You are correct, I'm not a Mormon.
First of all, I think you took my comment to literally. I didn't intend to single out Joseph Smith specifically, but to give an example of another charismatic leader who in posterity seems to have been known to be a good, honest guy by the people around him. You can choose any nice charismatic leader really. The Bab, Ayya Vaikundar, Guru Nanak, etc. Very few of them get off the ground while being known for being dishonest.
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith/Early_Smith_family_history/No_positive_witnesses
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith/Character/Was_he_a_disreputable_person
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith/Personality_and_temperament
Hi Tumah,
I see now that your point was more general. However, your question - 'why does this not apply to other individuals' - I don't think it's possible to answer it without looking at the specifics of each case. This is very time consuming, so I'm open to any other suggested options? Obviously, just taking someone's word for it doesn't work when assessing a prophet's reliability - if we did that, we would accept everyone's claims of prophethood.
In my earlier response, I tried my best to only use uncontroversial, universally agreed facts & events. The website you linked to, which is pro-Mormon, agrees with most of what I said:
- Financial & material benefits
- Motivations:
[In reference to money digging] "Given how common and respectable such an activity was, it is hardly surprising that the poverty-stricken Smith family took a legitimate opportunity to improve their station in life. Despite all their toil, they lost their farm because they could not make the final mortgage payment." - http://en.fairmormon.org/Criticism_of_Mormonism/Video/Search_for_the_Truth_DVD/The_"Occult"
- Charitable behaviour:
A search for 'charity' and 'donation' on the website gives no examples of Joseph engaging in charity to the poor/needy. The only references to charity are in the context of being forgiving of the sins of others, and love of Christ
- Genuine belief in religion
Given that your source, which is pro-Mormon, validates all of the points I made - this is a good sign.
Everything else you discuss here besides for that is moot, really. The foundation of your argument is whether Muhammad was trustworthy. If he wasn't, then no amount of self-inflicted pain is going to help him. And self inflicted suffering is not necessarily a greater indication of trustworthiness so long as asceticism is not a primary belief. Otherwise I think every member of the Heaven's Gate cult beats Muhammad hands down. All it indicates is that either the person truly strongly believes in what he's doing, or that he wants to really convince others that he does.
First off, in terms of context, the point of this exercise is to evaluate how likely it is that Muhammed genuinely believed what he was saying. In other words, if he genuinely believed that he met Gabriel on a regular basis and received the Qur'an as a revelation.
Self-inflicted pain/suffering are not the right words. Muhammed seems to have had
onerous daily religious duties that would be difficult to consistently adhere to. These duties were reportedly much greater than those placed on his compatriots (e.g. many hours of prayer, extra fasts, etc.). This makes it
more likely that Muhammed genuinely believed in what he was saying, otherwise he could have made his life a lot easier by removing many of those onerous duties.
I'd never heard of the Heaven's Gate but, if they voluntarily killed themselves on account of their beliefs, I'd say that's a pretty strong indication they genuinely believed in what they were saying. However, without having read much about them, I'd suggest the possibility of them being absolutely crazy shouldn't be excluded.
I accept that there is still a chance that Muhammed made it up & made his life more difficult to convince those around him. But that's a lot of effort over 23 years, don't you think? Plus, wouldn't his followers actually be more inclined to join him if he was more accommodating? (e.g. no prayers, permitted alcohol, slavery encouraged)
As a result, my conclusion is that it's unreasonable to think Muhammed didn't genuinely believe what he preached. But very open to your challenge on that,
either on the logic or the underlying facts?