
as her husband translated, she was not permitted to see the instruments of
translation. The evidence is in the testimony of the primary witnesses who
actually saw and handled the instruments used in the translation process.
The fact that Trask says the Urim and Thummim were
never returned to Joseph shows that Trask is ignorant of, or chooses to ignore
the truth as James Lancaster did. Joseph described specifically how and when
the Urim and Thummim were returned to him by a heavenly messenger after which
he received Section 2 of the Doctrine and
Covenants (See Times and Seasons,
Vol. 3, p. 785 referenced in RLDS Church
History, Vol. 1, p. 24). The instruments were again taken and returned, and
section 3 was received in which he is told that the gift has been restored to
him again and he is to finish the translation, “as you have begun.” (Times and Seasons, Vol. 3, p. 786
referenced in Church History, Vol. 1,
p. 25). He had begun using the Urim and Thummim.
In April 1829 Oliver Cowdery came to be Joseph’s
scribe, and the work of translating was resumed. Joseph says (Times and Seasons Vol. 3, p. 832) that
during this time he inquired of the Lord through the Urim and Thummim and
received revelation. Joseph specifically states in Times and Seasons, Vol. 3, pp. 853, 885, 897 that while translating
the plates, he also used the Urim and Thummim to receive revelations recorded
as Sections 7,12,13,14,15. Joseph and Oliver Cowdery, who were the ones
involved in the translation process, both declared the instruments were used
throughout the translation process. Joseph states unequivocally that when the
translation of the plates was completed, the
plates, the Urim and Thummim and the breastplate were returned to the
angel (Times and Seasons Vol. 3, p.
772).
The fact that Trask uses the Chicago Inter-Ocean report as the basis for David Whitmer’s
testimony shows that he is either ignorant of or chooses to ignore David
Whitmer’s protest against the Saints’
Herald reprinting that account. David said the reporter had misunderstood
and misquoted his statements and therefore he did not want the report given as
his. (Saints’ Herald, Number 33, pp.
764-765). David’s real testimony is recorded in Saints’ Herald, Number 26, p. 128 in an interview with Apostle T.
W. Smith, verified in Saints’ Herald,
Number 27, p. 13, to which he did not object. In it he declared that he saw
Joseph translate by aid of the Urim and Thummim.
When Apostle T. W. Smith’s interview was published
in the Saints’ Herald, Number 26, p. 128, J. L. Traughber, Jr.
challenged Apostle Smith’s report. He said Whitmer had said Smith translated by
means of “one dark colored, opaque stone” (Saints’
Herald, Number 26, p. 341). Lancaster reported Traughber’s statement as
evidence without even referring to Apostle Smith’s report to the contrary. In
addition he tried to validate Traughber’s statement by saying Traughber was a
member of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
When those of us investigating Lancaster’s article
saw Traughber’s statement in the form of a letter to the editors, we knew there
must have been something to which he was responding. We found the Apostle’s
report in a previous Herald. Then we
realized that the Apostle would not let such an effort to refute his report
stand without clarification, so we looked ahead. There we found Apostle Smith’s
response in Saints’ Herald, Number
27, pp.13 and 67. The Apostle repeated his assertion that David Whitmer had
described the interpreters to him, and to a reporter of the Chicago Times who was present at the
interview, as “shaped like a pair of spectacles only much larger.”
It is strange scholarship for an author such as
Lancaster to lift a negative response from a publication as evidence without
even alerting his readers to the genesis of the negative report. It is amazing
scholarship that the author would try to validate the negative report by saying
its author was a member of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ when the
positive report to which the challenger was responding was not only a member of
that church but an Apostle in the same! Perhaps Trask cannot be faulted for
trusting such deplorable scholarship, but that does not validate it.
Page 32 - Contradictions in Martin Harris’ testimony
have already been addressed. Oliver’s statement that the plates were not in
sight only confirms Joseph’s testimony that he was not to show them to any one
until the book was completed and the Lord instructed him to whom they were to
be shown. It does not even hint that Joseph was not using them. When Joseph
described the title page as, “... a literal translation , taken from the very
last leaf, on the left hand side of the collection or book of plates ... “ (RLDS History, Vol. 1, p. 74) he verified
the fact that he had translated from the plates.
Page 33 - The “strong evidence” that Trask says
shows that the eleven men who gave their testimonies that they did see the
plates were in fact “persuaded by Joseph to sign those statements” is not shown
by Trask because it does not exist! Those men were not liars! They
confirmed their statements to the day they died, even those who were no longer
associated with Joseph and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The
accusation is slanderous and should never have been made by anyone or used as
evidence by the author of this work. Bearing false witness is breaking one of
God’s commandments!
In the reference to William Smith, William was
testifying to the facts that prevailed before the translation of the Book of Mormon was completed, the facts
of which have always been the testimony of all of the family. That fact is
obvious to anyone who loves the truth by William’s last statement that the
family did not care to have Joseph break the commandment and suffer as he did before.
In this, William was referring to the loss of the plates and Urim and Thummim
when Joseph allowed Martin Harris to take the 116 pages of translated material.
After the translation was completed and those shown the plates whom the Lord
had commanded, Joseph returned the plates and Urim and Thummim to the angel
(See documentation above). He had no more control of them and hence no more
commandment not to show them because he did not have them to show!
If Martin Harris said that he saw the plates with
his spiritual eyes, that statement would be easy to understand when one reads
the testimony of the three witnesses. It was an angel who showed them to David, Oliver and Martin and the voice of God who spoke to them.
Any normal person would view such an experience as a spiritual experience. But
it was an experience so real and valid that all three men continued to bear
witness to it as long as they lived, even when alienated from the church that
Joseph organized. If Joseph had “persuaded” them to give that testimony, they
would certainly have revealed him and it as a fake instead of affirming it to
their graves.
Martin’s statement concerning the 8 witnesses, if he
really made such a statement, could only be hearsay at the best since he was not one of the eight. Here
Trask is pitting the supposed negative statement of one hearsay witness against the positive witness of 8 men who
maintained that witness to their deaths. On one hand Trask has one supposed
witness who says he heard
another hearsay witness say that the 8 witnesses
did not see the plates and were persuaded by Joseph to lie. On the other hand
we have the positive statement of 8 men who said they did see, examine, handle,
heft the plates, who described what they saw, felt and knew, and maintained
their testimony until death. The hearsay testimony pales in the face of the
positive witness as would be held in any reasonable court.
Page 35 - False premises lead to false conclusions!
This summary is such a fallacious document!
(1). Joseph’s six or seven accounts of his first
vision do not conflict. Different portions are emphasized under different
circumstances and with different audiences, but the substance is always the
same. And it was not 18 years after it was experienced in 1820 that he began to
share it! As noted above, sharing it with a trusted Methodist minister soon
after the event was the cause of persecution that followed him from that early
date.
For accurate documented information on the First
Vision, see Byrna S. Zerr, In Behalf Of
Joseph, An Affirmation, Copyright 1992, pp.16-35. Available from Price
Publishing, Independence, Mo. or the Library of Congress.
(2). There is no valid history that shows Joseph
Smith or his family “practicing occultists”. No court record of 1826 has been
produced by Trask, Hansen or any other that proves Joseph was “convicted of
glass- looking by using a “peep-stone” buried in a hat”. The facts are that
Joseph did not even have the plates from which the Book of Mormon was translated or the instruments by which they were
translated until 1827, the year following the purported conviction.
(3). Martin Harris declared to his dying day that
Joseph was shown the plates by an angel. Mark Hofmann, the convicted Mormon
killer, forged documents with Harris’ name that said otherwise, but those
documents have been proved forged. (See Salamander,
The Mormon Murders, or The Gathering of the Saints, all popular
books detailing the case against Hofmann). No evidence has been produced that
any primary witness ever said Joseph found the plates by using a peep-stone.
(4). There is no testimony of any person who scribed
for the Book of Mormon who says he
did not use the plates. There are only statements of other people who were not
involved who said they were not used.
(5). Joseph’s brother William was not permitted to
see the plates and only testified that Joseph was to show them to no one except
those to whom he was directed by the Lord to show them.
The Stephen Burnett letter is a secondary source
concerning Martin Harris’ testimony and a tertiary source concerning all
others. They can not stand against Martin’s own statements even as late as
1870. (See Zerr Ibid. p. 66.) and the testimonies of all 10 of the other
witnesses.
Trask’s dissertation on Zion contains some strictly
Mormon doctrine never accepted by the RLDS, and leans on the Book of Commandments as the true source
of Joseph’s teachings.
The Book of
Commandments is a partial printing of hand written copies of the early
commandments, interrupted by mob action in Missouri. It stops in the middle of
a sentence, the last of the section being printed at the time. Oliver Cowdery
and W.W. Phelps, who were responsible for the printing, later testified that
they had no idea how so many errors crept into the publication. Afterward they
were instrumental, with Joseph, in the printing of the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants from the original
revelations and testified to the correctness of that publication.
(See the Preface to the 1835 Edition of the Doctrine
and Covenants, the booklet on the Book
of Commandments entitled A Recurring
Issue and authored by Joseph Smith III, Israel A. Smith and Delbert D.
Smith available from the Board of Media Development of the Restoration Elders
Conference, Independence, Missouri).
Trask’s statement of the present situation on pages
40-41 is quite perceptive.
Page 43 - Trask says the Latter Day Saints build
Zion for God. It is true that some
people have that idea, but it is not
validated in the scriptures. The Inspired
Version of the Bible, the Book of
Mormon and the Doctrine and Covenants
all say men build the Kingdom.
God builds Zion with Kingdom quality people! (See the scriptures
or Delbert D. and Ronald K. Smith, The
Kingdom Way).
Page 44 - It is understandable that one who has not
experienced the Patriarchal Blessing or who does not accept the antiquity of
the Gospel might feel as Trask does about the office of Patriarch and the
practice of Patriarchal Blessings. For those of us who have experienced it, the
testimonies of the validity of that ministry are voluminous!
Page 45 - I have one question. If there are no
Priests after Christ, why are so many Christians looking forward to being Priests and Kings (Rev. 1:6;
5:10; 20:6 K.J.)? Hebrews 7 gives an understanding of how the Priesthood was
changed from that of the Mosaic law, but not taken away.
Page 46 - Trask proposes the dubious idea that the
Gospel should go only to the Jews until after the Son of Man comes again to the
earth. Jesus said He was sent to the House
of Israel, not just to the Jews. The scriptures are clear that there
were 12 tribes in the House of Israel of which the Jews are only one! And when
Jesus Christ commissioned his disciples, he told them to go and teach all nations! (Matthew 28:19). Read of the
experience of Peter as recorded in Acts 10 and 11 in which Peter was commanded
by spiritual means to go to the Gentile, Cornelius, and teach him and his
household. There were no Jews to take precedence, and when Peter was accused of
violating Jesus’ instruction in so doing, he retold his testimony and further
testified to the Lord’s Spirit falling upon the Gentiles who were baptized. So
powerful was his testimony that “they (Jewish members of Christ’s church) held
their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then hath God also to the Gentiles
granted repentance unto life.” Also Matthew 19:30, Matthew 20:16, Mark 10:31,
and Luke 13:30 all record that Jesus prophesied that the first shall be last and the last shall be first. The Jews
were taught the Gospel first but as a nation rejected it. They will be the last
to accept it fully.
Page 47- The concept of a Latter Day Israel is not a
distortion of Biblical theology. On the contrary, it is fulfillment of Biblical
prophecy. That in the last times Israel will again be gathered is so much a
part of the Bible’s prophetic
ministry that it is not even necessary to cite quotations to support the
assertion.
Chapter 4 - RLDS Scriptures
Trask begins by citing Paul’s statement that from infancy Timothy had known the
Holy Scriptures which were able to make him wise for salvation through faith on
Jesus Christ. What scriptures did Timothy’s mother and grandmother have to
share with Timothy? There was no New
Testament, nor even Old Testament,
compiled as we have it. How could the stories of Christ, his ministry, his
death and resurrection be scripture until after He died? Paul was writing to
Timothy, now a young man, very soon after Christ died, referring to the time of
Timothy’s infancy which had
to be at least a little while before that event. Scholars say the Gospels had
not yet been written. Many of Paul’s letters had not been written. John’s Revelation
was yet to happen. So what scriptures did Eunice and Lois have to share? They
could have had some of the writings from the Hebrew Bible, perhaps the Septuagint,
but what else? Certainly Timothy’s scripture was very different from ours! If
he had all that was ever to be needed, why should we accept the New Testament as scripture?
Trask says Jesus believed in the Bible. What Bible did He have in which to believe and from which to quote?
There was no Bible that looked like
ours in Jesus’ day. They had the Torah ,
the prophets and the writings all on scrolls. Some of these Hebrew scriptures
had been translated into Greek to form the Septuagint.
But there was no New Testament, for
many of the events recorded in it had not yet occurred! If the scholars are to
be believed, the four Gospels were not even written down until long after
Christ died. The Acts of the Apostles and Paul’s letters could not have been in
existence because Paul was still persecuting the Saints, and Pentecost was yet
to happen. Trask’s interpretation is so wrong! Jesus did not promise there
would be no changes in the Bible! The
Bible did not exist! Jesus spoke only
of the provisions of the law as being fulfilled, not of the rest of the writings as being perfect!
So when Paul wrote to Timothy, what did he really
say about the scriptures? The King James
Bible says that he said, “All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and
is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto
all good works.” Trask says Paul said, “All scripture is God-breathed and is
useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so
that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.”
Now if the Bible
is so accurate and reliable that “not the slightest letter nor the least stroke
of a pen” will disappear before everything is accomplished, as Trask indicates
from his second paragraph on that page, how can he suddenly change it and its
meaning? The two quotations above do not say the same thing. (1) “God-breathed” is substituted
for “inspiration of God”. “Is God-breathed” implies that man was not involved
in the production of scripture. “Given
by inspiration of God” means the author’s mind was stimulated to a high
degree (Strong’s Concordance says
“divinely breathed in”) by God. (2) Doctrine is a teaching, tenet or dogma. Trask’s rendition
is that the scriptures are “for
teaching”, in other words, a tool, which is far different in meaning.
(3) Reproof as Paul used it,
according to Strong’s Concordance, is
evidence, conviction. Rebuke,
on the other hand, is to criticize sharply, reprimand. (4) Instruction is education, something learned. Training is to coach in or
accustom to some mode of behavior or performance, as one would train a dog to
do tricks. (Definitions for the above terms not ascribed to Strong’s Concordance are from the American Heritage Dictionary.)
Now, which
version of the Timothy scripture is “accurate and reliable” with a guarantee
from God that “not the slightest letter nor the least stroke of a pen” shall
disappear from it until everything is accomplished? If it is the former, how
dare anyone vary from it not only in words but in meaning? If it is the latter,
surely millions of people have been deluded by misinformation at least since
1611!
Page 52-53 - Neither Joseph Smith nor the RLDS
church discard the Bible or put the Book of Mormon above it. The two
scriptures support each other in every way, and until recently, the contents of
the RLDS Doctrine and Covenants has
been judged by that which is written in the Bible
or it has not been accepted by the church as inspired by God.
Chapter 5 - The Book
of Mormon
Trask is wrong when he says that hidden knowledge
that was once in the Bible was to be
restored in the Book of Mormon for
which Joseph Smith’s followers were to be the exclusive beneficiaries. The Book of Mormon was never claimed to be
an instrument of restoration of former Biblical scriptures. Any clarification
of concepts or correction of details was to be for all nations and all peoples of the earth! To compare the Book of Mormon with the early Gnostic
heresies is to display deplorable ignorance of the book’s contents or of the
Gnostic heresies.(See explanation of Gnosis and Gnostic in the
answer to Trask’s page 78 in this work).
Page 57 - The Jaredites did escape the confusion of
tongues, which is what they requested
of the Lord, and were guided to a promised
land, choice above all other lands, not “scattered the farthest” as
Trask sarcastically affirms.
The sarcasm with which Trask treats the building of
the Jaredite barges just indicates his lack of understanding of that ingenuous
design that is used to this day in fishing boats of the South Pacific. The hole
in the bottom is rimmed up to a little above the usual level of the ocean water
and provides a port through which the people can fish, keep their catch fresh
until they return to land, and discard waste. The motion of the ocean waves
makes the port into a huge bellows that expels stale air and brings in fresh
air through the hole in the top when it is open. When the top hole is closed
during a storm, it keeps out the storm. When the seas are rough but no rain is
falling, or when the boat is stationary before launching into the deep, the
bottom hole may be closed to keep out excess sea water while the open hole in
the top still provides necessary ventilation. it wasn’t stupid at all! And the
fact that the Lord allowed the brother of Jared to think through many of the
problems attendant to building the boat and providing light for it, merely
shows how much the Lord wants us to use our own agency in consultation with Him
in solving the problems of the world in which we live.
The contention that the Jaredites loaded onto the
eight barges all of their flocks, herds, fowl, fish, birds and a food supply
for them all is again a statement showing lack
of knowledge of the scripture. Ether 3:4 says they prepared for
“whatsoever beast, or animal or fowl they should carry with them” when they
prepared to cross the ocean. It was when they left their home and went to the
Valley of Nimrod and moved about from place to place before reaching the place
of embarkation that they took all of their flocks, the bees, etc. with them. See
Ether 1:22-24.
Page 58-59 - Trask distorts the record again. The Book of Mormon does not say every wicked
person was completely destroyed at the time of Christ’s death. The people who
were destroyed were those who had known the prophecies of the Lord’s coming to
save them, had known of the Lord’s coming at the time of His birth and had not
only rejected that knowledge
but had deliberately chosen to live
wickedly in defiance of their knowledge of the coming Savior. Many who
were less wicked than they (but still had the possibility of repenting) were
saved.
The situation has many parallels in the history of
the Hebrew nation. When Moses came down from the mountain and found his people
worshiping the golden calf, Exodus 32 (King James) says that the Lord would
have consumed them all but Moses begged Him not to do it, so only about 3,000
men were slain by the Levites at Moses’ command. How many rebellious ones who
followed Korah (Numbers 16) were swallowed up in the earth when they failed to
repent? And what happened to the 250 men who had offered incense but not unto
the Lord? How many priests of Baal did Elijah kill? And what about the flood?
The scriptures are replete with instances in which the Lord removes from the
earth those who have had their chance to follow Him but have refused and pose a
danger to others whose spiritual well being they would put in jeopardy.
Page 59 - Trask repeats a monumental error that is very difficult to explain. How
anyone who was a member of the RLDS Priesthood as long as Trask claims he was
does not know the difference between the plates on which the Book of Mormon was written and the brass
plates which Lehi’s people brought with them is hard to comprehend and
impossible to explain except as evidence of ignorance! Not Moroni nor any of his predecessors of the Book of Mormon authors wrote on
brass plates. The records they made and which were delivered to Joseph
Smith were made of ore with the appearance
of gold! The brass plates, carried with the family of Lehi from
Jerusalem, contained the records of the holy scriptures and the genealogy of
their forefathers, even from the beginning (Alma 17:32). They learned from them
but they never wrote on them, and Joseph Smith never claimed to have them for
any reason!
Trask further compounds his error by saying that the
compiler of the brass plates
was a prophet named Moroni.
The brass plates were engraved centuries
before Moroni was even born, and no Book
of Mormon author added to their engravings. Moroni was not even the
compiler of the plates from which the Book
of Mormon was translated! It was Mormon
who abridged most of the record that constitutes the Book of Mormon on plates with the
appearance of Gold. Moroni had the records only after his father gave
them to him to preserve. In the “Book of Mormon”, chapter 4, page 704 of the
1908 edition of the Book of Mormon,
verse 1, Moroni says that he is to finish the record of his father, Mormon. He
tells of the last of his people, gives an abbreviated account of the Jaredites
whose record he found among the other sacred records of his people, and
finishes with some discussions of doctrine before he hides the plates in a hill
that was first called Hill Cumorah by
Oliver Cowdery - not by Moroni. The hill called Cumorah by Mormon, in which the large library of the
Nephite people is deposited, is
somewhere in Mesoamerica (Book of Mormon, 3:7-8).
That the language in which Mormon and Moroni wrote
or that the language of the brass plates was some form of Egyptian should not
be especially difficult to understand. Moses, who was the author of at least a
part of the early scriptures that were on the brass plates was raised and
educated an Egyptian. Joseph, ancestor of Lehi’s family, was a ruler of Egypt.
Lehi was a merchant taught in the language of Egypt. All had Hebrew thought and
Egyptian learning. Since the Egyptian language took less space than the Hebrew,
that it was the choice for engravings on metal plates is very understandable.
That it had been changed (reformed) over a period of a thousand years to suit
the needs of the engravers is also no great mystery.
That the Hebrews would not countenance the writing
of the name of their God in any language but Hebrew is a strange statement for
Trask to make in view of the facts. By the first century A.D., even books of
our Old Testament were translated into Greek and Aramaic, “the languages of international commerce and culture”
(Reader’s Digest, A,B,C’s of the Bible,
1991). The Greek translation of the early Hebrew scriptures, the Septuagint, became the standard
scripture for Christians along with the portions of the New Testament that were also written in Greek. The difference is
that in the day of Lehi, the language of “international commerce and culture”
was Egyptian, not Greek, but God’s name is in both!
Page 60 - Just last Saturday I was in a group in
which a linguist working with the Mayan and Egyptian languages demonstrated the
similarities between the characters Joseph Smith drew for Martin Harris and one
form (demotic) of the Egyptian language. Trask is just not current in his
knowledge of the languages, and so makes an unrighteous judgement of Joseph’s
motives.
Page 61-62 - It is understandable that Professor
Anthon would want to distance himself from anything so unpopular as the Book of Mormon came to be. It had been 5
or 6 years since Harris visited him when he wrote the letter cited, and a busy
professor might well have forgotten the particulars, especially if they would
be an embarrassment to him. His letter does verify that a man did bring him a
paper on which characters of some sort were drawn. It is not so strange that
one supposed to know languages would make a guess at what languages he was
seeing when he knew no one would know any more about it than he, especially if
the changes in the language made the characters unfamiliar.
Page 62 - Trask’s explanation of Isaiah 29 is
interesting, but it leaves out any mention of the book that is to be offered a
little while before Lebanon becomes a fruitful field and is esteemed as a
forest, and a number of other details that are pertinent to really
understanding the prophecy. Lebanon has become a fruitful field. It is too late
for the prophecy to be fulfilled as Trask suggests.
It is true that the Isaiah scripture has been
interpreted to say that the book would have a “familiar spirit”, which Trask
promptly and rightly condemns if that was what the scripture said. In
every place in the Bible in which the
term is used, with the exception of Isaiah 29, the context is that a person
has sought or is seeking a “familiar spirit” for the purpose of divining the
future or to receive advice or counsel. Such usage is forbidden. Careful
reading of the Isaiah scripture, however, shows that the writer simply used a
simile (“A figure of speech in which two essentially unlike things are
compared, often in a phrase introduced by like or as.” American Heritage Dictionary). The scripture actually says that the
voice of the people of the city where David dwelt will speak out of the ground
“as of” (in a manner similar to) “one that hath a familiar spirit”. The
Lord is telling the prophet that the voice of the people of Ariel
(Jerusalem), whose story will be in the book, will sound familiar to those who
read it, and will come out of the ground in a manner that they have often considered
ghostly. The Hebrew word translated “familiar” means safe, happy, friendly. In
Hebrew idiom it means to be at peace or to be well.
It is interesting that on pages 59-60, Trask
declares that Christ saves, not destroys sinners. Now on page 63 he interprets
Isaiah’s prophecy to mean that God will save Israel and punish her wicked
enemies, who are the ones who need saving. His explanation, however, does not
take into consideration that the prophet is still talking about a book, the
words of which shall be delivered to a learned man who cannot read it because
it is sealed and to an unlearned man who says he is unlearned.Then the Lord
moves marvelously to make the the book available even to those who are deaf and
blind just a little while before Lebanon becomes a fruitful field, esteemed as
a forest. The history of the coming forth of the Book of Mormon is the only event that fulfills the prophecy. Read
the record from the first few chapters of the RLDS Church History, Volume 1.
Page 64 - Ezekiel 37 is undoubtedly a prophecy of
what will happen to Israel in the future, but it is also a metaphor for the testimony of the several parts of Israel
that will be used by the Lord in making the northern and southern kingdoms of
Israel one nation.
It is common knowledge that the northern and
southern kingdoms of Israel were not united while they did exist. Now they are
long since gone, and the nine and a half tribes of Israel are known as the lost
tribes because Judah no longer has knowledge of them or their whereabouts. In
promising to reunite all Israel, the Lord has the prophet Ezekiel explain that
there will be one record for those of Judah and those children of
Israel his companions that are known
and another record for Joseph and those of the lost tribes who are his
companions. One of these records will be in the hand of Judah. It is the record
of the Jews, the Bible. The other
record will tell of Joseph’s people, who are among the lost tribes. It will be
in the hand of Ephraim, the son of Joseph to whom Israel, Joseph’s father,
insisted on giving the greater blessing even though Manasseh was the firstborn.
(Genesis 48).
The Book of
Mormon tells of a portion of the tribe of Manasseh who were led by the Lord
to the new land to live. When the book was brought into being by the Lord,
however, He placed it in the hands of one who is of the tribe of Ephraim.
Scholars, I understand, believe that the tribe of Ephraim is numbered among the
English and northern European peoples. Joseph Smith is one of those who
believed his lineage was of Ephraim.
These records, the Lord promises, will be used by
God to bring all of Israel together in a time to come. A stated purpose of the Book of Mormon is to bear such witness
of the Lord Jesus Christ that even the Jews will be convinced of His
Messiahship. The stick of Joseph is to be in the hands of Ephraim, and we have
no indication of which I am aware that Ezekiel was a descendant of Ephraim.
Contrary to Trask’s summary, I know of no persons
more aware of the restoration of Israel and more excited about the events
occurring currently than those of the Restoration who understand the Book of Mormon and through it understand
Bible prophecies more correctly.
Chapter 6 - The Book
of Mormon, Part Two.
Trask correctly shows that Spaulding’s Manuscript Found was not plagiarized in writing the Book of Mormon. He does not, however,
make it clear that Sidney Rigdon could not have provided the manuscript for the
Book of Mormon to Joseph since Sidney
did not know Joseph until after the Book
of Mormon was published. In fact, it was that book that was instrumental in
his conversion to the Restoration (Church
History Vol. 1, pp. 139-140).
Then Trask makes Joseph Smith the most highly
educated, most intelligent, most clever genius the world has ever known by
ascribing to him knowledge of all the literature of his day pertaining to the
subject of the origin of the native Americans with the ability to put it
together in one intricately woven story, without errors or contradictions, in
some 777 printed pages (1908 edition), detailing information that was not yet
discovered, creating names of people and places just now (1990-2002) being
discovered, writing in Hebrew Poetic forms that had not even been discovered in
the Bible until a century or so
later, using terms not known to have been used by the natives of Mesoamerica
until they were discovered on glyphs and translated in and since 1960, writing
in 15 distinct writing styles without using the language of one author in the
purported work of another, and doing it all is less than 80 days!
Inadvertently, Paul Trask has given Joseph a compliment that Joseph would never
accept. He would give the glory to God, his heavenly Father and God’s only
Begotten Son!
It only takes a glance at Ethan Smith’s View of the Hebrews to know that Joseph
did not copy it. It is interesting, though, that if Joseph had knowledge of the
Ethan Smith book, he did not make the mistake of saying that the plates to
which he was led were buried with a skeleton of an Indian as one copying the
legend Ethan Smith reported would have done. Neither did he make the mistake of
ever calling the people to which the Book
of Mormon referred “Indians” in the text. Ethan Smith called them Indians.
Joseph called them Israelites, Nephites, Lamanites, Jaredites, Mulekites but never
Indians.
Joseph did not err in adopting Ethan Smith’s
nomenclature or interpretation of many other facets of the legends and ideas
that he reported. He did not, for example, endorse the idea that the people of
whom the Book of Mormon spoke came to
America by way of the Bering Strait, nor did he adopt the nomenclature of a
“bearded white God”. In fact, the only reference to a beard in the Book of Mormon is a quotation from
Isaiah found in II Nephi 9:33 and has nothing to do with Christ or any other
person of whom the book speaks. The bearded
white God of which the people of the Restoration speak comes from the carvings and paintings found in
Mesoamerica long after 1830.
The idea that Oliver Cowdery was Joseph’s cousin is
not verified in any way. Oliver, Joseph and Joseph’s mother all indicate that
Oliver and Joseph did not know each other until Oliver went to investigate and
stayed to write for Joseph. Oliver’s brother Lyman was even one called upon by
Lucy Harris to help her try to convict Joseph of fraud according to Lucy
Smith’s account (Chapter 28 of Joseph
Smith and His Progenitors).
The fact that Ethan Smith made much of the stick of
Ephraim and the stick of Joseph symbolizing the reuniting of the house of
Israel is not surprising. Trask’s own interpretation of the Ezekiel scripture
concurs. Did Trask get his idea from Ethan Smith?
What is reported to be B. H. Robert’s summary is
couched in typical propaganda terms - “... it is more than likely”, “ a great
probability”, “most likely”, “within the lines of possibility”, “could have
been produced this way”, “can there be any doubt?”, “could be urged”. “would
make it possible”, all of which show that whoever wrote them had no credible evidence on which to
base his speculations. The answer to the question asked at the bottom
of page 69 and the top of page 70 is, “YES,
there is every reason to doubt it”! This kind of speculation has no
place in serious study of events surrounding the coming forth of the Book of Mormon!
Page 70 - Trask says that Josiah Priest’s book was
“checked out repeatedly” but does not
list Joseph Smith or any of his family among those who checked it out. Again,
the Book of Mormon never even
mentions Indians. The Book of Mormon narrow
neck of land divides two bodies of land.
Priest’s book has it dividing two vast oceans.
Page 70 - Again Trask makes Joseph a very clever man
by stating that he was careful to cite Priest’s 1833 book instead of the
earlier Ethan Smith or Priest works when speaking of an Indian legend in 1842.
Then he makes the unsubstantiated
presumption that that reference shows that Joseph was acquainted with
both men’s work 13 years earlier, before the Book of Mormon was written. Propaganda
tricks again, but not serious history!
Page 71 - Trask’s comment on the renewed interest in
the Apocrypha interests me in view of
his earlier contention that the Bible
of Joseph’s day was inerrant. Not one jot or tittle was to be changed before
all was accomplished. If there were no errors in it, why was the Apocrypha removed and how can it have only literary and historical value now?
The speculation that Joseph may have borrowed from the Apocrypha is again unsubstantiated speculation - pure propaganda! For one, I have
been in the church for 76 years and have never before heard anyone try to
determine where Joseph got the word Nephi. The fact that it is in the Apocrypha merely proves that it was a legitimate Hebrew term, not that
it was copied. Why Trask makes such a deal of it is incomprehensible to me.
Lehi, Sam, Jacob, Joseph, Ishmael, Laban and numerous other Book of Mormon names are in the Bible. In 1961, an ancient deed bearing
the signature of Alma ben
Yehuda was found in the Cave of the Letters during an archaeological dig in the
Holy Land and is now on exhibit at Brigham Young University in the Museum of
Art in Provo, Utah (see Angela Crowell’s “Jerusalem Report” to Qumran Quest
supporters, May 26, 1997), and we have rejoiced to learn that even that name is
authentic Hebrew! On the other hand, for every name used in both the Apocrypha and the Book of Mormon, there are many more that are found solely in the Book of Mormon or solely in the Apocrypha. Some found only in the Book of Mormon are just now being
discovered in Mesoamerica. An ancient city in Belize is named Lamani, very
similar to Laman. Recently I was in the ruins of a city in the Yucatan that has
two names on its ancient glyphs, one of which is Mulek. The city of Mulek is
spoken of twelve times in Alma 24 and once in Helaman 2. And there are more to
which reference is made later in this response.
Trask uses his propaganda technique again saying, “It is possible that Joseph got his idea from 2
Maccabees”. Again the fact that Maccabees speaks of brass plates and treasuries
only serves to validate the authenticity of those items
in Hebrew life. Trask has no justification for his conclusion that “It seems clear that the King James
Apocrypha provided yet another source of ideas for Joseph Smith’s fertile
imagination.” The statement merely demonstrates his very obvious bias and his
adeptness at using propaganda techniques.
The
same is true of his discussion of the influence of Anti-Masonry sentiment on the
text of the Book of
Mormon and on the account of Enoch in the scriptures. The tragedy of
Joseph’s involvement with Masonry does have validity in events that occurred in
Nauvoo, but the effort to equate the experience of Joseph with the Masonic
“Legend of Enoch” falls far short of credibility. For Joseph there was no lost name of God, no
flood that made it necessary for him to preserve the name, no pillars inside the hill, no builders had to find the plates. (The plates were
shown to Joseph by the one who buried them there.) No three evil men tried to force Joseph to reveal the
place from which the plates came and finally killed him. No persons associated with Joseph pursued those who
killed him, killed them or were rewarded by Joseph’s friends. No repository of the plates and their accompaniments
was ever designed or considered. In an effort to make the story fit, Trask
resorts to the propaganda term “it seems”, and the slanderous statement that
Joseph had a polygamous wife in Far West in 1838. If the fact that Joseph died
at the hands of a mob crying, “Oh Lord, My God ...” is evidence that he was
copying the legend, he certainly carried the act too far!
In
summary, Trask goes too far. What two books did Joseph confess knowledge of in
later years? The fact that Joseph quoted Josiah Priest’s, American
Antiquities in 1842 does not in any way indicate
that he was aware of or acquainted with either Ethan Smith’s work or the earlier
work of Priest in 1829. Even trying to validate the
work of an unnamed scholar, Trask uses that “scholars” terms, “seemed transformed”, “appears to be”, indicating
that the “scholar” had no evidence to support his speculations.
Trask’s final statement of the way in which Joseph
translated the Book
of Mormon plates is not truthful, as shown earlier by Delbert D. Smith’s, How The Book of Mormon
Was Translated, Byrna Zerr’s, In Behalf of Joseph, RLDS Church History,
Times and Seasons, Lucy Mack Smith’s, Joseph Smith and His
Progenitors, etc. This was no New Age channeling process. It was far more
like the present form of translation by computer. There is recorded on a small
silicon chip the information that makes it possible to translate German or
French or any of a number of other languages into English or vice versa. In the
computer, electrical impulses provide the energy for the translation. In
Joseph’s case, the Spirit of God provided that energy. To say that it could not
be is to say that we can do things that are impossible for God. That is putting
ourselves in the place of God and declaring ourselves greater than He. That is
the Spirit of the Anti-Christ!
Page
78 - If one uses the actual definition of gnosis - the knowledge of spiritual things -
perhaps it might be applied to Joseph Smith. If, however, one is applying it to
the Gnostics of the early Christian era, nothing could be farther from the
truth. That sect claimed that matter was evil and denied that Christ had a natural corporeal
existence. None of Joseph Smith’s writings or those that he translated
have any of those characteristics. In fact, the Book of Mormon and
the Doctrine and
Covenants carry the strongest evidence that Jesus lived, died, rose from the
dead and lives today that is available anywhere. And the Word of Wisdom (Doctrine and Covenants
Section 86), Sections 49, 59, 85, 119, 90 and numerous other references are
irrefutable evidence that Joseph did not reflect the belief that matter is evil!
Either Trask does not understand Gnosticism or he does not know either the Book of Mormon or
the Doctrine and
Covenants at all! If he was ever a member of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saint, he surely did not
understand it’s teachings or his mind has become so darkened that he does not
remember that which he once espoused! Trask’s pronouncement of demonic
forces channeling through Joseph Smith, producing a book promoting a massive
heresy is, at best, an unrighteous judgement.
The
Book of Mormon,
Part 3
The
Book of Mormon
does contain quotations from Isaiah because the people had Isaiah’s
prophecies on the brass plates. The brass plates were not readily available to
the people, so the religious leaders taught from them frequently. Trask
demonstrates his convoluted misconception of the languages involved in his
effort to make this an impossibility. Most importantly, Trask contradicts
himself in declaring the King James translation of the Bible just the
product of scholars using different manuscripts. Earlier he said “all scriptures
are God-breathed”, etc. and therefore perfect! Does he not consider the King James Bible
Scripture?
The
fact that Trask says references in the Book of Mormon are identical to those in the King James Bible is
also incorrect. Where there is a similarity, there are many significant differences. Where Jesus is
quoted, it is just good common sense to expect that He would use language
similar to that used in Palestine since He knew that He was speaking to His own
“other sheep”. It is apparent that Trask has not made a significant study of the
material he disparages. I recommend that he does!
Page
80 - Trask does accurately define an anachronism; but to say there are no such
in the Bible is
strange. Isaiah, for example, called Cyrus by name some two centuries before his
birth (Isa. 44:28) and named him the one who should cause Jerusalem to be
rebuilt long before Jerusalem was destroyed. The Jewish historian, Josephus says
that it was when Cyrus was shown that prophecy that he decided to do as God,
through His prophet, had said he would. Surely calling Jesus by name in Old Testament times
would not have been more difficult for God!
In 2
Nephi chapter 11 Nephi explains some of the prophecies of Isaiah and those of
his father and others concerning the coming of the Messiah. He says plainly that
it is according to the words of the prophets and “the
word of the angel of God, his name shall be Jesus Christ, the Son of
God.” God knew by what English name the Messiah would be known at the time the Book of Mormon was
brought forth in English. He made certain there would be no mistaking who the
Messiah was by causing the prophets to foretell it by giving them a name in
their language that would be translated into English, Jesus Christ. For Trask to
say that those who left Jerusalem around 600 BC could not have known of the
angel’s message is very strange. God surely has the ability to send angels to
whomever He chooses wherever He chooses.
The
story of the birth of Jesus cannot even be fully told without the Book of Mormon
record!
Where in the King James Bible is there a
prophecy of a new star to arise at Jesus’ birth? There is none.
Why
does Luke not mention a new star shining over the stable at Christ’s birth?
Because there was none seen there! Matthew is the only Gospel writer who
mentions a star associated with Christ’s birth, and that only after the Wise Men
tell Herod about seeing one in the East.
Why
did the Wise Men go to Jerusalem instead of to Bethlehem? If they were studying
the Hebrew prophesies of the birth of a King of the Jews they would have gone
directly to Bethelem. Micah had said He would be born in Bethlehem, and Herod had no trouble finding the
prophecy from the Chief Priests and the scribes.
The
Book of Mormon
has the answer. The Book of Mormon people did not have Micah’s prophesies. Their
prophets had said, “he shall be born of Mary at
Jerusalem, which is the land of our forefathers”
(Alma 5:19). The Wise Men had no knowledge of the specific city in the land of
Jerusalem, so went to Jerusalem to ask.
If
the Wise Men were just kings of the Orient or Zoroastrian Priests or Magi or
astrologers, as some modern texts say, why would they want to worship a Jewish
king? That was the only purpose the Wise Men gave for seeking Him. The Wise Men
were believers in the Messiah of whose birth they knew by the fulfillment of the
prophecy of a new star that would arise at the time of His birth (Helaman 5:59
and 3 Nephi 1:24).
Beautiful stories like The Other Wise Man
have filled in a huge gap in this foundational story with fiction and formed
a tradition that has blinded even good Christians to the missing parts of the
story of Christ’s birth. The Book of Mormon fills in the gaps!
Surely Joseph Smith cannot be
credited with figuring this one out!
Trask’s criticism of the practice of the Book of Mormon
peoples keeping the law of Moses even while they believed in Christ and looked
forward to His coming is very strange in view of the fact that Jesus’ parents did the same and so, also, did
Jesus. He was circumcised, presented at the temple with sacrifices,
observed the Passover, etc., etc. Jesus and His Apostles were even preparing to
observe the Passover the night before His crucifixion! That is exactly the pattern of the Book of Mormon
people. As soon as Christ gave His life in sacrifice and came among them as a
resurrected being, the Law of Moses was no longer observed. There is no
scripture more plain than the Book of Mormon on this point that Jesus Christ
fulfilled the Law of Moses and established the New Covenant.
How
Trask can say that the words gospel and baptism are out of place before Christ’s sacrifice is
another strange one. What was John the Baptist doing using those terms and
practices before Jesus had even declared His Messiahship? And how could Jesus be
baptized with a “Christian baptism” while even He carried the marks of the
Mosaic Law in His body and was still observing Jewish feasts (John 7:8-14)
including the Passover (Matthew 26:17-18)? Obviously, it is not Joseph
Smith who “has no understanding of the Gospel of Christ.” That Joseph had “not
even fundamental understanding of Biblical theology”, as Trask affirms, is very
good since fundamental Biblical theology of the nature Trask affirms
is not at all scriptural!
Trask’s criticism of the use of Greek words, alpha and omega, in the Book of Mormon
again shows his misunderstanding of the nature of the book. It is a translation,
and a translation from any language to another uses the words that presently
convey the thought of the author. These Greek words were used because they were
commonly used and understood in 1829. Adieu, borrowed from the French but well
established in the English language by 1828, was similarly used, simply because
it was the word commonly in use and understood in 1829 that most closely
expressed the meaning of the Jewish word Barak. (See Angela Crowell, “Adieu: The
Right Word After All”, Recent Book of Mormon Developments, Volume 2, p.
40.)
Whether Jonas and Timothy were names known to Lehi’s family
or to Mulek and his companions before they left Jerusalem, we do not yet know.
We do know that Greek influence had reached Egypt by the mid 4th century before
Christ because Alexander the Great founded Alexandria, Egypt about 322 B. C.
Greek was the most widely spoken language in the Mediterranean after the fourth
century B. C., and the Jewish population in Alexandria was so numerous that the
Hebrew scriptures were translated into Greek beginning in the third century
before Christ, forming the Septuagint. Greece and Palestine were neighbors. Even
Andrew and Philip, two of the Apostles whom Jesus chose, have Greek
names.
Trask’s objection to the quotation from Malachi being
similar to those found in the Book of Mormon fails to take into account that the Holy Spirit was the source of both scriptures and
He has every reason to use similar or identical language if He chooses! There is
not the slightest indication that the people brought Malachi’s prophecy with
them. 2 Nephi 11:73, for example, is directed to the Nephite people speaking
even of the number of generations involved in the fulfillment of that prophecy.
Christ, too, has every reason to say to the people on this continent what has
already been said on another. If it had not been important for the House of
Israel to know, I believe Trask will agree, the prophecy would never have been
given in the first place; and those to whom Christ spoke were and are of the
House of Israel. Again the principle of translation applies whatever the actual
words that Christ used.
With
respect to Book of
Mormon archeology and anthropology, there are always those among us who fit
the adage, “None are so blind as those who will not see!” Trask gives no
credible statement from any Book of Mormon student or researcher who ever claimed that the Smithsonian and the National
Geographic Society are using the Book of Mormon as a tool to discover Mesoamerican ruins. Rumor is
not evidence, and neither is ignorance! The fact that the two institutions have
not used the Book of Mormon in locating historic ruins, however,
does not in any way deny that there are ruins found that
coordinate with ruins described in the Book of Mormon.
The
Smithsonian Institution statement is not dated by Trask and is written by one
who was before or not aware of the Smithsonian’s own research data which give an
entirely different view of the facts. (See Diane E. Wirth, A Challenge to the
Critics, Horizon Publishers, Bountiful, Utah, 1986, p. 22-36.) Actually, the
Smithsonian statement was written in 1982 and the National Geographic one in
1979, neither of which could possibly include the massive amount of information
that has been discovered since those dates, which Trask chooses to ignore.
I
have read Ferguson’s material that Tanners circulate and find that it is just
another piece of “evidence” that the Tanners promote filled with much more evidence of propaganda than of truth. They say
Thomas Stuart Ferguson wrote a letter saying that he was going to “spoof” the
Mormon church concerning the Book of Mormon, yet the supposed letter did not come to
light until after Ferguson was dead; and if Ferguson actually
wrote the letter the Tanners circulate, addressees violated his confidence in
allowing the Tanners to have and publish it. I am sorry that I no longer have
the material available, but if one can find it, they will note that Mr.
Ferguson’s family deny that such a letter or such an attitude ever existed. In
fact, one of his sons helped to complete his father’s unfinished work, that of
revising and republishing his book, as a tribute to him and to his “abiding
testimony of the Book of Mormon....” His brother helped finance the
endeavor. Certainly Mr. Ferguson’s family believe that Thomas Stuart Ferguson
believed in what he was doing. The Tanners effort to refute that idea is filled
with propaganda terms and techniques that place a shadow
over their work.
When
the Tanners and others, including Trask, try to equate the archaeological
findings of the Biblical lands with those of the Americas, they fail to take
into consideration that for nearly two thousand years critics of the Bible denied that
there were archaeological evidences of the existence of many places and
characters spoken of, especially in the Old Testament. Only recently have such archaeological
evidences been found, and this in spite of the fact that many of the towns still
exist, many records are extant and many peoples have a continuous history. I
recently saw a TV documentary showing even these findings being hotly disputed
by professional archaeologists who question their validity.
The
search for Book of
Mormon evidences by the BYU Department of Archaeology has been in progress
about a half century, if its first sponsored field trip was in 1948 as this
paper states. Give them some time! The Book of Mormon tells of 2 nations destroyed. There were
none left to keep their records available to those who do not believe Mormon’s
record. Those persons who did survive lost almost all of their records at the
hands of the invading Spaniard so there is far less to which American
Archaeologists may turn for guides. The critics also fail to consider that God
may have a time table for when He wishes the definitive evidences to appear.
As
to the archaeological findings that do support the Book of Mormon,
they are increasing from time to time. When Delbert Smith was last in Central
America, he saw a line of fortifications that were identical with those
described by Mormon, placed in the same relation to each other that Mormon
described. I stood in the ruins of one such fortified city January 2002. As
already mentioned in this paper, there is an ancient town named Lamani in
Belize. The name is very similar to that of a chief character of the Book of Mormon
named Laman. I have recently visited an ancient city named Mulek in the Yucatan.
Both Lamani and Mulek are names reminiscent of Book of Mormon
times. The book, Maya Divine Kings of the Rain Forest, published in 2001
and edited by the famed epigrapher, Nickoli Grubs, has a picture of a court
scene on page 157. The caption identifies the king as King K’inich Laman Ek’.
The
“golden” artifacts of central and south America are made of the ores described
in the Book of
Mormon as used for that purpose. One of the most often recurring glyphs in
Mesoamerican ruins has been translated by the renowned epigrapher, David Stuart,
“It came to pass”, that often recurring phrase of the Book of Mormon that
has been so maligned. The report of the translation may be found in Science 1986, Vol.
7, Number 2, p. 48 in Virginia Morell’s article, “The Lost Language of Coba”. We
have seen and examined many stele and statues near Oaxaca and know for a surety
that they show persons of distinct Jewish, Egyptian, Negroid, Chinese, and other
anthropological physical characteristics and of national dress. (For further
information on the archaeological findings that are supporting the Book of Mormon,
contact the Pre-Columbian Studies Institute, P.O. Box 477, Independence, M0
64051 or Book of Mormon Foundation, 210 West White Oak, Independence, Mo.
64050.)
Additional items that have been called anachronisms have
been answered by Roy Weldon and others. See Roy Weldon, Restoration
Witnesses, a compilation of articles published in the Saints’ Herald,
available from the Book of Mormon Foundation or the School of the Saints,
Independence, MO. or see Roy E. Weldon and F. Edward Butterworth, Book of Mormon
Deeps, Volumes 1,2, and 3.
Chapter 8 - The Doctrine and Covenants
Trask starts out with an error. He gives misinformation
concerning the relationship of the Book of Commandments and the Doctrine and
Covenants. For correct information see A Recurring Issue, the
Authenticity of the Book of Commandments, Three Treatises By Joseph Smith
III, Israel A. Smith and Delbert D. Smith, Conference of Restoration Elders,
Independence, MO 64050, 1996). Those who were responsible for the printing of
those revelations that did get printed in the Book of
Commandments said there were numerous errors in the transcriptions and
printing. When the revelations were printed in the Doctrine and
Covenants in 1835, after having been compared with the originals, these same men said they believed they were now printed
correctly.
Trask then says there were 3 additional revelations placed in the 1844 edition. When
publication of the Book of Commandments ended, there were 26 additional revelations to be printed that were
printed in the 1835 edition and remain in the present Doctrine and
Covenants as sections 15, 22, 31, 36, 51, and those from 65 through 85.
Two
of the documents that were added in the 1844 edition after Joseph Smith’s death,
and printed by John Taylor who was later a president of the Mormon church, were
letters Joseph had written, not inspired revelations. Only one was even
purported to be a revelation.
Page
88- Trask persists in his erroneous declaration that
Joseph used a peep stone by which to produce the Book of Mormon.
Pages 88-89 - Trask continues his misinformation concerning
the Book of
Commandments and the Doctrine and Covenants. For correct information, see
the preceding reference, “Recurring Issue”. Trask says there were 64 complete
revelations in the Book of Commandments. What he does not say is that
there is a sixty-fifth chapter in the book which is not complete; and those who were responsible for
the printing say there were many errors in that which was printed. All one has
to do is to read Section 64 of the present RLDS Doctrine and
Covenants and compare it with the final chapter of the Book of
Commandments, chapter 65, to know that the Book of
Commandments ends within a sentence. The book and the sentence were never
completed in that work!
During the printing of the Book of
Commandments, the printing press was destroyed and the printed portions of
the revelations scattered by a mob. Books were printed in sections of 16 or 32
pages, each called a Mo. At the time of the mob action, 160 pages (5 Mo) had
been printed. The last printed word was Ephraim, but the sentence was not
finished. The scattered portions retrieved were gathered into what has been
labeled The Book of
Commandments, but it carried only a small portion of the revelations that
had been given to that date and were to have been printed.
In
saying that Joseph Smith verified both the completeness and accuracy of the
book, Trask is again giving false information. The
letter to which he refers was not written by Joseph
Smith. It was written by Sidney Rigdon, and it does not say either that the book was completed or that
it was correct! It only addresses the errors in two chapters (Chapters 40 and 44) of the work and
says nothing about the other 63 chapters!
To
substantiate his statement that Joseph verified both the completeness and
accuracy of the Book
of Commandments, Trask gives the correct reference in the RLDS History. How, then, can he give such false information? He
uses a most insidious propaganda device to which reference
has already been made. A reliable reference is given which in no way conveys the information the author says it
does. The author, however, expects that the reader will trust
him/her so completely that the reader will never consult the reference.
In this way all sorts of misinformation is foisted off onto unsuspecting readers
by unscrupulous and prejudiced authors. (In my field of nutrition we call them
quacks!)
Page
90 - Trask still insists, without justification and with no evidence, that Joseph Smith and his father were
“practitioners of various occult devices”. His conclusions about the changes in
the Doctrine and
Covenants are likewise foundationless - the imaginings of only prejudiced
minds!
Rod as used in the Bible is not necessarily evil. Strong’s Exhaustive
Concordance of the Bible says one word from which it is translated is
sometimes translated as a branch (as extending) figuratively a tribe; or when
translated as a rod, it is an instrument that may be used for chastising
(figuratively correction), ruling (a scepter), throwing (a lance), or walking (a
staff), figuratively a support of life, e.g. bread.
Another word translated rod as in the 23rd Psalm , “Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me” is defined as a
stick (for punishing, writing, fighting, ruling, walking, etc.). This definition
is also that of the rod of God to which Job refers, or Proverbs 29:15, “the rod and reproof give wisdom”. Is the rod that “comforts” us or that “gives us wisdom”
evil?
Hebrews 9:4 speaks of Aaron’s rod that was kept in the Holiest part of
the tabernacle. In this instance, rod was translated from a word meaning “A
stick or wand (as a cudgel, a cane or a baton of royalty); rod, scepter, staff.”
This rod was also from the same word as the rod of Rev. 12:5 with which the man
child who was caught up into heaven was to “rule all nations with a rod of
iron”. This “rod of iron” is, of course, a metaphor for the
word of God.
Hosea 4:11-12 says nothing about an evil
divining rod of which Trask makes so much. It merely says that the people are
committing whoredoms which Strong’s defines as adultery or idolatry. In this
case, the prophet is directed to clarify it by saying the people consult their
wooden idols and expect an answer by those sticks of wood. The New International
Version makes the meaning especially clear. It is the rejection of knowledge
(Hosea 4:6) that has led the people to worship idols even to sacrificing to those wooden
creations, and their “whoredoms and wine and new wine take away the heart”
(Hosea 4:11). Trask has no justification for applying his perverted definition
to the scriptural use of a rod!
Page
89-90 - Trask gives Raveill’s reference to a lengthy letter from David Whitmer
to the Saints’
Herald
dated Dec. 9, 1886 and published February 9, 1887 (Saints’ Herald,
Vol. 34, Number 6, Pages 89-93) in which David said that Oliver Cowdery told him
that Rigdon was the one responsible for the differences in the revelations as
printed in the Book
of Commandments and the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and
Covenants. On the face of it, this was hearsay
testimony given some 52 years after the event.
This is another example of tertiary testimony that directly contradicts primary
testimony of the time of the event and so cannot be given credence as truth.
Oliver Cowdery’s own published statements of the time
(1835), along with the published statements of others involved in the printing
of the Book of
Commandments and the Doctrine and Covenants, declare there were errors in
the first printings in Independence that were corrected when the original revelations were examined back in Kirtland.
When printed in the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants, these men certified their
belief that they were now correct. (See the Preface to the 1835 edition of the
Doctrine and
Covenants and pages 6-8 of the Delbert D. Smith portion of A Recurring Issue, The
Authenticity of the Book of Commandments, Three Treatises, by Joseph Smith
III, Israel A. Smith and Delbert D. Smith.)
Trask quotes David Whitmer as saying Joseph heeded Rigdon
who expounded the scriptures to him and showed him High Priests and other
offices that should be added to Elders, Priests, and Teachers. Whitmer contended
that since these three offices were the only ones mentioned in the Book of Mormon,
these were all there should be. One needs only to consult a concordance to the
Book of Mormon
to see how many times “High Priests” or “High Priesthood” is ascribed to the
functioning of the church in that era. The High Priesthood is not missing from the Book of Mormon!
David’s objection to the introduction of High Priests has
been argued for so many years that there is little use to discuss it here. It
is, however, interesting to compare that objection to Whitmer’s personal
history. He was ordained a High Priest in the early church and served as
President of the High Council of Zion. (RLDS Church History, Vol. 2, p.5 ). After his expulsion
from the original church (RLDS Church History Vol. 2, p. 150), he was again
ordained a High Priest and designated President of the church organized by
William McLellin in 1847. In McLellin’s church, he was called a prophet, seer
and revelator as well as President; and John Whitmer was ordained a High Priest
to be David’s counselor in the First Presidency. David later denounced the
principles he had claimed were revealed to him in McLellin’s church. See the
following:
1.
William McLellin’s account of “Things in Kirtland” printed in their “Ensign of
Liberty”, reprinted in the RLDS Church History, Vol. 3, pp. 79-83;
2.
McLellin’s report to
the conference held in Far West, Mo., September 8 and 9 of 1847,
published in the “Ensign of Liberty”, August, 1849 and reprinted in the RLDS Church
History, Vol. 3, pp. 83-90. (See also the historians comment that follows
McLellin’s report);
3.
Hiram Page’s letter from Richmond in answer to an inquiry addressed to David
Whitmer there.
David Whitmer is said to have denied even that there should
be Apostles in the church, pointing out that the twelve Jesus chose in the
Americas were only called Disciples. In spite of this denial, there were and are
Apostles in the Church of Jesus Christ, (Temple Lot) which he espoused after
leaving McLellin’s church.
Pages 92-93 - Trask makes an incidental error in stating
that, what he calls the “triumvirate concept” is used in virtually every aspect
of the organization, including the Seventy. There is a quorum of seven
Presidents of Seventy that presides over the seven quorums of Seventy.
Other subjects addressed in these pages represent charges
the Temple Lot church has made through the years that have been answered
repeatedly.
Trask is correct that the institutional RLDS (now COC) has
built its temple on a spot other than the one dedicated for that purpose. That
does not mean, however, there will not be a temple built on the dedicated
spot.
Page
97 - The Word of Wisdom is not a “dietary code”. It is a revealment of
principles of health that are much more far reaching than food, are universal,
and are constantly being verified by scientific data. (See Mildred Nelson Smith,
The Word of Wisdom,
Principle With Promise, Herald Publishing House, 1977 or the 1997 version,
Paragon Publishing, Mt. Ayr, Iowa, available from Mildred Smith, Lamoni, Iowa,
or Herald House, School of the Saints, or Price Publishing all of Independence,
Missouri)
Page
98 - What Trask characterizes as Joseph’s new version of the afterlife is not
new at all. It is just a clarification of Paul’s statement to the Corinthians
concerning the glories of the sun, moon and stars (1 Cor. 15:40-42), concerning
one caught up to the third heaven (2 Cor. 12:2-5); paradise (Luke 23:44); 1
Peter 3:18-22 that tells why Christ went to preach in the prison to souls, some
of whom died in the flood; Rev. 20:13-15 which says that hell will give up her
dead and finally itself be destroyed, and other scriptures that traditional Bible “scholars”
have ignored in determining their erroneous view of heaven and
hell.
Pages 99-101 - With respect to Malachi, it has already been
shown that D&C 110 is a letter in which Joseph discussed his own ideas, not
a revelation. D&C 95 is an independent revelation and not a copy of Malachi.
It was the angel, not Joseph, who gave the reference a little different
from the scripture as written. Joseph reported the statement as
the angel gave it but retained it as it was in the Bible.
Chapter 9 - Joseph Smith’s Inspired Version of the
Bible
Trask misses a point on the date of publication of portions
of the Inspired
Version of the Bible. Genesis 7, which is also RLDS Doctrine and Covenants
36, was included in the 1844 edition of the Doctrine and
Covenants, much earlier than 1851.
Because he has no evidence on which to base his
conclusions, Trask again resorts to propaganda techniques at the bottom of page
103 and “speculates” on Sidney Rigdon’s participation in the “translation”. The
Inspired Version
is not a translation, as is sometimes erroneously stated, but is just what it
says it is, an inspired revision of the King James text.
Page
105 - Trask resorts to his erroneous statement concerning the production of the
Book of Mormon.
His statement that first hand witnesses gave such information has already been
shown to be false.
Page
106- Trask’s contention that the name of Jesus Christ could not have been
revealed to Adam is an indication of the limitation he puts on God. God is not
limited to any era of time, and he knows all there is to know even about us all.
Trask is correct in explaining that the Inspired Version
is not a translation as already noted. The parts of the Inspired Version
that appear to be insertions are revelations of portions
that were changed or removed from the old text.
That
Jesus Christ was involved in the creation as the Son of God is not an
anachronism! To whom was God speaking when he said, “Let us make man in our
image, after our likeness:” (Genesis 1:26)? Was Paul lying when he told the
Ephesians that “... God created all things by Jesus Christ” (Eph. 3:9), or when
he told the Colossians (1:16-17), “For by him were all things created ... : And
he is before all things, and by him all things consist”?
I am
puzzled by the assertion that the introduction of the gospel and belief on God’s
“Only Begotten Son” in the beginning of time is a theological anachronism. What
doctrine did God teach the people He created if He is unchangeable and Jesus was
the “Lamb slain from the foundation of the world?” To what was the Psalmist
referring when he wrote Psalm 2:7 which reads, “The Lord hath said unto me, Thou
art my Son; this day have I begotten thee.”? Did God leave those people born
during the two millennium or so before Moses without
a religious faith on which to depend? Were they left without knowledge of a
Savior?
Page
107-108 -The idea that Joseph wrote the account of Enoch as a description of his
own life has no basis in fact. That Joseph “defined himself as a revived Enoch
in the last days” is a figment of Trask’s imagination! That Enoch lived, walked
with God (Genesis 5:22-24) and “was translated that he
should not see death” (Hebrews 11:5) is clearly recorded in the King James Bible.
That the writer of Hebrews had a record that told more of the story than is
found in the King James Genesis is apparent because that Genesis account merely
says that God took Enoch, which could easily have been by death. But the Hebrews
account says pointedly that he did not die but was
translated. Where did the writer of Hebrews get his information? It was either
from inspiration from God or from some record that had been left out of the
Genesis account by accident or design. God merely restored the fuller account through Joseph Smith in
the Inspired
Version.
Genesis 7:9-10 - With respect to the people of Cainan,
Trask skews his facts to suit his purpose again! The Inspired Version
says the land was cursed, not the people. Enoch went to
preach as the Lord directed him, and there is no indication in the Inspired Version as
to why he was not sent to Cainan.
Trask disparages the idea that Zion will return to the
earth in the last days, but the King James Bible says the Lord will return to the earth
bringing “them ... which sleep in Jesus” with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14 - 17)
and will dwell on the earth a thousand years (Revelation 20:4-6). Whether one
calls it “Zion” is of little consequence. God’s people will return to the earth
with God’s Son to live there “with those who remain” for a thousand years.
The
substantive part of Isaiah 29 is the same in the King James Bible
and the Inspired
Version as previously noted. In case the reader is not familiar with the
scripture, let it be noted that the names Trask has put in parenthesis are not in the Inspired Version.
Page
111 - The warning in Revelation is very like the warning in Deuteronomy 4:2
which says, “Ye shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall
you diminish from it, that ye may keep the commandment of the Lord ... .”
Neither warning in any way limits God adding to or correcting the record men
have made of His word.
Page
112 - Trask presents his own hypothesis concerning
the male child that was taken into heaven. I have never heard nor read in any
Restoration literature that the early Christian church members are equated with
that symbolic male child by members of the RLDS church! Neither does the
Restoration literature claim that the Christian church was removed from the
earth “soon after Jesus’ death”. In fact, it does not say Christ’s church was
ever removed from the earth. Rather it says that church remained in the
wilderness and was called out of the wilderness, just as the scripture said it
would be, in the latter days. Certainly the ideas Trask presents are not in any
of the scriptures or writings of Joseph Smith or any of his successors! That
there would be a falling away (apostasy) before Christ’s return is clearly
prophesied in many scriptures, Matthew 11:12 and 2 Thessalonians 2 among them.
Chapter 10 - The Pearl of Great Price is not a scripture of the RLDS
church. Parts included in the RLDS scriptures are discussed in other portions of
this response.
Chapter 11 - The RLDS Priesthood System
Trask’s continuing insistence on Joseph Smith’s occult
orientation is getting tiresome in view of the fact that he has no evidence that it is true! Now he even stoops to using New Age language to disparage
Joseph’s work. His review of the history of the restoration of the Priesthood is
fairly accurate. He does make an error in designating specific offices in an
order of Priesthood as “higher” than others. For example, the offices of Apostle
or Bishop are not higher than that of a High Priest (p. 123). They are just
specific ministries within that group.
On
page 126 the antiquity of the gospel is denied by Trask. He supports the
traditional view of the Christian faith that ignores the fact that Christ was
“the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.” (Rev. 13:8). With the
traditional view, all the ministry of all the millenniums before Christ is
without Christ. That is not reasonable since Jesus Christ was the one through whom God created all things, was
alive and well through all those millenniums, and worked with His Father to
bring salvation to as many as would respond. If it were not so, how could He
expect every knee to bow and every tongue to confess Him? (Philippians 2:10-11,
King James.
Similar language in K.J., Isaiah 45:23 & Romans 14:11)? Why would he go to
preach to the spirits in prison, some of whom were disobedient in the days of
Noah while the ark was preparing? (1 Peter 3:19-20 K.J)?
Chapter 12 - Ministry in the Early Christian Church.
Page
130 - Again Trask forgets that there were people and ministry for centuries
before the Mosaic Law was instituted. The Mosaic Law was instituted simply
because the truth had been forgotten and the people now needed what Paul called,
a schoolmaster to bring them to Christ (Galatians 3:24-25).
Of
course the gifts of God are to be held and used by each member of the church, or
of the world, for that matter, as God provides them. And
Restoration members are among those who believe that principle should extend to
all of the gifts, both physical and spiritual. This proliferation of gifts,
however, does not negate the establishment of Priesthood and organization in the
church. I Cor.12: 27-31 says God set Apostles, prophets,
teachers, miracles, gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of
tongues in the body of Christ, not that they just happened, created as needs arose. Ephesians
4:11-14, speaking of Christ, says He gave some, apostles, prophets, evangelists,
pastors, teachers “for the perfecting of the
Saints, for the work of the ministry, for
the edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of Christ .... that we ...
may grow up into Him in all things which is the head, even Christ.” To date we
have not achieved a unity of the faith nor the measure of the stature of Christ,
which leads me to believe we still need these ministers. The fact that these and
others were not all mentioned at one time or in one place does not mean that
Christ had no intention of their being in His church for His purposes. Of
course, the function came first and the form later, but that does not mean that
it was not God and His Christ who determined the form!
Page
132 - Although Trask confirms the universal nature of some of the Priesthood, he
has to resort to assumptions to support his historical conjectures- “It seems the concept of Elders...”, “It may be predominantly Gentile congregations ...”
The Apostle Paul did not have to guess. He said, God and His Christ set the gifts and ministers in His
church.
Page
135 - Trask is correct in saying that Paul urged the people to desire the best
gifts. While the gift of prophecy was frequently experienced, as Trask says,
there is no evidence that it was the gift they sought above all else! That all
of the gifts are still needed and should be experienced frequently in the Body
of Christ is a given with Restoration believers; and it has been the history of
the church that they have been “Spirit appointed ministries proceeding from a
genuine gift of the Holy Spirit”.
Page
137 - Trask tries to prove that all Apostles have to be eye-witnesses of
Christ’s ministry. According to that reasoning, Paul could not be an Apostle,
unless you count his Spiritual encounter with the Christ as an eye witness. And
what about Barnabas? He was from Cyprus and was converted by Paul’s preaching
(Acts 4:36, 11:22-25, 13:1-2, Galatians 2:1). When was he physically an
eye-witness of Christ’s ministry? And if Paul could be an Apostle because of his
spiritual experience with the Christ, why not
others? It is the testimony of many Apostles of the Restoration that they have
had spiritual encounters with Jesus Christ that have verified their calling to
that office, and they have been gifted by Christ to be special messengers of His
new covenant.
Trask again forgets that Timothy had only the Old Testament to
make him wise at the time Paul made the quoted statement. The testimony of those
Apostles with whom Jesus Christ traveled had not yet been compiled into
scripture form. These testimonies were necessary for further assurance of the
truthfulness of the prophecies with which Timothy was familiar, the delineation
of the specifics of Christ’s continuing ministry and His expectations of His
people.
Christ is still ministering. We have not all come to a
unity of the faith nor have we become perfect people able to measure up to the
stature of Christ (Eph. 4:13). The continuing ministry and testimony of those
who are eye witnesses of the Savior is still essential, and it is available not
only in scripture but in the lives of some chosen persons. Many of the Apostles
called by God and ordained to Apostleship in the Restoration bear such a
testimony. Even my husband, Delbert D. Smith, saw His Lord and received
instruction of Him concerning his ministry as a Seventy in Christ’s church. (See
Mildred Nelson Smith, The Master’s Touch I and II.)
Chapter 13 - The Melchizedek Priesthood - A Biblical
Analysis
Again Trask’s footnote on page 139 prompts me to ask what
Bible is so
completely God-breathed that not a jot or a tittle can be removed from it. If
the King James uses the phrase, “after the order of Melchizedek”, what
justification is there for the other versions removing it if it is there
God-breathed? Trask also persists in using the pronoun “in” instead of the King
James “after” in the phrase which is used numerous times in the scripture. “In
the order of Melchizedek” is not the same as “After the order of
Melchizedek”.
Pages 139-144 - Of course the author of Hebrews was
building a case for Jesus Christ being the Great High Priest of the Jews who
would be both Priest and King. But it must here be noted that Abram paid tithes to Melchizedek. Melchizedek was a
person who was a Priest and King. That means that
Melchizedek was a Priest long before there was a Mosaic
law. It must also be noted that Trask declares the “type of Priesthood
held by Melchizedek was to actually prefigure that of the coming Messiah”. From
where did this Priesthood type of which the Messiah
was to be a Priest forever (Hebrews 7:17 & 21) come? It came from God (Gen.
14:18-20). Of course, men who hold this Priesthood must be “selected from among
men” and “called of God” as was Aaron. Those true to the Restoration have always
required it!
Trask’s conclusions are not justified. Ignoring the Genesis
scripture by saying it is the one exception does not make it go away! The
existence of a man who was of a Priesthood order of which Christ Himself is a
part, who offered Abram (Abraham) bread and wine and to whom Abram (Abraham)
paid tithes is clearly manifested in the scriptures. Melchizedek was not just a
figure of speech or one concocted to influence the Jews. He was a member of the Priesthood whom God had called, of
whom the Jews had knowledge and for whom they had respect.
Joseph Smith is falsely accused of
blasphemy by Trask. Joseph did not attempt to restore the Melchizedek
Priesthood. It was God who restored His
Priesthood, even that which had been from at least the days of Melchizedek, in
order to offer the ministry that would eventually bring us all to a unity of the
faith and to the measure of the stature of Christ!
Chapter 14 - The Aaronic Priesthood - A Biblical
Analysis
Again Trask unjustly accuses Joseph of showing contempt for
the sacrifice and work of Jesus Christ. The responsibilities of the Aaronic
Priesthood of the Restoration was not that of offering sacrifices and conducting
temple duties as those of the Mosaic Law. Their duties are those of the preparation of a people to receive the Lord Jesus
Christ on His return to reign forever, just as John the Baptist prepared
the way of the Lord at His coming in the meridian of time.
Chapter 15 - The Heresies of Joseph Smith’s Priesthood
Trask’s unjust accusations, from his insistence, without
evidence, of Joseph’s occult activities to his accusations of blasphemy and
contempt for the sacrifice of our Lord, continue unabated. They are extremely contradictory. First he makes Joseph one of the
most well read, intelligent, clever persons in the world, capable of gathering
information from every author of his day, including the Bible with the Apocrypha intact,
and creating a monumental work called the Book of Mormon from it. Now he calls him
an ignorant, spiritually immature person with no ability to distinguish right
from wrong!
In
this chapter Trask vents his intense hatred for Joseph and his work in an irrational manner. If the concept of a great or
high priest originated with Israel on Mt. Sinai, and Aaron was the first high
priest, as Trask says on page 151, then why do the scriptures record the life
and ministry of Melchizedek who lived even before Israel (Jacob) was born? Trask
acknowledges Melchizedek was a high priest by insisting that Hebrews 4:10 which
reads, “Called of God, an high priest after the order of
Melchizedek” really means in the manner of
Melchizedek, which means as Melchizedek was. Trask
is confused when he declares that the existence of Priesthood from Adam
invalidates the concept of Melchizedek being a high priest when in fact, it
validates it! And how the concept invalidates the Book of Mormon is
incomprehensible and irrational!
To
say that Doctrine
and Covenants 83:6c teaches that priesthood can be obtained by ones own
initiative is like me telling someone they can make as good bread as I make by
using wheat alone. Being faithful is only one qualification of a person called
to the Priesthood. The rest of the qualifications are discussed in other parts
of this and other scriptures, just as the rest of the ingredients in my bread
have all been spoken of in the rest of the recipe.
Trask again confuses the nations of Israel and Judah. It is
true that for the house of Judah and their associates, priests had
to be of the lineage of Aaron. However, for the other tribes of Israel there was
no such requirement. Elijah and Elisha were not
Jews. They were Tishbites from Gillead, East of Jordan. They were of the
Northern Kingdom of Israel, yet they were the powerful servants of God. The
record of the Kings tells of other prophets and elders of that nation who also
preserved the true religion even against their wicked rulers who tried to
institute other forms of worship. Lehi’s people were of the tribe of
Manasseh, not of Judah. Their Priests would not have had to be in the lineage of
Aaron.
Page
152 - Trask cites Mosiah 7:14 as additional proof that there were many high
priests at one time in the Book of Mormon record. Like much of his other
material, the reference is taken out of context. What he neglects to say is that
this reference describes the temple built by the wicked and idolatrous King
Noah. That the other references are legitimate does not, however “betray the Book of Mormon as a
fraud”. As previously noted, these were not Jews and their system of Priesthood
did not have to follow that of the Jewish line which was leading up to the
verification of Jesus as the Messiah for that people.
Heresy #4 - For Trask to contend that Melchizedek was
without father or mother, without beginning of days or end of life and remains a
priest forever is interesting. The man must still be alive somewhere and still
ministering as a high priest. I wonder where! And how was he born without
parents? That the reference is to the Priesthood that Melchizedek
received from God, as the Inspired Version says, is the correct rendition of the
scripture.
Actually, the writer of Hebrews was telling the
people to whom he was writing that there was another Priesthood that was greater than that to
which they were accustomed, for Melchizedek blessed Abraham, and the less is
always blessed of the better (Heb. 7:6-7). To be a part of this greater
Priesthood did not require lineage. The writer was contrasting the Priesthood of
Christ that, like Melchizedek’s which had prevailed while Levi was “yet in the
loins of his father” (Heb. 7:10), did not require lineage.
Trask does not understand section 83 and so divorces 83:2
c-g from the rest of the section. Again the two lines of Priesthood are being
delineated. Moses and His sons were one line and “The Lord
confirmed a priesthood also upon Aaron and his
seed throughout all their generations ....” (D&C 83:3a).
Heresy #5 -Again Trask ignores the Genesis reference to
Melchizedek and accuses Joseph of appropriating the title to himself and others.
It was not Joseph, but God who conferred the title
in Melchizedek’s day as in this day.
Heresy #6 - There is no attempt to return to the Levitical
Priesthood and their performance of sacrifices for the people in any of Joseph
Smith’s works!
Chapter 16 - True Christian Priesthood
Earlier Trask contended that there were no legitimate
Priests after Christ. Now he has all Christians going to be Priests. In the
sense that all have free access to God, this is true. And the fact that it is
spiritual sacrifices that are required of all people is also true. He says that
in this present life we are Christ’s servants. Christ said those who do as he
commands are friends, not servants, (John 15:14-15), but since
friends do serve each other, we will not quarrel with his statement.
Page
155 - I do not know where he gets the idea of dominion theology nor why he brings it into this
discussion. Certainly it does not come from any Restoration scripture.
Chapter 17 - Understanding the RLDS Dilemma
Trask’s statement that the beliefs of RLDS people have led
them to be moral people, good neighbors, workmates and fellow citizens who carry
out their lives with above average zeal leads me to quote Jesus Christ - “By their fruits ye shall know them” (Matthew
7:20). His accusation that our zeal is misdirected and not based on truth,
however, is based on his own misperception of the Restoration faith and lack of
understanding of truth. To imply that we have rejected the Messiah is so far
from the truth that it is difficult to understand how he can make the accusation
with a straight face! There is no group in all this world bearing a more vibrant
testimony that Jesus Christ actually came in the flesh (1 John, 4:2), was
crucified, rose from the dead and is alive and working personally in the world
today.
Trask’s misunderstanding or lack of knowledge leads him to
teach that the personal ministry of Jesus was limited to the Jews without regard
even to Christ’s “other sheep” of the House of Israel whom He said
He must bring, “and they shall hear my voice; and there
shall be one fold and one shepherd.” (John 10:16). Neither does he consider the
fact that Jesus Christ was the lamb slain from the foundation of the
world as Christ revealed through John in the book of Revelation. Faulty
premises lead to wrong conclusions, and this has been the journey Trask has
taken from the beginning of his work.
Page
160 - By making his sarcastic reference to “Joseph Smith’s highest heaven”,
celestial glory, Trask is, perhaps ignorantly, rejecting the testimony of the
Apostle Paul who writes of being in the “highest heaven”, of the
resurrection of bodies celestial and bodies terrestrial and of the glories of
the sun, moon, and stars (1 Cor. 15:40-42).
Trask’s evaluation of the “ties that bind” shows
regrettable ignorance of the Restoration and its people. The history of the
Restoration movement is filled with the testimonies of persons who have given up their families and friends to become a
part of Christ’s restored church. Among our immediate acquaintances, we can
introduce him to many, some of whose stories are in The Master’s Touch I
and II. To say that it is ignorance and fear that keeps us together is to bear false witness through the dissemination of
gross misinformation. I repeat. Bearing false witness is forbidden
by the ten commandments, which have never been rescinded!
Page
162-163 - I do not have access to the quotations that Trask attributes to Joseph
Smith through Fawn Brodie or the Tanners. Other materials he has borrowed from
them have proved unreliable and even slanderous. There is no reason to believe
these would be any different!
Page
163 - How Trask can say that “Joseph’s” Priesthood were to be “beyond reproach,
just as he was” when so many of the early revelations are reprimands to both Joseph and other Priesthood, is
beyond my comprehension. Either he has never read, or cannot
comprehend the Doctrine and Covenants or he deliberately misleads his readers. And for him to
accuse the RLDS of considering any weak in the faith who consider an opposing
viewpoint shows a deplorable lack of knowledge about the work of the Seventy,
the debates of the early days of the church, the explorations of other faiths
conducted by many in church school curriculum, the life of the church’s people
who freely “fraternize with the enemy by considering an opposing viewpoint”,
except that we do not consider them enemies!
Pages 163-164 - Trask returns to his unjust insistence on
Joseph’s obsession with the occult, and now applies it to the “burning of the
bosom” instruction of one revelation as though it is the entire method by which
truth is evaluated. In so doing Trask disregards the instruction of even this
verse to study it out in your mind and then ask God whether what you have thought is true.
Even more importantly, he disregards Section 85 in which all are instructed to
study out of the best books to obtain knowledge, to seek learning by study and
also by faith, since all cannot be instructed in all things (and the curriculum
is extensive), teach one another the things of the kingdom. He ignores the
definition of truth and the extensive treatise on truth in section 90. He
ignores the many statements of scientific fact found in the Doctrine and
Covenants in such sections as 85, 86, 90, long before science discovered the
principles they proclaim. He shows himself either ignorant of the revelations
that came through Joseph Smith or a vindictive prevaricator of the truth that he
does know. His assertion that Joseph Smith taught that the human heart is where
truth is to be evaluated is not documented because it is not a teaching of
Joseph Smith but a figment of Trask’s imagination.
Trask even distorts the promise of the Lord to bear witness
of the truth of the
Book of Mormon, which truth is that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the
living God. There is no limitation on how the Lord will give the
reader a testimony of the truthful testimony of Jesus that it bears. My Father
received his testimony by being instantly taught to read the book by the Spirit
at age 16 and through it being able to read everything that he chose to read.
Sherman Phipps received his testimony as a service man in World War II, also by
being taught to read instantly by the Spirit and by the ministry of an angel who
visited him as he read. (Both of the foregoing testimonies are found in detail
in Mildred Nelson Smith, The Master’s Touch II). We could multiply the
testimonies of miraculous confirmation of the promise in the Book of Mormon of a
testimony of the Christ and His continuing presence among the children of men to
those who ask in faith. There is no mention of a burning of the
bosom in that promise or in the many testimonies that are continually
given of the truthfulness of the promise. Neither is there a threat for those
who do not believe the book, even in the scripture cited. The only warning is
for those who reject the word of God to which the book bears
witness.
Like
the Saints at Berea (Acts 17:11), the Latter Day Saints are instructed to
examine the scriptures to see whether that which is being taught them is true.
The statement most often quoted on the subject in the church as I have known it
comes from Jesus Christ, “Whoso treasureth up my words shall
not be deceived.” (Matthew 24:39 IV). And it is by the words of Christ
and His servants that we who try to be faithful to our Lord judge all things,
Trask to the contrary!
Page
165 - Trask continues his display of ignorance of the way RLDS receive testimony
of spiritual truth. He does not have to believe to make the Three Nephites and
John the Beloved real and active ministers in the world today. John the Beloved
actually preached a sermon for my husband at Creston, Iowa years ago. (See The Master’s Touch,
Herald House 1973, pp. 192-195.) And there are many testimonies of ministries of
both John and the Three Nephites in Latter Day Saint literature. There are even
testimonies of their presence and actions in American and Israeli history, but,
as the Book of
Mormon indicates, those who receive their ministry without knowledge of or
belief in their presence will not recognize them (3 Nephi 13:39-41).
Page
166 - Aren’t healings one of the spiritual gifts of which Paul did not want the
Saints of his day to be ignorant (1 Cor. 12 )? And dreams and visions, are they
not manifestations of the Spirit of God prophesied by Joel and attested to by
Peter as being evidence of the action of the Spirit of God in the last days
(Acts 2:16-17)? Why does Trask question them in Christ’s church today? Are they
out of place in his Christianity? If so, why did Christ send his ministers out
with power to heal the sick and cast out devils. Has He since rescinded his
instruction? And has prophecy suddenly disappeared from the community of Saints?
Paul instructed the Saints of his day to “covet to prophecy”, as well as to
speak in tongues (1 Cor. 14). Has that instruction been rescinded? Trask said
not one jot or tittle could be changed in the God-breathed Bible - nothing
added or taken away!
When
one has experienced tongues as real languages given by
persons who did not know the language but interpreted at times by persons who
did know the language and containing prophecies that have come to pass as many
times as I have; when one has been the recipient of a “Thus saith the Spirit”
that answers questions asked only of God as I have; when one has seen lives
cleansed and saved by such ministry as many times as I have; when one has seen
instant headings of serious diseases and near fatal accidents as I have; when
one has experienced the testimony of dreams and visions that have brought
tremendous ministry to those who experienced them and to others for whom that
ministry was intended as many times as I have, it brings deep sadness and profound pity for one who
disparages the ministries because of ignorance or deliberate rejection.
In
his summary, Trask is obsessed with his own misinformation
concerning the way Joseph Smith encouraged his followers to evaluate scripture
and so rejects the truth of the instructions that are written in the scriptures
God gave through Joseph.
The
last paragraph of page 166 contains truth to which every faithful Saint with
whom I have been associated would readily agree! We do not believe every spirit, but test even the spirit by which Trask performs his
work of deceit and falsehood under the guise of trying to save the Saints! When
we “Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”, we find that we must reject his work as that of an angry man who either
does not understand the truth or deliberately rejects it.
Chapter 18 - Helping RLDS to Victory
Trask declares that he has proved much more than he has, as
can be seen by the foregoing refutation of a great portion of his assertions. It
is not the people who are faithful to the Restoration who are deceived but Trask
himself. It is Trask who has “proliferated misinformation” that would lead
faithful followers of the Savior from light into darkness! Christ said that it
is truth that makes one free (John 8:32), and
repeatedly we have shown that Trask has not been truthful!
Trask’s “historical information” has been shown to be based
on unreliable secondary and tertiary sources
substantiated by reprehensible propaganda techniques. His
“Biblical analysis “ has been shown to be extremely selective and faulty. His suggested technique for
saving RLDS is a good way to sell books, and may be successful with those who are ignorant of their
history and scriptures, as it is apparent Trask must be. His characterization of
Joseph Smith as a false prophet and the Book of Mormon as the heart of his rottenness will one
day cause him grief when he meets his Lord and learns the truth.
“A
mature and growing relationship with Jesus Christ” is the privilege of every
person who believes and loves God’s truth. That truth is found in the whole Bible, not in Trask’s selected excerpts from it.
We all need “intercessory prayer and undistorted truth”, including Trask!
Addendum: As I reread this response I note I have left out a
response that I should have included on page 23 concerning the use of the word
Nephi in the Apocrypha. 2 Maccabees 1 is a letter from the Jews in
Jerusalem to those in Egypt. They describe a miraculous happening in which water
that had covered the temple fire, hidden by the Priests when the people were
taken to Babylon, was sprinkled over the wood and the sacrifice when the people
returned. A great fire was miraculously kindled on the altar. When the sacrifice
was consumed, Neemias had the rest of the water poured on the stones and again a
fire was kindled. Verse 36 reads, “And Neemias called this thing Naphthar, which
is as much as to say, A cleansing; but many men call it Nephi.” If Joseph had
been copying it, he would have had Lehi and the people of Ancient America
“nephiing” their children (cleansing them miraculously) instead of naming them
Nephi!
Incidentally, there is no story in the Book of Mormon that
parallels this story. It is more closely related to the experience of Elijah and
the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18. Whether the 32 parallels the Tanners claim
to have found that Joseph “very likely” (there is
that propaganda phrase again) “used while developing his Book of Mormon” are
of any consequence can easily be determined by comparing the portions of the Apocrypha they
indicate with the Book of Mormon. It is not wise to take the Tanner’s
word for it.
It
is my prayer that all those who read this response will be blessed by the Spirit
of God, the Spirit of Truth, in the reading. If I have made errors, I apologize
and assure you that such errors are not intended.
Sincerely,
B. Mildred Smith
315
Zion’s Ridge, Lamoni, Iowa 50140
Telephone 641 784 7659