Joseph Smith, Plato, and the Apostasy

At a conference and later book that Jonathan and I both contributed to, Terryl Givens noted the Mormon notion of restoration was quite different than Protestants. Givens quoted Parley Pratt, “We can never understand precisely what is meant by restoration, unless we understand what is lost or taken away.”

“The problems seen by other restorationists,” noted Givens, “from Calvin and Severtus to the Campbellites was unwarranted accrual, not missing elements.” Givens noted Mormon revelations that speak of “no paring away, no stripping back to essentials, but rather, the hint of a vast expansion…. The Bible … was neither complete nor accurate. Neither was it sufficient.”[1]

Protestants wanted to restore primitive Christianity by removing what they saw as non-biblical elements accrued over the millennia, while Joseph Smith wanted to restore elements that had been removed. 1 Nephi 13:26 “thou seest the formation of that great and abominable church, which is most abominable above all other churches; for behold, they have taken away from the gospel of the Lamb many parts which are plain and most precious; and also many covenants of the Lord have they taken away.”

As I note in the video (minute 23-24), the claim that Christianity was corrupted by Greek philosophy was quite common in available Protestant books in Joseph Smith’s day. Smith owned one of the most popular of such books: Johann Lorentz von Mosheim’s Institutes of Ecclesiastical History.[2] But as Givens and 1 Nephi 13 note, Smith taught the opposite: it wasn’t the addition of false ideas after Jesus that was the problem, the problem was the REMOVAL of true principles.

I argue in my dissertation’s introduction that Mosheim attributed a notion of such removal of truth to the early Christian Platonist Ammonius Saccas. Mosheim spends considerable time attacking early Christian Platonists and describes them as having many Mormon ideas—like truth scattered everywhere, there being secret initiation rites, and links to other Mormon ideas elsewhere—ideas Mosheim hated and claimed corrupted Christianity.[3]

Mosheim thus wanted to explain Ammonius’s thought even though we have almost no writings from Ammonius. Mosheim therefore found the similarities in those whom Ammonius taught and attributed those ideas to Ammonius.

Mosheim said that Ammonius Saccas taught that Jesus’s “sole view, in descending upon earth, was … to remove the errors that had crept into the religions of all nations but not to abolish the ancient theology from whence they were derived.” Mosheim went on to say that Jesus’s “only intention was to purify the ancient religion, and that his followers had manifestly corrupted the doctrine of their divine master.”[4]

To “abolish” would be a suppressing or taking away, thus the later followers’ “corruption” that Mosheim claimed Ammonius claimed, would seem to be a taking away. The abundant Mormon ideas in the “ancient religion” and among the Christian Platonists that Mosheim denounced suggests that the removal of those ideas would be a loss of Mormon ideas that Smith restored.

I’ve stated many times that Smith’s later Nauvoo theology was full of Platonic ideas especially the plan of salvation (see Chapter Six of my dissertation as an example). The “vast expansion” that Smith restored had much in common with the ancient theology/religion that Mosheim noted and denounced.

Later Mormon thinkers adopted the Protestant view that Greek philosophy corrupted Christianity. But Joseph Smith specifically rejected such claims, and declared the opposite: truth was missing.

I’ll give more examples in upcoming posts.

[1] Terryl Givens, “’We Have Only the Old Thing’: Rethinking Mormon Restoration,” in Miranda Wilcox and John D. Young eds. Standing Apart: Mormon Historical Consciousness and the Concept of Apostasy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), 339-40.

[2] Christopher C. Jones, “The Complete Record of the Nauvoo Library and Literary Institute,” Mormon Historical Studies 10, no. 1 (2009): 192.

[3] Stephen J. Fleming, “’The Fulness of the Gospel’: Christian Platonism and the Origins of Mormonism” (PhD Diss.: University of California, Santa Barbara, 2014). Page 1 for gathering all truth like JS, and 6-16 for a summary of other themes.

[4] Johann Lorentz von Mosheim, Institutes of Ecclesiastical History, trans. Archibald MacLaine (New York, 1821), 1:141, 143. The notion that Jesus’s disciples removed Platonic truth from Christianity probably came from Renaissance Christian Platonist Marsilio Ficino. Hannegraaff, Esotericism and the Academy, 50-51; James Hankins, Plato in the Italian Renaissance (Leiden: Brill, 1990), 1:283-84.

 


Comments

5 responses to “Joseph Smith, Plato, and the Apostasy”

  1. I feel like you’re ignoring the elephant in the room: many Latter-day Saints are convinced Platonic thought corrupted Christianity for completely different reasons than Mosheim. Exhibit A is converting God from a physical being in whose image we were created to an immaterial abstraction, and I’m sure you could expand on that better than I could. Several commenters have raised this objection and I’m sure far more readers are thinking it and thus rejecting the idea that Plato is the real source of truth about God out of hand.

    FWIW, the most detailed description of Greek thought corrupting Christianity I’ve heard came from the clearly atheist chair of the Classics Department at the state university I attended my freshman year (I transferred to BYU after my mission) in a lecture giving us background before reading Dante. He also focused on the nature of God, not what you’re describing from Mosheim. (Also, a lot of stuff from Aristotle.) Of course in his view the corruption started with Paul claiming Jesus was divine, so I’m not really holding him up as an authority except to say that we’re not making this up.

  2. In the original Times and Seasons there was an benign article reprinted referencing Plato and other philosophers that generated this response:

    “We do not make the above extract so much for the intrinsic value of the article, as to show the danger of philosophizing upon religion:—
    Paul was well aware of this course when he
    exclaimed, “beware lest any man spoil you
    through philosophy and vain deceit, after the traditions of men; after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.” The whole doctrine of salvation, as revealed by God at sundry times, has been diametrically opposed to philosophy. The world by wisdom know not God. Before the flood, and after, men, although they had been created upright, sought out many inventions, which, when viewed closely, all go to put God a great way off,—or to make him out a complete—nothing, showing that without the spirit you cannot know the living God.”

    ——————————
    TIMES AND SEASONS.
    CITY OF NAUVOO,
    THURSDAY, SEPT. 15, 1842.

  3. Stephen Fleming

    Right, the idea that Christianity was corrupted by Greek philosophy was extremely popular before JS, during his life, and remains extremely popular. Adolf von Harnock’s “Hellenization of Christianity” thesis that came out around 1900 has been extremely influential.

    The issue of God’s body is a large and tricky topic, and maybe I’ll give it it’s own post. But here’s a few points.

    1) I think it’s problematic to turn the entirety of JS’s restoration to be about God’s body. Mormonism has a whole lot of other distinctive doctrines (many of which line up with Plato).

    2) JS wasn’t that clear on the nature of God’s body until c. 1840. Lots of Mormons claimed God had a spirit body before then (my point, again, is that JS brought back a whole lot of OTHER doctrines in line with Christian Platonism).

    3) The nature of God’s body isn’t that clear in the NT. As you know, plenty of Christians will argue that the NT does not support God having a flesh body.

    4) Jesus made a lot of changes to the OT. Lots of his changes (like the Sermon on the Mount) look similar to the ethics of Greek philosophy. Jesus lived in a thoroughly Hellenized environment. Alexander took over the area in 332 BC. The Hasmoneans revolted in the mid 2nd century BC, but they practiced a very heavy-handed form of Judaism that Jesus seemed to be against. It looks to me like the first Hellenizer of Christianity was Jesus (sorry if that sounds radical. I’ll post more about that. That’s why I think JS was onto something!)

    5) As I note in the video, Dartmouth professor, John Smith, argued that the ancient theology was corrupting BECAUSE of how material the Stoics were: Stoics said that all spirit was matter and that God had a body. As I note in the video, I see John Smith and other hill-country thinkers likely influencing Joseph Sr. early on (I plan on giving a paper on that at Sunstone if they’ll accept it!)

    6) Again, the notion in Smith’s day was that the ancient theology was bigger than Plato. It went back to ancient sages and included other forms of Greek philosophy like Stoicism.

    7) So a few points. Hellenization in Judea started long before Jesus. Those who really wanted to be distinct and practice the law of Moses vigorously like the Hasmoneans, Jesus seemed to condemn their approach. Mormonism has lots of distinctive doctrines in addition to a God with a flesh body. I think it’s problematic to reduce Mormon theology to that one tenet. There’s reason to believe that JS believed that God with a flesh body was a tenet of the ancient theology that he wanted to restore. John Smith said an embodied God WAS a part of the ancient theology.

    Anyway, this is a complicated topic, but I do think there are several points to consider.

  4. Stephen Fleming

    RL, yeah, I don’t think that was Joseph Smith’s opinion. But a common Protestant one. Lots of Mormons held onto such opinions. Lots of such opinions got printed in the T&S.

  5. Those at the Jospeh Smith papers provide this historical introduction: “JS served as editor for the 15 September 1842 issue, the twenty-second issue in the third volume, of the Times and Seasons, a church newspaper published in Nauvoo, Illinois. He was assisted in his editorial responsibilities by Wilford Woodruff and John Taylor. Together, these three men produced the semimonthly newspaper, including composing its editorial material. While the extent to which JS was involved in the creation and publication of this issue is unclear, as the newspaper’s editor he was responsible for its content…The issue’s editorial content, featured here with introductions to each passage of text for which JS was ultimately responsible, included commentary on the Book of Mormon in light of recent archaeological discoveries, reflections on the risks of philosophizing about religious matters, a condemnation of the way government officials condoned the expulsion of church members from Missouri in 1838, and a report of a recent discourse delivered by Sidney Rigdon to church members in Nauvoo. The issue also included editorials encouraging church members living outside the city to send donations to facilitate the construction of the Nauvoo temple, urging traveling elders to arrange for the free delivery of the Times and Seasons and the Wasp through the postal service, and insisting that JS was consistent in condemning vice and promoting virtue.”

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