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Joseph Smith's First Vision
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Joseph Smith's First Vision
Summary: Joseph Smith's claim that he saw the Father and the Son in 1820 has produced a wide variety of criticism. This set of articles addresses the various critical claims related to the First Vision. The linked articles below are designed to help readers to see some of the weaknesses that are found in arguments that are made against Joseph Smith's First Vision accounts. Some of these arguments are currently being advocated in anti-Mormon literature that is handed out near the Sacred Grove in Palmyra, New York.
Jump to Subtopic:
- Criticisms of the First Vision accounts
- Criticisms of events leading up to the First Vision
- Criticisms of events occurring after the First Vision
- Doctrinal issues related to the First Vision
- Primary sources related to Joseph Smith's First Vision
God touched his eyes with his finger and said “[Joseph] this is my beloved Son hear him.” As soon as the Lord had touched his eyes with his finger he immediately saw the Savior. After meeting, a few of us questioned him about the matter and he told us at the bottom of the meeting house steps that he was in the House of Father Smith in Kirtland when Joseph made this declaration, and that Joseph while speaking of it put his finger to his right eye, suiting the action with the words so as to illustrate and at the same time impress the [occurrence] on the minds of those unto whom He was speaking.
—Diary of Charles Lowell Walker (Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 1980), 2:755–56 [recorded 2 February 1893]
Multiple accounts of the First Vision
Summary: Historians have published and discussed the various accounts of Joseph Smith's first vision for decades.
First video published by the Church History Department.
Jump to Subtopic:
- Joseph Smith's various accounts of the First Vision
- Joseph Smith's 1832 account of the First Vision
- Joseph Smith's 1835 accounts of the First Vision
- Joseph Smith's 1838 account of the First Vision
- Joseph Smith's first and second visitation of angels
- Joseph Smith's 1832 First Vision account states he was 15 years old
- Discrepancies in Paul's account of his vision
- REDIRECT Events leading to the First Vision
- REDIRECT Events after the First Vision
- REDIRECT The First Vision and doctrine
- REDIRECTMultiple accounts of the First Vision
- REDIRECT Accounts of Joseph Smith's First Vision
- "Reported accounts of the First Vision" (Video), The Joseph Smith Papers.