The Latter-Day Revelation versus the Apostolic Deposit: A Conversation with Leonard on Joseph Smith, Denver Snuffer, and the Restoration Question
Fellowship Discussion Essay | May 9, 2026
Occasion: A long Zoom conversation with Leonard Hofheins, a member of the fellowship and a former Latter-day Saint who now follows the teachings of Denver Snuffer, the excommunicated LDS author whose work treats Joseph Smith’s restoration as authentic, but the modern LDS Church as apostate. The conversation arose from four essays I sent Leonard, drafted from 30 video transcripts on Snuffer’s learnofchrist.org site. Leonard passed those essays to Snuffer himself, who responded with a brief and gracious note describing the analysis as fair, Christian in spirit, and a reasonable attempt at respectful disagreement. The conversation that followed between Leonard and me ranged across the longing for direct experience of God, the analogies of knot holes and oceans, the historical pattern of apostasy and restoration, the question of additional canon, the wheat-and-tares problem of mixed revelation, and finally the question of whether and on what terms the apostolic deposit can be supplemented by latter-day prophetic voices.
The position governing this essay: Leonard and I share more on this question than we differ on. Both of us hold that the human heart is made for a direct relationship with the living God; both of us hold that obedience flows from that relationship rather than purchasing it; both of us hold that the Holy Spirit speaks today and that the believer must learn to listen. The disagreement is narrower than it looks, but it is real and consequential. It concerns whether the apostolic deposit — the canonical witness of the apostles to Christ, however imperfectly transmitted — is the sufficient ground of the church’s confession, with the Spirit illuminating that ground in every generation; or whether that deposit is properly supplemented by latter-day prophetic restorations — Joseph Smith’s, Denver Snuffer’s, others’ — that add new canonical material the church is bound to receive. I hold the first. Leonard holds the second. The conversation reproduced and engaged within this essay is the most charitable working-out of that disagreement I can offer, with Leonard’s case presented as fully as I can before I respond.
Context: This conversation is part of an ongoing series of fellowship engagements with Latter-day Saint, post-LDS, and Restoration-movement interlocutors who form part of the broader Renaissance Ministries community. Leonard is a treasured friend and a respected member of the fellowship. Nothing in what follows should be read as questioning his sincerity, his discipleship, or the depth of his pursuit of the living God. The disagreement is a doctrinal one held within fellowship, not a fellowship-dividing one.
To the Fellowship —
I had a long conversation with Leonard yesterday. We have known each other for some time now, and on most matters of Christian discipleship we are in close agreement. The conversation began with my framing of our discussion about modern-day revelation with my story about how I came to Christ and why I am doing this ministry. The only reason I am a Christian is because of a revelation, a vision, a symbolic representation of God’s relationship with the creation. It was from that single picture that I developed the Conscious Point Physics theory as an integrated corollary to the revelation about God, His relationship to the Son, and the Son’s relationship to the creation. The Conscious Point Physics work is not, for me, a side project. It is the substrate from which my whole picture of God, the soul, the moral order, and the structure of reality has been built. I told Leonard I feel a great obligation to bring that physics to a place where conventional science recognizes it, because the implications for the Christian witness are direct and the framework is, in my own conviction, clear.
Leonard’s response was the response of a friend. He said the work was righteous, that I was not doing it for nefarious or selfish reasons, that I had been called into it through what amounted to an external prompting, and that all prophets across the ages have struggled with exactly the communication problem I had just described — the problem of holding premises that one’s audience does not yet hold, and trying to argue from them to conclusions that the audience cannot follow because the premises are foreign. He named Joseph Smith specifically as someone who, on his reading, faced the same difficulty in 1820: a young man with a vision and a calling, working out how to communicate something for which the existing vocabulary was inadequate.
That comparison was the seed of the longer conversation. Leonard’s case for the Restoration tradition emerged from it gradually, in his own voice and on his own terms, and I want to lay it out as fully and as charitably as I can before I respond to it. There is more I agree with in what Leonard said than I disagree with, and I owe his position a fair hearing.
What Leonard sees rightly: the longing, the limited view, the vast ocean
Leonard began with the observation that runs through everything else he said: the human being is made for a direct relationship with the One who made him, and the present forms of religious life mostly fall short of that. He told a story about his time as a missionary in Venezuela. Looking back, he said, he had not been bringing people to God; he had been selling them an organization. He compared it to selling Amway. He felt the product (the basic teaching of Mormonism) was good, but that what he was doing was persuading people to join the organization, which was not the same as the project of helping them know God. He had spent time, energy, and intention on the first when he should have been spending time on the second.
This is an important observation about his LDS missionary efforts and membership, but it is not my primary criticism of Mormonism, Joseph Smith, or Denver Snuffer. I believe the substitution of promotion, membership, and working for a religious institution over a relationship with God is a common feature of religious movements, whether a Christian denomination, a Restoration or Charismatic movement, an Eastern religion, or a cult. The right object of evangelism is not the promotion of the institution. Rather, evangelism should present the One that the institution exists to point to. That they may know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent (John 17:3). This is the correct object of evangelism, and I agree with Leonard’s instinct, and the fellowship should recognize this temptation as foundational to the human condition.
From this, Leonard moved to two analogies that served as important metaphors throughout the conversation. The first was the knot hole. Imagine, he said, a wooden fence with knot holes in it — the small, round openings where branches once grew. Each of us is looking at the divine through one of those holes. We see something; it is our experience. To us, it is real, true, and the full picture of life. But what we see is only what the hole admits. Different people are looking through different holes.
Rebuttal: Leonard has implied that whatever we see in life is only a portion of life, and then he has made the further unstated assumption that whatever we see is only a portion of the truth. It is the second part of this assumption that must be confronted. I agree with the first — everything is a portion of life — but it is not useful; it is a tautology, it is unavoidably true. The problem is with the implied statement that everything is a portion of the truth (if we are seeking the truth sincerely). This is not true. The problem is that we can be deceived by others of good intention, by others of ill intention, and simply misinterpret life.
Life presents many perspectives. We may be looking at a distortion of the fullness of life, which, by analogy, would be like looking through a lens with aberrations. And given that life has examples of righteous and unrighteous behavior, the truth about God’s way, and outright misdirection toward evil, not all perspectives or knotholes are revelations of what we should actually do or believe about life.
This is the real point of conflict and counsel. If we see and believe that a fellow member of Christ’s family is believing false doctrine and engaging in practices contrary to God’s will and way of living, then we should confront them and speak our truth in love. Not all errors of truth are of the same magnitude of error. Some examples of doctrinal divergence include the following:
Believing that nature worship, séances, sacrificing to spirits, and occult practices are just another path to God (paganism, spiritism, Wicca vs. Christianity). Believing that we should meet and worship on Saturday rather than on Sunday, a fine point that may or may not have eternal consequences, is held by SDA and other Sabbatarian denominations. Sprinkling vs. immersion, the historic schism between many Reformed and Baptist communions. Whether Jesus was a man or God incarnate is a more substantive consideration (Jehovah’s Witnesses vs. orthodox Trinitarian Christianity). Whether Jesus’ death on the cross completed the work of salvation, or his prayer in Gethsemane was the atoning act (Mormonism vs. Protestantism). Whether a woman has the right to kill her child before it has left the womb; whether intoxicants may be used for recreational entertainment or for coping with stress; whether suicide is permissible in terminal illness; whether any form of sexual act between consenting adults is moral; whether one may adopt the gender of one’s choice (secular religions vs. bible-based religion). Whether Jesus Christ and His redemption from sin are the only true way to God (Christianity vs. all other world religions). Whether Mohammed is the true prophet of God, and Allah the true God (Islam vs. Christianity).
The problem is that a path, regardless of how sincere and true it may seem to us, does not become God’s truth by virtue of our sincerity. This is where the knot hole analogy breaks down. The fact is that we can be looking through the knothole into hell, and taking that knothole as a portion of the truth is true only in the trivial sense that hell is a portion of what is real; it is not a portion of what we should follow. Likewise, the spiritual knot hole can have filters on it that distort the view. It can look true and feel real, but it is a distortion of reality.
The Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Mormon, Jew, and secular seeker — each has a knothole through which he looks. Through that knothole, each names good and evil according to the precepts of his scripture. Each names the way to worship God. Each names the way to act in order to please their God. Each presents a creation story as the foundation for justifying his morality, revelation, worldview, prophecy, and post-life world. Each sees something through his knothole, and each believes it is true because he perceives and experiences it as reality. It is felt and rationalized as true, real, factual, and universal. Using this metaphor, mutual respect is the proper posture, because no one sees the whole. On the other hand, mutual respect should not devolve into acceptance of every doctrine as true. All perspectives are not equal nor good. We should respect each person as an eye/observer, a point of experience of the physical and spiritual world, a portal through which God views, hears, and feels. The problem is that our bias, preconceptions, language, association, interpretation, and knowledge color what we see. God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit see things as they are because the universe is integral with who they are. To the extent that the clarity of vision and the filter applied to each person’s perception vary from that of God, who sees actual reality, each person carries a corresponding amount of error — but that error will feel absolutely true, because to the perceiver, his perception is reality.
The analogy of the knot hole fails catastrophically when we realize that spiritual knot holes can be portals through which we see a portion of heaven, earth, and/or hell. The conscious experience of every person is essentially a porthole. We can be portals through which we see spiritual fabrications presented to our minds as visions, beliefs about the meaning of a picture, sound, or touch. The perceptions can appear as divine revelation when, in fact, they are the creation of demons appearing as angels of light.
We should honor and affirm only those whose efforts do not contradict what is true. Hence, Charlie’s question: “What is truth?” I take my standard to be the revelation of the Apostolic Deposit. I do not take other scripture or revelation to be the truth that must be rationalized or reframed. To the extent that other revelations correspond to biblical revelations, I applaud them. In all other aspects, I caution that it may be a deception, regardless of the appearance of the divine package in which it is delivered.
The second analogy Leonard used was the ocean, in trying to explain God. Leonard said God is the ocean, and understanding God is like scooping a cup of water from the ocean, compared to His vastness. The problem is that we are trying to define the ocean from what is in our cup. We don’t have any scope of what percentage of God’s ocean we have mapped because we don’t know how big God’s reality is. Most of the life in the actual ocean lives in the top three hundred feet, and we mostly don’t know what is below that. It’s the same with God. We only know Him on a very superficial level. We can only know what He chooses to reveal to us, and the way we receive that revelation is the way Scripture itself prescribes: ask, seek, knock. If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him (James 1:5). Leonard quoted that verse not in passing but as the operative principle of his own spiritual life. He said it had also been the operative principle of Joseph Smith’s spiritual life as a fourteen-year-old boy in upstate New York. He believed it was the operative principle of every serious seeker of God across history.
Leonard longs for a direct relationship with God, and that is right and good. The recognition that we see in part is right. The ocean-and-coffee-cup puts our knowledge of God’s mystery in perspective. The appeal to James 1:5 — to ask, seek, and knock — is important. Leonard is correct in moving away from institutional religion that has become the object of worship, attention, and energy instead of pointing toward the true object of worship. If the conversation had stopped there, there would have been nothing to write about.
Leonard’s case for restoration
But the conversation moved past mutual recognition when Leonard developed what he and the broader Restoration movement understand as the historical and theological argument for the necessity of a restoration. The argument has several strands, and Leonard laid them out carefully, in roughly this order.
First, on Leonard’s reading, the pattern of apostasy and restoration is the structural pattern of biblical history itself. Moses brings Israel out of slavery; Israel apostatizes; the prophets are sent; Israel apostatizes more deeply; the exile comes; restoration comes; apostasy returns; eventually Christ comes to a Judaism that has so deeply apostatized from its own scriptures that it kills its own God. The gospel goes to the Gentiles. The Gentile church flourishes for two centuries and is then, in Leonard’s view, absorbed by the Roman emperor Constantine into a state church — Catholic, meaning universal, the universal church being a creation of an earthly, worldly organization, more than a continuation of the apostolic body. From that absorption, all the rest of Christian denominationalism descended. By 1820, when Joseph Smith was a fourteen-year-old boy in New York, the Christian world had divided into multiple competing denominations, all reading the same Bible, all coming to mutually contradictory conclusions, all on the verge of war with one another over their interpretations. The young Joseph Smith, on Leonard’s account, was caught in this confusion, took James 1:5 with full seriousness, went into a grove of trees to pray for the first time aloud in his life, and received a vision in which the Lord told him that none of the existing churches were of Him, that knowledge had been lost, and that a restoration was coming. Joseph never recanted that account; he died professing it; on Leonard’s reading, the inner consistency of his testimony across his life is itself evidence of its authenticity.
Second, Leonard pointed to specific biblical predictions that, on the Restoration tradition’s reading, are the textual ground for the necessity of a restoration. Paul’s reference in 2 Thessalonians 2 to a falling away that must come first; the prophets’ references to a famine of the word in the last days; the Book of Mormon’s own language about Gentiles in the last days who treat their existing canon as closed and call additional revelation a stumbling block. The closed-canon position, in Leonard’s framing, is itself the stumbling block the Lord predicted — not the corrective to error but the chief instance of it.
Third, Leonard offered his own working framework for direct experience of God, drawing on Doctrine and Covenants section 93:1. The framework is sequential and demanding. Forsake your sins. First, you must understand what sin is in your own life and put it down. Come unto Him. This is its own movement, distinct from the forsaking; it is the deliberate approach of the soul, on its knees, toward the Lord. Call upon His name. The name is the key that opens the channel. Obey His voice. When the Lord speaks, you do what He says. Keep His commandments. Not as a checklist but as a treasured possession, kept the way you keep something valuable. And when these are done, in the order in which they are given, the promise is that you shall see His face and know that He is. Leonard offered this not as a theory but as the working pattern of his own life. He is in his sixties; he has not yet had the face-to-face experience the verse promises; he is striving for it; he believes it is available because the Lord is no respecter of persons and because the verse is plain.
Fourth and finally, Leonard pointed to Denver Snuffer specifically. Denver, on Leonard’s account, has had the kind of direct experience described in the Doctrine and Covenants verse. He does not advertise this. He treats it as the most ordinary thing in the world — not because it is ordinary but because, having stood in the presence of the divine, he cannot claim any special status, since what he saw was so much greater than what he is. Leonard cited two recent interviews on the Mormon Book Reviews podcast in which Denver shared, with an evangelical Christian interviewer, accounts of his experiences that he has rarely shared with his own followers. Leonard found this striking and persuasive. A man who shares his deepest experiences with a sympathetic outsider rather than with his own movement is not, on Leonard’s reading, a man building a personality cult; he is a man bearing witness in the place where bearing witness is most useful and least self-aggrandizing.
I have laid Leonard’s case out at this length because it deserves it. There is nothing dishonest in any of it. There is nothing self-serving in any of it. Leonard is a serious disciple of Christ, a man pursuing the direct knowledge of God along the line of a tradition he has thought through carefully and held with integrity, who has paid the cost of leaving the institutional LDS Church when its leadership departed from what he understood to be the apostolic posture. He told me, frankly, that he had stepped away from the modern LDS Church because some of its recent statements struck him as “anti-Christ,” in the precise sense that they had compromised the unique Lordship of Christ as the gate. That is not a small thing for a lifelong member to say, and it indicates that Leonard’s commitment is to the thing itself rather than to the institutional vehicle — exactly the posture he commended to me at the start of the conversation.
Where the agreement runs deep
I want to be very clear about what I do not disagree with. I do not disagree that the human being is made for a direct relationship with God. I do not disagree that institutional religion can become a substitute for that relationship. I do not disagree that we see in part. I do not disagree that the Lord still speaks. I do not disagree that James 1:5 is operative for every believer who will pray it in faith. I do not disagree that the historical pattern of human religious life shows recurrent drift and recurrent recovery. I do not disagree that the modern Christian denominations, taken as a class, contain real distortions of the apostolic faith. I do not disagree that the human heart longs for the kind of face-to-face encounter the Doctrine and Covenants verse describes.
I told Leonard this directly, more than once, and I want it on the record here. There was almost nothing in what he said about God, prayer, seeking, sincerity, or the structure of discipleship that I would withhold assent from. The disagreement, when it comes, is on a narrower question than the conversation might suggest. It is the question of canon — the question of which voices the church is bound to receive as authoritative witness, and which voices, however valuable, must be received as something less than that.
Not all knot holes are equal
The first move I made in response to Leonard’s case was on the knot-hole analogy itself. The analogy, taken at face value, has a generous quality I appreciate. Everyone is looking through a hole; everyone sees something; mutual respect is the proper posture. But the analogy, as it stands, does work that the analogy itself does not warrant. It assumes that all the holes are looking at the same yard next door, and that what is on the other side of every hole is some portion of the same divine reality. This is not obviously the case. Some knot holes are looking at the truth that will set you free; some are looking at a partial truth that will set you partially free; some are looking at distortions that will, if followed, place you in bondage. Not all knot holes are oriented toward the same picture.
Leonard granted this. He said: I’m not saying every knot hole is equal — I’m saying everybody has one when it comes to how they perceive the divine. Fair enough. I accept the qualification. Then he made what I take to be the move that actually does the work in the Restoration argument: he said that every once in a while, the Lord breaks down a plank of the fence and lets someone see the bigger picture. This is the warrant. The Restoration tradition is the claim that Joseph Smith was one of those someones. The plank came down; the bigger picture was given; what Joseph Smith saw was not a knot-hole vision but plank-down vision; and therefore the canon Joseph delivered is not one knot hole’s view among others but a corrective to the knot-hole limitations the rest of Christendom is operating under. Denver Snuffer, in this picture, is a man who has himself stood at the plank-down place and is reporting what he saw there.
I understand the move, but I do not think the move can bear the weight the Restoration tradition asks of it. The reason is what I want to develop next.
The replacement question, however gently framed
I told Leonard, plainly, that the Restoration claim is structurally a replacement claim. He pushed back on this. He said he does not see it as a replacement; he sees it as an addition, a filling in, a completion of what is missing. I want to honor that he does not experience it as a replacement, and I take him at his word. But I also want to say that, intellectually, I cannot avoid the conclusion that it functions as a replacement, regardless of how it is held subjectively.
The reason is simple. When two sources speak to the same question and produce different answers, the believer cannot follow both. He must choose. The apostolic deposit and the Joseph Smith canon do not always speak to the same questions, and on many questions they are compatible. But on some questions, they are not. I gave Leonard one example: the question of where the atonement was completed. The apostolic deposit places the atonement at the cross — through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all (Hebrews 10:10), he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him (2 Corinthians 5:21), it is finished at the cross itself in John 19:30. The Joseph Smith canon, as I understand it from the Denver Snuffer lecture transcripts, places the atonement substantially in Gethsemane, with the cross as the completion of what was already accomplished in the garden. These are not the same picture. They cannot both be the structurally correct account of where the work of redemption was done. One of them has to be primary, and the other has to be secondary or wrong.
Leonard remembered the Gethsemane point that I made in the four essays I wrote summarizing the Denver Snuffer theory. He did not contest that it was a real difference. He took it on board. But the existence of differences like that — and that one is just an example; there are others — means that any tradition that holds both the apostolic deposit and the Joseph Smith canon as authoritative is, in fact, having to choose between them at the points where they diverge. The choice is unavoidable. And when the choice is made in favor of the latter-day source on a doctrinal question, the apostolic deposit has been functionally replaced as the controlling authority on that question, however gently the replacement is framed.
This is what I mean when I say that, structurally, the Restoration position is a replacement position. Not because Leonard or Denver wants to replace anything. Not because the rhetoric of the Restoration tradition uses the word replacement. But because, on any question where the two sources disagree, one of them is being functionally treated as the higher authority, and that one is the latter-day source, because the latter-day source is what makes the Restoration claim distinctive in the first place. If the apostolic deposit is sufficient where it speaks, the Restoration is unnecessary; if the Restoration is necessary, it is necessary precisely because it is correcting or supplementing the apostolic deposit at the points where they differ.
The wheat-and-tares problem
The deeper objection follows from the replacement question. Suppose I grant, for the sake of argument, that Joseph Smith was a sincere seeker who saw something real in the grove in 1820 — that, in Leonard’s terms, a plank of the fence came down for him. I am willing to grant this. I do not know that it did, and I do not know that it did not, but the possibility is not something I can refute, and Joseph Smith’s lifelong consistency on the point is real evidence in its favor. Suppose further that what he saw was, like every prophet’s vision in scripture, partial — one wide view rather than the whole panorama. Suppose further still that in the years that followed, he transmitted some of what he saw faithfully and some of what he saw less faithfully, that his memory and his interpretive frame and his cultural moment shaped the transmission, and that what came down through the Doctrine and Covenants and the Book of Mormon and the Pearl of Great Price contains both genuine revelation and human admixture — some wheat, some tares, mixed together in the same field, exactly as the Lord said the world’s mixed condition would always look until the harvest (Matthew 13:24-30).
The question I cannot resolve within the Restoration tradition is: which is which? I do not have the gift of separating the two. Leonard does not, on his own testimony, have the gift of separating the two. The modern LDS Church, by its own departure from the original, has not separated them well; Denver Snuffer’s project is, at least in part, an attempt to identify which parts of the post-Joseph LDS development have departed from the original revelation. But the disagreement among Restoration-tradition figures about what is wheat and what is tare is itself the proof that no human can sort the field reliably. And if no human can sort the field reliably, then taking the field as canon is a different operation from taking the apostolic deposit as canon — not because the apostolic deposit lacks tares but because the apostolic deposit has been tested by the church across two thousand years, by hundreds of millions of believers in every culture, against the Holy Spirit’s witness in every generation, and has produced a remarkably stable confessional core. The Joseph Smith canon has been tested by far fewer believers across far less time, and the testing has, even within the Restoration tradition itself, produced multiple incompatible readings of what the original revelation actually was.
I told Leonard that I cannot risk my discipleship, my salvation, and my witness on a canon I cannot reliably sort. I would rather take the apostolic deposit as my ground, with all its imperfections of transmission, and then ask the Holy Spirit directly to fill in what is missing — doing for myself, in miniature, exactly what Joseph Smith did at fourteen, but without canonizing the result. It is my prayer, Lord, this deposit is incomplete. I know it is incomplete. Show me what is missing. The Lord can answer that prayer in any believer’s life. The answer, when it comes, is for that believer; it is not for the church as binding canon. The closed canon is not a stumbling block in this picture. It is a discipline. It says: this is the foundation that has been tested and confirmed across the catholic Christian witness; build your life on it; receive what the Spirit shows you privately; do not impose what you have received as canon on anyone else. The closed canon protects the church from the proliferation of latter-day prophets, each making different incompatible canonical claims, all of which would have to be sorted, none of which can be sorted reliably from the inside.
A vignette: the only voice I have ever heard
I told Leonard, in the middle of all this, a story I have not often told. Some years ago, I was, for a time, involved in a Buddhist sect. I was chanting before their scripture in an altered state, with a fellow Buddhist seeker in a barrio in Los Angeles. As we chanted, I had a vision of myself falling into a flame. While in the vision, I heard a voice say, Don’t go. I knew it was Jesus. I threw down the beads. I walked out of the apartment and never spent another moment practicing that religion. That was the only time in my life I have ever heard, audibly, the voice of the Lord.
The other thing I have ever experienced that I take to be a revelation in any direct sense was the picture of the galactic center and the fine lines between it and the stars around it. It was that vision that became the structural intuition behind my Conscious Point Physics work. I tell you those two experiences only to illustrate that we all can have the Lord speak to us, correct us, warn us, and give us revelation about our life’s work and purpose. I had one audible warning and one structural vision. I am not Joseph Smith. I am not Denver Snuffer. I am not John on Patmos. I am not Paul on the Damascus road. I have lived a long life of Christian discipleship with two direct interventions of the kind the great prophets received continuously.
And here is what that experience taught me, which bears on the conversation with Leonard. When the Lord wants you to hear something, you hear it. When He wants to redirect you, He redirects you. The Lord is competent in His own communication. He does not need a latter-day prophet to mediate to you what He could tell you directly. The fact that He spoke to me audibly once, and structurally once, and otherwise has worked through the still small voice of the Spirit applied to the apostolic deposit, suggests to me that the apostolic deposit plus the Spirit is the standard mode of operation, and the dramatic prophetic visitation is the exceptional case. It is reserved, when it is given, for purposes whose canonical weight and verification cannot be assessed by the recipient himself.
I do not doubt that Denver Snuffer has had experiences. That is, I do not believe he was delusional or intentionally deceptive. I do not know the origin of his visions, but I do know that the two stories are mutually exclusive. Someone is wrong. Either the apostolic deposit is wrong, or the Denver Snuffer / Joseph Smith revelation is wrong in these points. (I refer specifically to the issue of atonement: was it completed in the Garden or on the Cross?) If there is one error in the canon, are there others? In areas where there is disagreement, whose canon do we follow? Do we alternate and choose the one we like in each situation? What is the implication of the possibility that it was a different spirit than the Holy Spirit that inspired the new revelation? Might we be following a spirit that will subtly change us to its nature by following a new revelation, rather than the nature of the Holy Spirit? Regarding the revelation of DS/JS, we can say with certainty that either the apostolic deposit or the Joseph Smith revelation is wrong.
The ground I can defend is that the apostolic deposit, with the Spirit illuminating it, is sufficient to prosper individually and collectively. I believe the apostolic deposit has only been partially embraced as true and lived fervently, authentically, and accurately. The result is a lukewarm church, a government that does not govern itself according to the revelation of God’s way, and families that teach their children without authenticity of example or in the ways of wisdom. The fruits of those who claim the name “Christian” have been mixed, and much evil has been attributed to the followers of Christ, which was in fact the result of living a life without renewal. I am asking Christians to live like Christ. We don’t need a restoration or a new revelation; we need to read the Bible, attune our hearts and minds to the words of life, and listen to the voice of conscience and the Holy Spirit as informed by God’s word. This is the ground I am building this fellowship on. This is the ground I am inviting Leonard, Denver, and every Restoration-tradition believer to consider standing on with me.
Kill the Buddha on the road
There is a Zen saying that I borrowed for the closing argument of the conversation: If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him. The point of the saying is that any figure other than the ultimate object of devotion who positions himself between you and the ultimate object must be cleared away. The Buddha on the road is not the Buddha; the Buddha is what the figure on the road is pointing to; if the figure on the road is mistaken for the destination, the figure has become an idol and must be removed.
I told Leonard: I do not follow Apollos. I do not follow Paul. I do not follow Joseph Smith. I do not follow Denver Snuffer. I do not follow Thomas Abshier. I follow Jesus, and I read what the apostles wrote about Him because they were the men He chose to bear witness, and I receive what the Spirit shows me about that witness, and I bring what I have received into fellowship with other believers who have also received, and we test together what we have heard with our ears and our hearts. That is the fellowship’s working method. It is exactly what Paul rebukes the Corinthians for losing in 1 Corinthians 1:12-13: every one of you saith, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I of Cephas; and I of Christ. Is Christ divided? was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? The same rebuke applies to I am of Joseph Smith, I am of Denver, I am of Calvin, I am of Wesley, I am of any teacher whose name has come to organize the believer’s allegiance in place of the name of Christ.
Leonard accepted this without resistance. He noted that Denver has been adamant about not being seen as a prophet. I take that at face value. I assume Denver sincerely does not want to be elevated to the position of a prophet, oracle, revelator, or guru. The problem is not what Denver wants; the problem is that those who follow Denver take his words as prophetic. He has said he has spoken with Jesus. He is speaking as though his conversations with Jesus are the pure restoration of Joseph Smith’s restoration. Denver’s proclamation of truth is exactly what Leonard has brought into the fellowship: a debate about what is canon. The serious consideration of Denver’s canon, which is non-apostolic doctrine, introduces a competition into the heart of the Christian fellowship as to which spirit is the source of truth. This is the foundation of all interfaith conflicts and competitions. To bring it into the heart of the conversation is to be in a place of ambivalence and non-commitment, searching as to whose canon is canon, whose spirit is the spirit we worship, follow, and listen to in our hearts. The fundamental issue is that the Mormon / Smith / Snuffer revelation is a different revelation from the apostolic revelation, meaning it is from two different spirits.
I am not faulting Leonard for raising the conversation; I am the one who sent him the four essays. But the conversation is real, consequential, and common. We have an example of another Christ being presented. This one was channeled or witnessed by Joseph Smith and Denver Snuffer. The spirit witnessed by the apostles was a different spirit; the revelations are similar, but they differ because they bring different revelations. It sounds like Denver, in his heavenly visits, witnessed the same spirit that Joseph Smith did. Both spirits declare Jesus to be Lord, but the specifics of the revelation are sufficiently different in issues of actual character and message as to be impossible to be the same spirit.
The fact that there are two different spirits revealing and guiding the heart in two different ways means that one is not true to its center. The two spirits will lead their followers’ hearts and minds in slightly different directions. The Mormon/Smith/Snuffer spirit will have a twist, a bias, an emphasis that shapes the character of its followers’ souls in slightly different directions from the Biblical canon.
The question of what that change might be is a subject for another examination, but as a broad consideration, a revelation from a single source has no ambiguity. There is no possibility of broad metaphorical application and multiple perspectives in passages and revelations where the words are specific and first-person. This is significantly different from the gospel, the prophets, the epistles, the psalms, the proverbs, the histories, and the law, which were revealed over millennia through many portals of personality and perspective, including through the person of Jesus Christ, who was God incarnate.
I have made my choice. I embrace what I believe was the purposeful ambiguity of the Lord revealing His will and way through His Spirit speaking through the minds and hearts of the apostles. I reject the single-channel revelation of Joseph Smith and Denver Snuffer. I believe their revelation and encounter were real, but I do not accept them as the perfected, final word of God’s revelation to man of His will and His way. I think seeing them as personal experiences — maybe a plank knocked down, maybe a larger view than most humans perceive, but still limited by the fence, still the perspective of a human, still not the full, unbiased, and unshaded view of God’s revelation. This framing prevents the deification of any human who heard the voice of God in one of its lesser forms. The Biblical and apostolic record allows us — and requires us — to each retain our own counsel. We must each seek the witness of the Holy Spirit and study the fragments of the records of those who came before us. The Word of God, as in the biblical account, is incomplete, but it serves exactly what God intended: to teach us the basic pattern of God’s will and way, and then to develop a sensitivity to His leading of each heart in each circumstance.
God speaks to each of us through our own filters. When a person experiences a vision of such complete clarity, as happened to Joseph Smith and Denver Snuffer, and it differs from the Biblical canon, I think the origin of such miraculous visions is likely a spirit other than the Spirit of Christ Himself. I don’t think millennia of metaphor, proverbs, and parables will be overwritten to give us a single-channel perfection if He had not given that purity and totality throughout the world story.
If a pure revelation of what really happened in the Garden and on the Cross had been God’s plan for revelation, He could have given it without ambiguity from the beginning and repeatedly. Instead, what we see is a pattern of ambiguity, hidden treasures, even a parable — the pearl of great price — which was hidden in a field that no one else saw as the very nature of heaven. We crave clarity. We want to know the answers, but it is a king’s glory to find a thing, and God’s glory to hide it. The revelation of Smith and Snuffer is entirely opposite to this Pearl-of-Great-Price pattern — it is a pearl lying open without parable and ambiguity. It is exactly this pattern that I believe is the most disturbing, because it leaves room for latter-day prophets to come and tell the flock what to do and not do, which is the seed of a theocratic tyranny. This is the mark of the prince of this world.
God could have had prophets repeatedly give clear revelations. But if we look at the Biblical prophetic record, the prophets’ messages were riddles hidden inside clues. The crystalline clarity of the Joseph Smith and Denver Snuffer revelations does not match the pattern of Biblical revelation. Even Jesus’ words were spoken in parables. The Smith / Snuffer revelations are absolute clarity, but then the human and flawed nature of the seemingly first-person, angel-delivered message is shown to be flawed, and it is seen mixed with errors, changes, modifications, and new revelations — for example, the well-known changes Joseph Smith made to the Book of Mormon text between the 1830 and 1837 editions, including the alteration of phrases describing the Lamanites’ skin from “white” to “pure” in some passages, and the broader pattern of textual revision across editions. The absolute contradiction or reversal of a divine pattern is not a characteristic of the signature of the Bible. Rather, the modified and shifting revelations of Smith and Snuffer have the markings of another source.
I see how God revealed the Bible, little by little over time, through many sources, with deep metaphorical application as a signature of authenticity. Even the words of Jesus were incomplete, and the accounts of His witness were seen from multiple perspectives. And if we take Jesus as the Creator of all, then His words were likewise shaped, filtered, and colored by multiple prophetic witnesses to His incarnation. This pattern of imperfect, soft-focus witness is a recurrent theme in pre- and post-incarnation, as well as during the very presence of Jesus during His incarnation.
The crystalline purity of a single-source vessel inevitably leaves an imprint of the vessel on the message. This signature will be multiplied as the message spreads, is followed, and patterns of life emerge that reflect that message. The pattern of teaching I advocate is individual responsibility to listen to the Holy Spirit’s voice and to read the Bible daily to imprint God’s direction in our minds. It is our imperative to follow Jesus, in the sense of living life in a way that is complete and full. We accept His sacrifice as effective, and we sacrifice our lives in the sense of crucifying the flesh, not acting out our various desires, impulses, and flesh hungers in a way other than as He prescribes by metaphor, parable, command, and lesson in the imperfect and incomplete record we have. In short, we receive the apostolic deposit; we receive the Spirit; we test our receptions in council; and we do not canonize latter-day prophetic voices, accepting them only as personal revelations to the extent that they are consistent with the apostolic revelation.
The fellowship’s working answer
Toward the end of the conversation, I told Leonard what I am trying to do with this ministry, and I want to put it on record here because the conversation crystallized it for me. I am trying to build a church that follows the Bible — the apostolic deposit, the canonical witness of the apostles to Christ — with each member doing his or her absolute best to figure out what it says and to listen to what the Holy Spirit is showing about it. We bring our individual hearings into fellowship. We say: I heard this. What did you hear? And what did you hear? And we look for the common center of what has been heard. Where the hearings converge, we have stronger ground for confidence. Where they diverge, we hold the divergence as live and unsettled, and we keep listening. The Spirit illuminates the deposit. The fellowship tests the illumination. The apostolic revelation, the biblical corpus, and the words of Christ are the foundation.
This is, I think, what the apostolic church itself did. They had the Old Testament; they had Christ’s words and works; they had Paul’s revelation of counsel to the churches; they had the Spirit; they tested what they were hearing in council, most visibly at Jerusalem in Acts 15. They did not appeal to a latter-day prophet to settle the Gentile question. They appealed to scripture, to the Spirit’s manifest work among the Gentiles, and to the apostolic council’s collective judgment. The same method is available to us. It does not require additional canon. It requires the apostolic and testamental deposit, the Holy Spirit moving us, and being open to the council’s critique, which is also open to criticism.
Leonard, to his great credit, said at this point that he loved what I was describing, that he agreed with it totally, that this was what was needed, and that he wanted to participate in exactly that kind of fellowship. He had said earlier in the conversation that the most personal thing a human being can do is reach out to the One who created him, and that the kind of mutual listening I had just described — a meeting of the minds to find that commonality — was the kind of fellowship he had been longing for. We ended the conversation in agreement that we are on the same team, going in the same direction. The fact of our doctrinal disagreement need not divide the fellowship. The fellowship is the working method by which we can both pursue and discover truth together.
I want to be clear about what that means and does not mean. It does not mean I have changed my position on the canon question. I have not. The apostolic deposit is the floor; latter-day prophetic voices, however valuable as private edification, are not canon for this fellowship and should not be canon for any fellowship that wants to keep its footing based on biblical revelation. What it means is that Leonard and I can hold our disagreement on that question while sharing fully in the work of iron sharpening iron, hearty counsel in the conduct of relationship, challenging ourselves in the discipline of mutual listening, the pursuit of direct relationship with the Lord, and the building of a community whose center is Christ rather than any teacher’s name or personal revelation. The disagreement is real; the fellowship is also real; both can be held at once.
Crescendo
The verse I want to close on is the one I quoted to Leonard near the end of the conversation, and it deserves the full reading.
For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not carnal? Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord gave to every man? I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase. So then neither is he that planteth any thing, neither he that watereth; but God that giveth the increase. — 1 Corinthians 3:4-7
Paul will not let the Corinthian church organize itself around the names of its teachers. He will not even let it organize itself around his own name. The teachers are ministers; the increase comes from God; the believer’s allegiance is to the Christ the teachers point to, not to the teachers as such. This is the apostolic posture toward every later teacher who would arise, and it includes Joseph Smith, Denver Snuffer, and me. I have my own personal revelations, and I argue for their logicality, their applicability, and their consistency in increasing the joy and peace of life. None of us is the gate. Jesus said, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me (John 14:6). There is only one gate to the Father, and that gate is named. The gate is the crucified and risen Christ to whom the apostolic deposit bears witness. Every other teacher whose work has any value at all has its value because it points to Him; every teacher whose work would obscure Him, however sincere, has misjudged his vocation; and the believer’s task is to follow the gate, not the gatekeepers, not the latter-day claimants, not the men who say here is Christ when the Christ is the One the canonical witness already names.
Leonard and I are in agreement on this. We both want to follow the gate. We disagree on whether the men who came after the apostles — particular men, particular voices, particular Restoration figures — are pointing toward the gate or have, however unintentionally, put themselves on the road in front of it. That disagreement will be settled in the end, but in the meantime, our choice of shepherd has consequences, and it behooves us to keep listening — to the deposit, to the Spirit, to each other — and to refuse to organize our discipleship around any name but His.
That is the fellowship I am building. That is the fellowship Leonard told me he wanted to be part of. That is the fellowship I commend to all of you for our continuing discussion.
“For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not carnal?” — 1 Corinthians 3:4
“I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.” — John 14:6
“If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.” — James 1:5
“Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world.” — 1 John 4:1
Sources
Primary source: Zoom conversation between Thomas Lee Abshier and Leonard Hofheins, May 9, 2026, transcribed and edited for fellowship-essay form. Direct quotations of Leonard preserved where possible; arguments paraphrased where necessary for length and continuity, with the substantive content of his case rendered as fully as the format allows.
Background context: Denver Snuffer, learnofchrist.org video archive (thirty videos), engaged in four prior fellowship essays prepared in late April 2026 and shared with Leonard, who in turn shared two of them with Snuffer himself. Snuffer’s response, conveyed by Leonard during the conversation, characterized the analysis as fair, Christian in spirit, and a reasonable attempt at respectful disagreement.
Additional context: Mormon Book Reviews podcast, two recent interviews with Denver Snuffer (referenced by Leonard during the conversation; not independently reviewed for this essay).
Internal Renaissance Ministries references: prior fellowship essays in the May 7-9 sequence engaging Charles Whitaker on proselytism (CFE_christos_fellowship_essays/essays/260508-the-buick-salesman-and-the-great-commission.md) and John Ritenbaugh on grace and law (CFE_christos_fellowship_essays/essays/260508-the-law-beneath-the-mercy-seat.md); the four Denver Snuffer engagement essays referenced in the “Occasion” paragraph above.
Scripture references in this essay are King James Version: John 17:3; James 1:5; 2 Thessalonians 2:1-3; Matthew 13:24-30; Hebrews 10:10; 2 Corinthians 5:21; John 19:30; 1 Corinthians 1:12-13; 1 Corinthians 3:4-7; John 14:6; Acts 15; 1 John 4:1.
Latter-day Saint scriptural reference (engaged but not endorsed as canonical for this fellowship): Doctrine and Covenants 93:1, the sequence of forsaking sins, coming unto Him, calling upon His name, obeying His voice, and keeping His commandments, with the promise of seeing His face. The framework is engaged because Leonard offered it as the working pattern of his own discipleship; the engagement does not constitute endorsement of the broader Doctrine and Covenants as canon.
Postscript: The Asymmetry as Tell
Six Crystallizations on Form, Spirit, and the Markers of True Revelation — for inclusion in the Christos Rigorous Framework (CRF)
The body of the essay above is a record of a conversation held in fellowship — written conversationally, in the spirit of mutual recognition, with the case for the Restoration tradition rendered as fully and as charitably as I could render it. That register was appropriate to the conversation as it occurred. In the days since, however, several arguments have crystallized in my own thinking that the essay only gestured at, and that I now want to set out more rigorously for inclusion in the Christos Rigorous Framework. The conversational register honored Leonard and the fellowship. The rigorous register honors truth as a separate obligation. Both are necessary; neither suffices alone.
What follows are six crystallizations. They are connected, and they culminate in a single meta-argument — that the form of true revelation is itself a primitive feature of the truth and not a secondary phenomenon, and that the asymmetry between that form and the form of latter-day single-channel revelation is the diagnostic marker by which the two can be distinguished. The meta-argument bears the same structural shape as a result we have been working out in the Conscious Point Physics in parallel: that chirality in the universe is not a secondary phenomenon caused by some prior event, but a primitive feature of the creation at the level of the geometric and conscious points themselves. The parallel is not decorative. It is the same form of argument applied to a different subject matter: in both domains, the form is the signature.
1. The knot-hole metaphor fails the moment distortion is admitted as possible
The metaphor, as Leonard offered it, assumes a fence. The fence bounds a single reality on the other side. Every knothole is a partial view of the same thing. The various religious traditions of humanity are therefore partial views of the same divine reality, and the proper posture is mutual respect.
This is generous, and it is wrong in the way that generosity often is — by smuggling its conclusion into its setup. The setup assumes what the conclusion needs to prove: that all the knot holes look into the same next-door yard. They do not. Some knot holes look at the truth of the One who made the cosmos. Some look at distortions of that truth introduced by sincere error. Some look at deliberate fabrications introduced by the enemy of souls. Some look at portions of heaven; some look at portions of earth; some look at portions of hell. The metaphor assumes a uniform geometry of perception that the actual landscape of human religious experience does not exhibit.
The proper test is not whether a perception is sincerely held. Sincerity is not truth-conducting. A man can sincerely look into a portal of deception and report what he sees there with complete fidelity, and what he reports will be true to what he saw and false to what is the case. The proper test is whether the perception conforms to the Apostolic Deposit — the canonical witness of those whom Christ chose to bear witness, preserved by the catholic Christian community across two thousand years, illuminated in each generation by the Holy Spirit who indwells the believer.
This is not a closed-fist posture. It does not require rejecting every non-apostolic perception as worthless. It requires only that the Apostolic Deposit serve as the criterion against which other perceptions are tested. Perceptions that align with it can be received and treasured. Perceptions that contradict it on substantive points must be set aside, however sincerely held, because the alternative is to make the heart the judge of revelation rather than the receiver of it, and the heart is not competent for that office.
2. Two different spirits produce two different soul-shapes
The Apostle Paul, writing to a church beset by latter-day revelations in his own moment, warned the Corinthians plainly: if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached, or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received, or another gospel, which ye have not accepted, ye might well bear with him (2 Corinthians 11:4). To the Galatians he was sharper still: though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed (Galatians 1:8). These are not abstractions. They are working categories that the apostolic church already needed for the kinds of revelations that arose then and continue to arise now.
The relevant fact about the Smith / Snuffer revelation is not that it is sincere, not that the experiences may have been real, not that its followers are devout. The relevant fact is that the spirit that delivered it differs from the spirit that delivered the apostolic witness. Two spirits cannot deliver materially different accounts of the same events — Gethsemane and Calvary, for instance — and both be the Spirit of Truth, because the Spirit of Truth is one, and the events were what they were.
This matters because spirits shape souls. A man who orders his life around the Apostolic Deposit, illuminated by the Spirit of Christ, becomes a particular kind of man — humble before scripture, attentive to the Spirit’s witness in his own conscience, suspicious of his own private revelations, anchored in the catholic tradition, willing to be corrected by other believers. A man who orders his life around a latter-day crystalline revelation, even one that names Jesus as Lord, becomes a particular kind of man as well — and the particular kind will bear the marks of the particular spirit that shaped him. Subtle marks, perhaps. Marks his friends may not see, and he may not see himself. But marks, over time and in multiplication by numbers, that reveal the source.
The Christian must care which spirit is moving him, because the spirit that moves him is the spirit that is making him. This is not an academic question about which canon is canon. It is the question of what kind of soul one will have at the end of one’s life.
3. The form of true revelation is multi-source, gradual, parabolic, and partial
The Apostolic Deposit, viewed across its full sweep from Genesis to Revelation, exhibits a striking and consistent form. The revelation is multi-source: many prophets, in many ages, in many literary genres — law, history, psalm, proverb, prophecy, apocalypse, gospel, epistle. The revelation is gradual: it does not arrive whole; it builds, prefigures, fulfills, and develops. The revelation is parabolic: when the Word incarnate Himself spoke, He spoke in parables, deliberately, that seeing they might not see, and hearing they might not understand (Luke 8:10) — not to obscure for obscurity’s sake, but to engage the heart in the act of receiving. The revelation is partial: each prophet sees in part, the gospels record four overlapping but distinct testimonies, Paul says now we see through a glass, darkly (1 Corinthians 13:12).
And the revelation is deliberately signaled by its Author to have this form. It is the glory of God to conceal a thing, and the honour of kings is to search out a matter (Proverbs 25:2). The hiddenness is not a regrettable byproduct of bad transmission. The hiddenness is the design. The pearl of great price is hidden in a field; the kingdom of heaven is like leaven hidden in three measures of meal; the treasure is buried until it is sought. God’s pattern in His own self-disclosure is to invite seeking, not to spare the seeker the work.
This pattern protects the heart. Because the revelation requires search, it forms the searcher. Because it admits multiple witnesses, it requires integrating testimony, which is itself a discipline of the soul. Because it speaks in parables, it engages the heart’s deeper faculties, not just the cognitive surface. Because it is gradual, it forms the receiver over a lifetime rather than overwhelming him in a moment. The form of biblical revelation is doctrine about how revelation works, and what it teaches is that revelation is something the soul must rise to meet, not something delivered to a passive recipient.
4. The form of latter-day crystalline revelation is single-source, clean, and theatrical
Set against the biblical form, the Smith/Snuffer revelation is structurally the opposite. It is single-source: one prophet, in one moment, receives the whole. It is clean: first-person, unambiguous, no parable, no metaphor, no partial vision — direct words from a directly visible divine figure, with names and instructions and doctrines spelled out. It is theatrical: angelic visitations, golden plates, seer stones, voices from heaven — drama in place of hiddenness. It is immediately authoritative: the recipient announces the revelation, and the followers are bound by it.
The contrast is not incidental. The contrast is diagnostic. The biblical pattern is the form of revelation that engages the heart and forms the soul. The latter-day clean pattern is the form of revelation that bypasses the heart and binds the soul. The first cultivates seekers; the second cultivates followers. The first produces a catholic Christian church capable of holding doctrinal continuity across two thousand years and a dozen cultures; the second produces a series of single-source movements each centered on the original prophet’s voice, each requiring its own institutional vehicle to preserve and propagate the original revelation, each subject to the schismatic problem that as soon as a second prophet arises within the tradition, there are two crystalline channels and no method to adjudicate between them. The schism of the Restoration movement after Joseph Smith’s death — Brigham Young’s branch, the Strangites, the Reorganized Church, the Snuffer-aligned remnant, and dozens of others — is the structural consequence of the crystalline form itself.
The latter-day form is not the form God has used to disclose Himself throughout redemptive history. That this form claims to come from the same God who used the biblical form is itself the difficulty. A single Author does not change His signature.
5. The asymmetry as primitive: the structural parallel to chirality
In the Conscious Point Physics work in parallel, we have been clarifying something that bears directly here. Chirality in the universe — the handedness of the weak interaction, the handedness of biological molecules, the asymmetry between matter and antimatter — is not a secondary phenomenon caused by some prior symmetric event that broke. Chirality is a primitive feature of creation, present at the level of the Conscious Points, the Geometric Points, and the rules governing their relationships. The handedness is in the substrate. The universe is chiral because chirality is built in.
This matters because for decades, physicists have sought an event that would explain the asymmetry — a primordial moment when symmetric conditions broke, and chirality emerged. That search failed because it was looking in the wrong place. The asymmetry was not caused; it was given. The form of the creation is its signature, not a consequence of something prior.
The same form of argument applies to the question before us. For years, apologists for the Restoration tradition have sought an explanation for the difference between the biblical pattern and the latter-day clean-revelation pattern — perhaps a difference in dispensational timing, perhaps in audience, perhaps in cultural context. These accounts are searching for an event that would explain the asymmetry. They are looking in the wrong place. The asymmetry is not caused; it is given. The form of true revelation is its signature. A revelation whose form contradicts the form of God’s disclosure across redemptive history bears the signature of a different author, regardless of its content.
This is the meta-argument, and it is the heart of the matter. The form is the tell. Faith accepts this as a primitive — not because it can be derived from something prior, but because it is internally consistent, it produces good fruit across two thousand years of catholic Christian witness, and it conforms to what God Himself has said about how He works (it is the glory of God to conceal a thing; I am the Lord, I change not; Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever). The Christian who learns to recognize the form learns to recognize the Author.
6. The theocratic tyranny that follows from crystalline revelation
There is one further implication that should be made explicit because it bears on the political consequences of theological error. A crystalline single-source revelation produces, structurally and over time, a particular institutional form: a class of latter-day prophets and their institutional successors who can tell the flock what to do without parable, without ambiguity, without the need for the believer’s heart to engage in discernment. The revelation is clean; the application is clear; the believer’s role is to obey.
This is the seed of theocratic tyranny. Not because the original prophet intends tyranny — Joseph Smith may not have, Denver Snuffer plainly does not — but because the structural form of the revelation creates the conditions for it. The biblical pattern’s deliberate ambiguity is the structural protection against prophetic tyranny: because the revelation requires interpretation, and interpretation requires the Spirit’s witness in the individual heart, and that witness is not the prophet’s to give or to withhold, the believer retains an irreducible court of discernment. No prophet can override it because no prophet has access to it. The clean revelation pattern eliminates that court. The believer becomes a passive recipient of the prophet’s interpretation. The prophet’s institutional successors inherit that interpretive authority. And within two or three generations, the institutional structure is in place that allows the prophetic class to command and the flock to obey, with no internal mechanism for correction.
This is the mark of the prince of this world — not necessarily in the original prophet, but in the structural form the original prophet’s revelation creates. Any revelation that strips the believer of the work of discernment should be suspected on that ground alone, because the God of the biblical revelation has consistently designed His self-disclosure to require and develop that very work. A revelation that contradicts that design contradicts the Designer.
Conclusion: the CRF position on revelation and canon
The Christos Rigorous Framework adopts, on the basis of the foregoing six arguments, the following formal position on the question of revelation and canon:
First, the Apostolic Deposit — the canonical witness of the apostles to Christ, preserved in the sixty-six books of the Old and New Testaments — is the sufficient ground of the church’s confession.
Second, the Holy Spirit illuminates that Deposit for each believer in each generation, and the believer’s individual responsibility to listen for and respond to that illumination is the structural commitment of Christian discipleship.
Third, the multi-source, gradual, parabolic, and partial form of biblical revelation is itself doctrine — doctrine about how God discloses Himself — and any later revelation that exhibits a contrary form (single-source, immediate, crystalline, theatrically delivered) is for that reason alone suspect as to its origin, regardless of the content it claims to deliver.
Fourth, the asymmetry between the biblical form and the latter-day crystalline form is a primitive feature of the question — a tell — and is not to be explained away by appeals to dispensational difference, cultural context, or transmission failure. The form is the signature.
Fifth, sincerity is honored, fellowship is preserved across denominational lines, and Christians who order their lives around latter-day revelations are welcomed as brothers and sisters; but canon is not given to crystalline single-channel revelations regardless of how moving they may feel or how genuinely the recipient may have experienced them, because their very form contradicts the pattern of God’s actual self-disclosure across redemptive history.
Sixth, the protection against theocratic tyranny within the Christian community is the believer’s irreducible court of discernment under the witness of the Holy Spirit applied to the Apostolic Deposit. Any teaching, prophet, or institutional authority that seeks to displace that court — by offering clean revelation that bypasses interpretive responsibility — is to be resisted on structural grounds before its content is even examined.
These six propositions form the CRF position on the Restoration question. They are offered not as an attack on Joseph Smith, Denver Snuffer, or Leonard Hofheins, all of whom are or have been sincere seekers in their own ways. They are offered as the working framework by which Renaissance Ministries will proceed in fellowship with all who name Jesus as Lord while declining to receive as canon those revelations whose form bears a different signature than the form of the Author we serve.
The form is the tell. The asymmetry is primitive. The Apostolic Deposit is enough.
Renaissance Ministries | Fellowship Discussion Essay — One heart to make Christ King.