by jimwalton » Tue Sep 26, 2017 4:38 pm
Great question.
You know there are deep questions about the legitimacy of the document ("The Testimony of the Three Witnesses"). The original doesn't exist. The oldest copy that does exist has all three signatures by the same handwriting, assumed to be that of Oliver Cowdery.
The real problem with the Mormon story lies in what is being claimed. We have to look at the total picture. The alleged plates are claimed to have been hidden in the earth from the year 420 until September 22, 1823, when Joe Smith discovered them. And yet the golden plates give extensive quotations from the King James Bible (AD 1611). They contain anachronisms that could not have been known to its supposed author in AD 420. It puts words of Jesus (though often distorted) into the mouths of men alleged to have lived centuries before Christ.
Secondly, there's some confusion about this "testimony." Smith himself writes, "Not many days after the above commandment was given, we four, viz., Martin Harris, David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery and myself, agreed to retire into the woods, and try to obtain, by fervent and humble prayer, the fulfilment of the promises given in the above revelation-that they should have a view of the plates. We accordingly made choice of a piece of woods convenient to Mr. Whitmer’s house, to which we retired, and having knelt down, we began to pray in much faith to Almighty God to bestow upon us a realization of these promises.
"According to previous arrangement, I commenced prayer to our Heavenly Father, and was followed by each of the others in succession. We did not at the first trial, however, obtain any answer or manifestation of divine favor in our behalf. We again observed the same order of prayer, each calling on and praying fervently to God in rotation, but with the same result as before.
"Upon this, our second failure, Martin Harris proposed that he should withdraw himself from us, believing, as he expressed himself, that his presence was the cause of our not obtaining what we wished for. He accordingly with drew from us, and we knelt down again, and had not been many minutes engaged in prayer, when presently we beheld a light above us in the air, of exceeding brightness; and behold, an angel stood before us. In his hands he held the plates which we had been praying for these to have a view of. He turned over the leaves one by one, so that we could see them, and discern the engravings thereon distinctly."
So, wait a minute. Joe had already started translating the plates. Couldn't the 4 just go look at them? Why was prayer necessary if the plates were, in fact, tangible? Did the plates actually exist as a physical object? Then LDS historians say Harris left the group because he felt his faith was too weak and he might inhibit the vision. Then it says the 3 left saw a vision of the plates, then went and found Harris. *The History of the Church* 1:55 says Smith "left David and Oliver and went in pursuit of Martin Harris, whom I found at a considerable distance fervently engaged in prayer." Both men joined in prayer, and according to Smith, "the same vision was opened to our view." Smith never claims to have carried the plates the woods where he and the 2 saw them, or carried the to where Harris was praying. And then the 4 of them saw the plates "in a vision."
So what did the 3 actually see? The story almost sounds like collusion about a religious fraud (probably the Russians!). Another LDS writer, Stephen Burnett, in 1838 wrote, "When I came to hear Martin Harris state in public that he never saw the plates with his natural eyes only in vision or imagination, neither Oliver nor David." Burnett also reported that Harris said he had "hefted the plates repeatedly in a box with only a tablecloth or handkerchief over them, but he never saw them only as he saw a city through a mountain."
There is testimony from several independent interviewers, all non-Mormon, that Martin Harris and David Whitmer said they saw the plates with their "spiritual eyes" only. Among others, A. Metcalf and John Gilbert, as well as Reuben P. Harmon and Jesse Townsend, gave testimonies to this effect. This is contradicted, however, by statements like that of David Whitmer in the Saints Herald in 1882, "these hands handled the plates, these eyes saw the angel." But Z. H. Gurley elicited from Whitmer a not so positive response to the question, "Did you touch them?" His answer was, "We did not touch nor handle the plates." (*Dialogue*, Vol.7, No.4, pp.83-84).
Something's fishy here. I wouldn't just so easily consider it "more historical than the latter."