Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Grant Understood on D&C 42 and the Joseph Smith Translation (JST)

 

. . the Law abruptly shifts from discussion of the proper handling of surplus to Joseph Smith’s “New Translation” of the Bible: “Thou shalt ask & my scriptures shall be given as I have appointed & for thy salvation thou shalt hold thy peace concerning them until ye have received them” (vv. 56-57). The subsequent redaction of this passage provides a rare view of multiple layers of revision. The first revision appears to have been made in November 1831 in conjunction with the conference held to plan publication of the Book of Commandments. At a meeting on November 8, the elders resolved that “Br Joseph Smith Jr correct those errors or mistakes which he may discover by the holy Spirit.” [50] Among the revisions made at this time was one involving this passage about the New Testament. The unpunctuated original allows for a reading that connects “for thy salvation” to “my scriptures shall be given” rather than to the subsequent phrase “thou shalt hold thy peace concerning them.” Joseph, however, revised the passage to make clear that the link was between salvation, understood temporally, and holding their peace about the New Translation: “For thy safety it is expedient that thou shalt hold thy peace concerning them.” [51]

 

Apparently not satisfied with this rendition, the Prophet (or those working under his direction) again revised the passage some three years later while preparing the revelation for publication in the Doctrine and Covenants. The later version shifts emphasis from the safety of the Saints to the safety of the scriptures. In the final form, the full passage reads: “My scriptures shall be given as I have appointed, and they shall be preserved in safety; and it is expedient that thou shouldst hold thy peace concerning them, and not teach them until ye have received them in full” (vv. 56-57; emphasis added).

 

Notes for the Above:

 

[50] Minutes, 8 November 1831, in JSP, D2:123.

 

[51] This revision appears in the Whitmer, Coltrin, and Hyde manuscripts, all copied in early 1832, or before, as well as in the excerpt of the Law published later that year in the Star and in the Book of Commandments the following year.

 

Grant Underwood, “’The Laws of the Church of Christ’: A Textual and Historical Analysis,” in The Voice of the Lord: Exploring the Doctrine and Covenants, ed. Alexander L. Baugh (Provo, Utah: BYU Religious Studies Center; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2024), 109-110

 

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