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Joseph Smith: Prophecy, Process, and Plenitude

TitleJoseph Smith: Prophecy, Process, and Plenitude
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsGivens, Terryl L.
JournalBYU Studies Quarterly
Volume44
Issue4
Pagination55-68
KeywordsProphecy; Prophet; Smith, Joseph, Jr.
Abstract

Joseph Smith was an explorer, a discoverer, and a revealer of past worlds. He described an ancient America replete with elaborate detail and daring specificity, rooted and grounded in what he claimed were concrete, palpable artifacts. He recuperated texts of Adam, Abraham, Enoch, and Moses to resurrect and reconstitute a series of past patriarchal ages, not as mere shadows and types of things to come, but as dispensations of gospel fullness equaling, and in some cases surpassing, present plenitude. And he revealed an infinitely receding premortal past—not of the largely mythic Platonic variety and not a mere Wordsworthian, sentimental intimation—but a fully formed realm of human intelligences, divine parents, and heavenly councils.