
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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===Subsequent documents copied the error from the original source=== | ===Subsequent documents copied the error from the original source=== | ||
* Later drafts of the Manuscript History of the Church reproduced the error (see discussion below). | |||
*The 1839 document was then published in the 1842 ''Times and Seasons'' as follows: | *The 1839 document was then published in the 1842 ''Times and Seasons'' as follows: | ||
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:He called me by name, and said unto me that he was a messenger sent from the presence of God to me, and that his name was ''Nephi'' <ref> Lucy [Mack] Smith, ''Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet, and his Progenitors for Many Generations,'' (London: Latter-Day Saints' Book Depot, 1853), 78–80. [italics added]</ref> | :He called me by name, and said unto me that he was a messenger sent from the presence of God to me, and that his name was ''Nephi'' <ref> Lucy [Mack] Smith, ''Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet, and his Progenitors for Many Generations,'' (London: Latter-Day Saints' Book Depot, 1853), 78–80. [italics added]</ref> | ||
However, on the bottom of page 79 of this autobiography (where the above quotation occurs) there is a note about the name "Nephi" and it says, "Moroni, see ''Doc & Cov''. sec. L., par. 2; ''Elders' Journal'', vol. i., pp. 28 and 129; ''History of Joseph Smith'' under year 1838; ''Deseret News'', no. 10, vol. iii. O.P." The initials at the end probably stand for Orson Pratt -- who had the autobiography published in 1853. | However, on the bottom of page 79 of this autobiography (where the above quotation occurs) there is a note about the name "Nephi" and it says, "Moroni, see ''Doc & Cov''. sec. L., par. 2; ''Elders' Journal'', vol. i., pp. 28 and 129; ''History of Joseph Smith'' under year 1838; ''Deseret News'', no. 10, vol. iii. O.P." The initials at the end probably stand for Orson Pratt -- who had the autobiography published in 1853. | ||
===A single error had a ripple effect through several published accounts of the vision=== | ===A single error had a ripple effect through several published accounts of the vision=== | ||
Critics cite a variety of sources that repeat the 'Nephi' identification. The key point to understand is that there is really only one source that claims the heavenly messenger was Nephi; the other sources which mention Nephi are merely citing this one source, thus perpetuating the error. The problematic document is the June 1839 Manuscript History of the Church Book A-1 (which was a copy of an April 1838 document -- James Mulholland copied George W. Robinson's earlier text. The 1838 document is no longer extant).
However, on the bottom of page 79 of this autobiography (where the above quotation occurs) there is a note about the name "Nephi" and it says, "Moroni, see Doc & Cov. sec. L., par. 2; Elders' Journal, vol. i., pp. 28 and 129; History of Joseph Smith under year 1838; Deseret News, no. 10, vol. iii. O.P." The initials at the end probably stand for Orson Pratt -- who had the autobiography published in 1853.
Thus, a single error in the Manuscript History had a ripple effect through several published accounts of the vision. These accounts are not independent 'proof' that Joseph was changing the story; they all depend upon a single initial error (which may have been caused by the 1838 or 1839 scribes). Most of these occurred in England. Click here to see a list of the later perpetuation of the same errors which refer to the works above.
Notes

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