In Part 1 of Answering Dr. Clandestine, we have
already demonstrated that the anonymous Mormon historian has made
a serious error with regard to Joseph Smith's 1826 trial. He claimed
that the printing of the "court record" appeared in "contradictory
versions." We have shown, however, that the versions were the
same.
Since we published the 1972 edition of Mormonism-or
Reality? Wesley P. Walters has brvought forth a new discovery which
also verifies the 1826 trial and shows that Joseph Smith was deeply
involved in treasure digging and magical practices. Writing in The
Journal of Pastoral Practice, Mr. Walters reveals the following:
"Joseph Smith, Jr., before he became the
founder and prophet of Mormonism, had made part of his living
as a 'glass looker.' By gazing into a peep~tone or seer stone,
placed in a hat to obscure the light, he would attempt to see
where buried treasure was hidden or to locate lost objects for
people. This money digging activity and the court trials that
grew out of that illegal practice have received new clarification
through a recently discovered letter from a judge who, in 1830,
tried Joseph Smith in Colesville, south central New York. The
letter was written in 1842 by Joel King Noble, a justice of the
peace in Colesville, Broome County...
"Our knowledge of Joseph Smith's activities in the Bainbridge
area had previously, to a large extent, depended on the printed
record of a trial at South Bainbridge in 1826, in which Joseph
had admitted to his 'glass looking' practices and was accordingly
found guilty of breaking the law, though no sentence is recorded....
the discovery in 1971 of the bills of cost handed in to the county
by Constable Philip DeZeng and Justice Neely for their services
during the arrest and trial of Joseph Smith in 1826 have now established
beyond doubt that the young 'Glass looker' (as Mr. Neely's bill
calls him) was indeed involved in glass looking for hidden treasure
and lost objects, and that he was brought to trial for that crime....
Mormons have recently been inclined to grant that Joseph Smith,
Jr., was tried in 1826, but they do not believe he was found guilty,
and they therefore tend to regard the printed record as a falsification.
Mr. Noble's letter, however, now fills in the missing details
and confirms the entire incident, so that there is no longer any
reason to doubt the authenticity of the printed docket.
"Judge Noble says quite unequivocally that
'Jo. was condemned' in what he calls Joseph's 'first trial.' Then
he adds a detail that provides the clue to why no sentencing appears
in the docket record even though Joseph was found guilty. Mr.
Noble succinctly states that the 'whisper came to Jo., 'Off, Off!''
and so Joseph 'took Leg Bail,' an early slang expression meaning
'to escape from custody.' What is obviously happening is that
the justices are privately suggesting to this first offender to
'get out of town and don't come back,' and in exchange they will
not impose sentence. This is why no sentence was recorded in the
docket record of Mr. Neely.
"In reporting the court's method of clemency,
Judge Noble's statement agrees precisely with an early account
of this 1826 trial published just five years after the trial had
taken place. It was written by a young medical doctor who lived
in South Bainbridge at the time, Dr. Abram Willard Benton, who
like Mr. Noble mentions that Joseph had been involved in glass
looking, and that he had been 'tried and condemned.' Dr. Benton
adds that because Joseph was a minor at the time, being 20 years
old, 'and thinking he might reform his conduct, he was designedly
allowed to escape.' Therefore, the court, though it found him
guilty of being in violation of the law, had intentionally not
imposed sentence as a way of showing mercy on this youthful offender....
Thus it is quite clear from all sides that Joseph wove occult
religious material into his money digging practices, and this
led the communities where he dug for treasure to associate him
with divination, necromancy, and wizardry.... Mr. Noble reports
that he heard one witness testify that he had asked Joseph on
one occasion whether he could actually 'see or tell' more than
anyone else, and Joseph had admitted he could not but added, 'Anything
for a living. I now and then get a Shilling.' However, it seems
likely that he came at least half-way to believe in that realm
of the occult, for he carried with him as a prized possession
most of his life a talisman bearing the signs of Jupiter, and
had it on him at the time of his death. Whatever his personal
beliefs, his use of the religious elements of prayer and faith,
as well as revelations telling where treasure could be found,
shows a certain religious bent to his thinking and an inclination
to use religious exercises as a means of manipulating people.
Therefore, once he had determined to give up money digging after
his close brush with the law in 1826, this occult religious interest
made it easy for him to think in terms of producing a religious
book from the gold plates he claimed to have discovered through
the same stone he had used for his treasure hunting." (The
Journal of Pastoral Practice, Summer 1977, pp. 121-123, 127-128)
Wesley P. Walters has photographically reproduced
Justice Noble's letter, and we have now included it in the pamphlet
Joseph Smith's Bainbridge, N.Y. ,Court Trials. According to Justice
Noble, when Joseph Smith was tried in his court in 1830 there was
a discussion of Joseph's money digging and use of magical practices.
In the History of the Church, Joseph Smith himself admitted that
money digging was discussed during the trial:
"Next day I was brought before the magistrate's
court at Colesville, Broome county, and put upon trial....
"Mr. Seymour.. .brought up the story of my having been a
money-digger; and in this manner proceeded, hoping evidently to
influence the court and the people against me." (History
of the Church, Vol. 1, pp. 91-93)
Two years after we published the Enlarged Edition
of Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? Dr. Reed Durham, who was Director
of the LDS Institute of Religion at the University of Utah and President
of the Mormon History Association, made a discovery which was so
startling that it caused great consternation among Mormon scholars
and officials. Mr. Durham found that what had previously been identified
as the "Masonic jewel of the Prophet Joseph Smith" was
in reality a "Jupiter talisman." This is a medallion which
contains material relating to astrology and magic. Dr. Durham, apparently
not realizing the devastating implications of his discovery, announced
this important find in his Presidential Address before the Mormon
History Association on April 20, 1974:
"...I should like to initiate all of you
into what is perhaps the strangest, the most mysterious, occult-like
esoteric, and yet Masonically oriented practice ever adopted by
Joseph Smith... All available evidence suggests that Joseph Smith
the Prophet possessed a magical Masonic medallion, or talisman,
which he worked during his lifetime and which was evidently on
his person when he was martyred. His talisman is in the shape
of a silver dollar and is probably made of silver or tin. It is
exactly one and nine-sixteenths in diameter,... the talisman,...
originally purchased from the Emma Smith Bidamon family, fully
notarized by that family to be authentic and to have belonged
to Joseph Smith, can now be identified as a Jupiter talisman.
It carries the sign and image of Jupiter and should more appropriately
be referred to as the Table of Jupiter. And in some very real
and quite mysterious sense, Table of Jupiter was the most appropriate
talisman for Joseph Smith to possess. Indeed, it seemed meant
for him, because on all levels of interpretation: planetary, mythological,
numerological, astrological, mystical cabalism, and talismatic
magic, the Prophet was, in every case appropriately described.
"The characters on the talisman are primarily in Hebrew,
but there is one inscription in Latin. Every letter in the Hebrew
alphabet has a numerical equivalent and those numerical equivalents
make up a magic square. By adding the numbers in this Jupiter
Table in any direction... the total will be the same. In this
case, on the Jupiter Table 34....
"There is the one side of the talisman belonging to the Prophet
Joseph Smith. You can see the Hebrew characters... you see on
the margins, at the bottom is the Jupiter sign,... The cross at
the top represents the spirit of Jupiter, and you will see the
path of Jupiter in the orbit of the heavens, and then again the
Jupiter sign.
"I wasn't able to find what this was, for--as I said--two
months; and finally, in a magic book printed in England in 1801,
published in America in 1804, and I traced it to Manchester, and
to New York. It was a magic book by Francis Barrett and, lo and
behold, how thrilled I was when I saw in his list of magic seals
the very talisman which Joseph Smith had in his possession at
the time of his martyrdom.... To the Egyptians, Jupiter was known
as Amman, but to the Greeks he was Zeus: the ancient sky Father,
or Father of the Gods....
"In astrology, Jupiter is always associated with high positions,
getting one's own way, and all forms of status. And I quote: 'Typically
a person born under Jupiter will have the dignity of a natural
ruler....He will probably have an impressive manner... In physical
appearance, the highly developed Jupiterian is strong, personable,
and often handsome.... the Jupiterian influence produces a cheerful
winning personality, capable of great development.'...
"So closely is magic bound up with the stars and astrology
that the term astrologer and magician were in ancient times almost
synonymous. The purpose of the Table of Jupiter in talismanic
magis [magic?] was to be able to call upon the celestial intelligences,
assigned to the particular talisman, to assist one in all endeavors.
The names of the deities which we gave to you, who could be invoked
by the Table were always written on the talisman or represented
by various numbers. Three such names were written on Joseph Smith's
talisman: Abbah, Father; El Ob, Father is God or God the Father;
and Josiphiel, Jehovah speaks for God, the Intelligence of Jupiter.
"When properly invoked, with Jupiter being very powerful
and ruling in the heavens, these intelligences--by the power of
ancient magic--guaranteed to the possessor of this talisman the
gain of riches, and favor, and power, and love and peace; and
to confirm honors, and dignities, and councils. Talismatic magic
further declared that anyone who worked skillfully with this Jupiter
Table would obtain the power of stimulating anyone to offer his
love to the possessor of the talisman, whether from a friend,
brother, relative, or even any female." (Mormon Miscellaneous,
published by David C. Martin, Vol. 1, No. 1, October 1975, pp.
14-15)
Reed Durham was severely criticized by Mormon scholars
and officials for giving this speech. He was even called in by Mormon
President Spencer W. Kimball, and finally found it necessary to
issue a letter in which he reaffirmed his faith in Joseph Smith
and said that he was sorry for the "concerns, and misunderstandings"
that the speech had caused. Richard Steven Marshall claimed that
in an interview on April 11, 1977, Dr. Durham told him, "'I
had to write that. They wanted me to bear my testimony. I hadn't
done that in my talk. They had me do that so people would know where
I stood.'" ("The New Mormon History," p. 54) Kuva
lausunnosta
We feel that Dr, Durham's identification of Joseph
Smith's talisman is one of the most significant discoveries in Mormon
history and that he should be commended for his research. That Joseph
Smith would own such a magic talisman fits very well with the evidence
from his 1826 trial. W. D. Purple, who was an eyewitness to the
trial, claimed it was reported that Smith said certain talismanic
influences were needed to recover a box of treasure:
"Mr. Thompson, an employee of Mr. Stowell,
was the next witness.... Smith had told the Deacon that very many
years before a band of robbers had buried on his flat a box of
treasure, and as it was very valuable they had by a sacrifice
placed a charm over it to protect it, so that it could not be
obtained except by faith, accompanied by certain talismanic influences....
the box of treasure was struck by the shovel, on which they redoubled
their energies, but it gradually receded from their grasp. One
of the men placed his hand upon the box, but it gradually sunk
from his reach.... Mr. Stowell went to his flock and selected
a fine vigorous lamb, and resolved to sacrifice it to the demon
spirit who guarded the coveted treasure... but the treasure still
receded from their grasp, and it was never obtained." (The
Chenango Union, Norwich, N.Y., May 3, 1877, as cited in A New
Witness For Christ In America, Vol. 2, pp. 366-367)
Dr. Durham was unable to determine just when Joseph
Smith obtained his talisman, but the fact that he was recommending
"certain talismanic influences" around the time of the
1826 trial is certainly interesting. The Jupiter talisman is probably
the type of talisman a money digger would be interested in because
it was supposed to bring its possessor "the gain of riches,
and favor, and power,..."
Regardless of when Joseph Smith obtained his talisman,
we do know that he possessed it up to the time of his death. He
must have felt that it was very important because the Mormon scholar
LaMar C. Berrett reveals that "This piece was in Joseph Smith's
pocket when he was martyred at Carthage Jail." The Wilford
C. Wood Collection, 1972, Vol. 1, page 173)
The discovery of evidence to prove Joseph Smith's
1826 trial was certainly a devastating blow to Mormonism, for it
proved that Smith was a believer in magical practices. Reed Durham's
new find that Joseph Smith possessed a magic talisman is also very
significant because it shows that Smith probably held these ideas
until the time of his death.
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