MVB Jr. publishes article in Ensign on the different First Vision accounts.

Date
Jan 1985
Type
Periodical
Source
Milton V. Backman, Jr.
LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Secondary
Reference

Milton V. Backman, Jr., “Joseph Smith’s Recitals of the First Vision,” Ensign, January 1985, 8–17

Scribe/Publisher
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
People
Milton V. Backman, Jr.
Audience
Latter-day Saints, Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

On at least four different occasions, Joseph Smith either wrote or dictated to scribes accounts of his sacred experience of 1820. Possibly he penned or dictated other histories of the First Vision; if so, they have not been located. The four surviving recitals of this theophany were prepared or rendered through different scribes, at different times, from a different perspective, for different purposes and to different audiences. It is not surprising, therefore, that each of them emphasizes different aspects of his experience. When Latter-day Saints today explain this remarkable vision to others, their descriptions often vary according to the audience or circumstances that prompt such reports. If one were relating the incident to a group of high priests, for example, he would undoubtedly tell it somewhat differently than he would to individuals who had never heard of the restoration of the gospel or of Joseph Smith.

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