Dan Vogel Explained

Daniel Arlon Vogel (born 1955)[1] is an independent researcher, writer, and author on a number of works that include and is most known for his work on early Mormon documents.

Joseph Smith biography

Vogel was awarded the Best Book award in September 2004 by the John Whitmer Historical Association and the Turner-Bergera Best Biography award by the Mormon History Association in May 2005 for his biography .[2] [3]

Vogel argues in the biography that Joseph Smith was a pious fraud—that Smith essentially invented his religious claims for what he believed were noble, faith-promoting purposes. Vogel identifies the roots of the pious fraud in the conflict between members of the Smith family, who were divided between the skepticism and universalism of Joseph Smith, Sr., and the more mainstream Protestant faith of Lucy Mack Smith. Vogel interweaves the history of Joseph Smith with interpretation of the Book of Mormon, which is read as springing from the young man's psychology and experiences.

Reception

In the LDS historical community, Vogel's work has received significant recognition. In 1997, Vogel received the "Best Documentary Editing/Bibliography Award" from the Mormon History Association for Volume 1 of Early Mormon Documents.[4] Vogel's 2004 biography of Joseph Smith received the highest award for such works from both the John Whitmer Historical Association and the Mormon History Association. LDS history journals have reviewed most of Vogel's publications. A typical summary: "Despite its idiosyncrasies, Early Mormon Documents remains the most useful collection of documents on the early movement available to researchers. Its unconventionality may actually magnify its importance, not diminish it."[5]

Vogel's scholarship on the topic has been debated by Mormon apologists and scholars who have stated that he is critical of Mormon faith claims.[6] [7] [8] He has also been criticized by ex-Mormons and anti-Mormons for not being sufficiently critical of Joseph Smith. Larry Morris praised his efforts to produce the multi-volume Early Mormon Documents.[9]

Many of Vogel's books have been critically reviewed by members of FARMS, a Mormon apologetics institute.[10] For example, in 1991, Mormon religion professor and FARMS scholar Stephen E. Robinson suggested that Vogel's naturalistic arguments closely resemble those of Korihor, an atheist polemicist in the Book of Mormon.[11]

Publications

As editor

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Indian origins and the Book of Mormon : religious solutions from Columbus to Joseph Smith / Dan Vogel. . . 2017-09-10 .
  2. http://www.jwha.info/awards/default.asp "JWHA Awards"
  3. http://www.mhahome.org/awards/2004.php "MHA 2005 Award Winners"
  4. https://mormonhistoryassociation.org/about/awards-nominations/past-award-recipients Mormon History Association Past Award Recipients web page
  5. Review: Dan Vogel, Early Mormon Documents. Reviewed by Jed Woodworth. In Journal of Mormon History Vol. 34, No. 3, 2008, Page 242. Online at https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/mormonhistory/vol34/iss3/1. Accessed 14 May 2020.
  6. http://farms.byu.edu/publications/review/?reviewed_books&vol=17&num=2&id=588 "Dan Vogel's Family Romance and the Book of Mormon as Smith Family Allegory"
  7. Book of Mormon Minimalists and the NHM Inscriptions: A Response to Dan Vogel. Rappleye. Neal. Smoot, Stephen. O.. 6 November 2018. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture. 8.
  8. Web site: Hales - Vogel - Joseph Smith's Polygamy.
  9. Web site: Morris . Larry . Joseph Smith and "Interpretive Biography" . Dan Vogel has made a significant and lasting contribution to Mormon studies, and he deserves to be thanked for his bibliographic work. I sincerely appreciate his prodigious research..
  10. Web site: FARMS reviews of Dan Vogel's works.
  11. Stephen E. Robinson, "Review of The Word of God: Essays on Mormon Scripture by Dan Vogel," FARMS Review of Books 3/1 (1991): 312–318. off-site