When I write about the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding, I hope for a day in which we have LDS scholars who readily acknowledge and accommodate multiple working hypotheses.
A day in which LDS scholars openly embrace the idea of laying out all the facts for everyone to see, and then comparing the various assumptions, inferences, and theories so that every person can make informed decisions, without being expected (or required) to delegate their gospel study to the credentialed class.
But we still face obstacles to that ideal future. Today we'll discuss some reasons why.
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Yesterday I had a fun conversation with Steve Pynakker at Mormon Book Reviews. We discussed Moroni's America 2.0, Royal Skousen's Part 7, the Jonathan Edwards annotation of the Book of Mormon, and much more.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5tV3cZqyEw
There are links in the description for more information on all those topics.
Enjoy!
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Last night Ward Radio sponsored a debate: "MesoAmerican vs. Heartlander Debate (feat. Rod Meldrum and Luke Hanson!)."
We happened to be in Utah so I attended.
The audio wasn't great, unfortunately.
Both sides made the predictable points. Luke was well-prepared (and apparently well coached), but it was a little surreal watching him make the same old arguments for M2C.
If I get time I'll go through the entire debate in more detail, but here are some key points, all in the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding.
Luke started off listing common attributes of human society that he said were in the Book of Mormon and in Mesoamerica, but, according to him, were not in North America during Book of Mormon times, including:
cities
monetary system
written language
wars
My overall point about this line of reasoning is that these features are ubiquitous among human societies around the world and throughout time. It makes no sense to cite Mayan civilization as evidence of the Book of Mormon, any more than it would to cite Chinese or Cambodian civilization.
(Sure, the Mayans lived in the western hemisphere, but so did lots of other cultures. Besides, the text never mentions America so we have to rely on the teachings of the prophets, but all of Joseph's successors rely on what Joseph and Oliver taught, and they both taught Cumorah was in New York, but that's a point we've discussed many times.)
While the Book of Mormon mentions these common attributes of human civilization, it is also specific about only a few things, such as:
- what language they had (Hebrew and reformed Egyptian) and
- the size of their armies (ranging from a few thousand to the largest enumerated Nephite army of 42,000 after they had gathered in all their people (Mormon 2:7).
People still debate over how the monetary system worked in the real world, and no one knows how big or extensive any of the cities were.
But people make lots of assumptions. So let's separate known facts from assumptions.
Written language. Rod agreed the Mayans had a written language, but pointed out that it was the wrong language. That is obvious to everyone who engages in this conversation. It's also obvious that from the beginning (Enos) to the end (Moroni), the Lamanites were intent on destroying the written records of the Nephites. It was specifically to prevent the Lamanites from destroying all the records that Mormon moved the records from Shim to Cumorah.
IOW, if we believe the text, the only evidence of written language among the Nephites that we could expect to exist are the records in that repository in Cumorah. And in fact, these are the very records that Oliver Cowdery reported seeing, as he related to David Whitmer, Brigham Young, and others.
The M2C argument about language has two fun aspects:
(i) M2Cers deny that Oliver (and Joseph) ever saw any repository of records in Cumorah. They claim Oliver either lied about it or related a vision he had of a repository in southern Mexico, a vision he had multiple times and described as a physical experience.
(ii) M2Cers claim that Mayan glyphs are the true language of the Book of Mormon and that the references to Hebrew and reformed Egyptian are either incorrect or restricted to the elite class of Nephites. That's why FARMS used the Mayan glyph in their logo and why John Sorenson titled his book Mormon's Codex with Mayan artwork right on the cover.
FARMS' Mayan logo used by Book of Mormon Central |
[BTW, it's fun to see this FARMS Mayan logo on the spine of Royal Skousen's books about the Text of the Book of Mormon, including the one published within the last month.]
The M2Cers even persuaded the Church to put the Mayan glyphs on Temple Square!
"Two Cumorahs" on display at the visitors center on Temple Square |
Cities. Luke kept coming back to "cities," but he never defined what is a city and Rod didn't ask, that I remember or heard. (As I said, the audio was poor and they were talking over one another often.)
Regarding cities, no city is mentioned in the text until the book of Alma, and the text gives us the population and extent of no city.
I've pointed out before that it's useful to compare the Book of Mormon to Old Testament cities:
The Old Testament uses two words for “city” (eer and kiriah ) and one for “village” (chatsair ). The Old Testament differentiation seems to be based not on size primarily, but on the presence or absence of a defense wall. Cities had walls, while villages were unwalled. Villages, being unwalled, were usually smaller than cities, but that was not always the case.
Size of cities. Ancient cities tended to be much smaller in both size and population than our typical understanding of a city. The oldest walled city at Jericho mentioned above covered less than ten acres....
Closely related to the area of a town is its population. Recent population projections based on the density of cities from cultures similar to those of biblical times along with a count of the number of house units found in excavations suggest that most cities could support 160-200 persons per acre. Thus Shechem might have had a population of 2,000 to 2,500 during the Old Testament period...
https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/hbd/c/cities-and-urban-life.html
The text never describes the cities in detail, but the only mention in the entire Book of Mormon of constructing anything with stone is building walls:
8 Yea, he had been strengthening the armies of the Nephites, and erecting small forts, or places of resort; throwing up banks of earth round about to enclose his armies, and also building walls of stone to encircle them about, round about their cities and the borders of their lands; yea, all round about the land. (Alma 48:8)
Scripture Central's "ScripturePlus" app |
The Church does not take a position on the specific geographic locations of Book of Mormon events in the ancient Americas....
Individuals may have their own opinions regarding Book of Mormon geography and other such matters about which the Lord has not spoken. However, the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles urge leaders and members not to advocate those personal theories in any setting or manner that would imply either prophetic or Church support for those theories. All parties should strive to avoid contention on these matters.
Brant Gardner: "The Church’s essay on the translation of the Book of Mormon is as close to canonical as the official Church gets."
All parties should strive to avoid contention on these matters.
A day in which LDS scholars openly embrace the idea of laying out all the facts for everyone to see, and then comparing the various assumptions, inferences, and theories so that every person can make informed decisions, without being expected (or required) to delegate their gospel study to the credentialed class.