Book of Mormon controversies
This article deals with controversies regarding the authenticity of the Book of Mormon as a translation of an ancient American sacred text. For critical analyses applying to Mormonism in general, see Controversies regarding Mormonism.The Book of Mormon was published by Joseph Smith, Jr in Palmyra, New York in 1830. Smith claimed that the book was a translation into English of ancient American prophetic writings, conveyed to Smith by the ministering of angels. Critics proffer alternate explanations for the origin of the book. Key points of the controversies over these explanations are organized below.
Smith claimed that The Book of Mormon was translated from ancient records. This is one area of controversy.
Smith's Explanation for the book's origin
Most of the controversies over the Book of Mormon are attempts to discredit or support Smith's own explanation. These controversies are discussed in this section.Source text
Physical description of source text
In the Wentworth Letter Smith wrote:
William Smith (Joseph's brother) wrote in an 1883 account:
Critics claim that Smith erred in underestimating the weight of the plates. A block of pure gold measuring 6" x 8" x 6" would weigh roughly 91 kg or 200 lbs, not the 60 lbs. Smith and his associates report. Bill McKeever believes that this discrepancy suggests that Joseph Smith fabricated his story, unaware of the density of gold.
[1]
Opponents of this criticism argue that it is unfair to relate a book of "like gold" plates of unknown thickness to a block of solid gold, as it would be much akin to comparing a stack of aluminum foil with a block of solid steel. Other cultures have kept records on metal plates, and those found to date have been extremely thin, so as to facilitate their being engraven into with a pointed utensil. For utilitarian reasons alone, to make it both easier and feasible, the plates would need to be thin enough to allow depressions to be made into them simply by applying pressure, rather than having to scratch and dig as thicker plates would necessitate. Michael R. Ash points to the discovery of objects made from tumbaga, a gold-copper alloy in South America. He writes that using this alloy would make the plates lighter and more rigid, and could account for the difference in weight. [1].
Smith kept the plates at all times concealed at least by being wrapped in a cloth like a cloak or pillow case. Only Smith and 8 others (composed of the Joseph Smith Sr. and Peter Witmer Sr. familes) officially viewed and handled the plates uncovered under non-supernatural circumstances, though critics have called the accuracy of these accounts into question. At least four others (Martin Harris, Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, and Mary "Mother" Whitmer) reported seeing the plates in supernatural or visionary experiences (see 'Investigating the Book of Mormon Witnesses' by Richard Lloyd Anderson).
Smith's parents, brothers and sisters, wife, and others reported seeing and handling some object approximately matching the description of the plates when Joseph Smith had them with him or lying idle in the course of transporting them or translating them. For example, Smith's wife, Emma Smith, reported lifting the "very heavy" plates while dusting. And Martin Harris, after hearing his wife and daughter tell of lifting them and that they were "about as much as [his daughter] could lift", went to the Smith house himself when Joseph was away and "while at Mr. Smith’s I hefted the plates, and I knew from the heft that they were lead or gold, and I knew that Joseph had not credit enough to buy so much lead” (Joel Tiffany, “Mormonism—No. II,” Tiffany’s Monthly 4 (1859): 168–69. cited in William J. Hamblin, Review of Books on the Book of Mormon, p.512).
Apologists assert that though most of the witnesses of the plates were at some time disaffected with Joseph Smith or the Church, none of them recanted their statements about their experience with the plates.
Critics claim that Smith's family and associates were mistaken in identifying the object they saw, lifted, and riffed through as ancient gold plates. They also point out the unstable aspects of the character of Martin Harris.
One of the controversial issues is whether there is archaeological evidence for the Book of Mormon.
The Book of Mormon claims to be written by real people who lived in a real place on "this [the American] continent". Apologists find numerous details in the current archaeological body of knowledge that appear to plausibly validate Book of Mormon assertions. Critics find numerous details in the Book of Mormon that appear to be implausible when weighed against the current archeological body of knowledge. Both apologists and critics have posed at least some questions or hypotheses that have yet to be fully answered.
Currently most Mormon apologists do not place much emphasis on archaeological evidences (and the Church officially places none) for at least the following reasons:
Examination of the source text
Archaeology
State of Archeological Research
Only a small percentage of known archeological sites in the Americas have been fairly excavated. While there is a great deal of archeological data (as well as historic accounts) of ancient Aztec city of Tenochtitlan over which Mexico City was been built, many other ancient cities of the Americas have had little serious excavation done on them. (Brigham Young University has sponsored a number of archeological excavations in Mesoamerica.) Although much more is certainly yet to be uncovered, archaeology has provided a large amount of data on the lives, customs, technology, etc. of the ancient American peoples. A prominent Mesoamerican archaeologist, Michael Coe of Yale University, addressed the state of Mesoamerican archeology in regards to The Book of Mormon in 1973:
Much of the literature of the Pre-Columbian Maya was deliberately destroyed by the Spanish when they conquered the region in the 1500s. On this point, Michael Coe noted:
- "[O]ur knowledge of ancient Maya thought must represent only a tiny fraction of the whole picture, for of the thousands of books in which the full extent of their learning and ritual was recorded, only four have survived to modern times (as though all that posterity knew of ourselves were to be based upon three prayer books and Pilgrim's Progress)." (Michael D. Coe, The Maya, London: Thames and Hudson, 4th ed., 1987, p. 161.)
(The above paragraph needs to be re-written, providing different examples as horses and swords are both found in the pre-columbian Americas - see http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/05/0511_ancienthorses.html and sword. Also, historian Thomas E. Sheridan (who is not Mormon), in his book Arizona: A History cites evidence to prove that horses, camels and relatives to elephants were part of the North American landscape in Pre-Columbian America. Better evidence may be needed, but modern Mormon scholars provided some for many of the more common rebuttals such as the above mentioned.)
The Book of Mormon affirms that there were pre-Columbian peoples that were literate, spoke knowledge of Old World languages, and possessed Old World derived writing systems. (E.g. 1 Nephi 13:23 et. seq.) They smelted metal and made tools and weapons of iron, steel, and brass. (E.g. Ether 7:9, 10:23) They owned domesticated horses and cattle. They possessed chariots. (E.g. Alma 18:9-12) The people covered the entire land. These archeological implications and scores of others found in the Book of Mormon, if true, predict that certain discoveries will be made in the pre-Columbian archaeological record. But critics assert that no such discovery has yet been made, and that some of what is currently known contradicts Book of Mormon claims.
See also:
Quetzalcoatl Legends
The ancient Mesoamerican legend of Quetzalcoatl, according to some versions as "the bearded white god", is interpreted by some Latter-day Saint apologists as an altered depiction of the actual visit of Jesus Christ to the Americas referred to in the Book of Mormon. Most students of ancient Mesoamerica do not accept this claim, for at least two of the following reasons: Quetzalcoatl the Feathered Serpent deity is depicted in Mesoamerican art several centuries before Jesus. The King Quetzalcoatl who promised to return to Mexico dated almost 1,000 years after the life of Jesus. [1]. Apologists rebut that the visitation of Jesus was incorporated into some of the various, exisiting legends of Quetzalcoatl.
See also:
The Kinderhook Plates
A third area of controversy centers on the language of the Book of Mormon.
More sophisticated Mormon apologists now focus on evidence with respect to The Book of Mormon authenticity as follows: There are many things in The Book of Mormon which should not be there if it was written by Joseph Smith or anyone else in the 1830s. Both apologists and critics continue to discuss the Book of Mormon in the background of the early 19th century vs. as an ancient text.
These kinds of evidences approach the book as an old world document springing from the well-documented old world cultures of the Jews, Egyptians, Arabs, etc. Many of the geographical, political, cultural and religious allusions in the Book of Mormon, (including proper names, quotations of texts undiscovered at the time, technology, idioms, poetic style, etc), were not known at the time of Joseph Smith. Doctrinally, the Book of Mormon, it is claimed, is more similar to the Ante-Nicene Fathers, some Gnostic sects and the Dead Sea scrolls, as well as other coptic writings, few of which were available (or popular) at the time.
The critics, on the other hand, have a long list of problem items in the same areas: proper names, anachronisms, quotations of texts that did not exist until after the story takes place (notably the KJV and Shakespeare), and the prevelance of religious and political sentiment of the 1830s. Critics point out further that Mormon apologists are too quick to find parallels between ancient cultures and Book of Mormon cultures.
Some Latter-day Saint apologists have offered various possible explanations based on both archaeology (recent finds have shown some technologies existed earlier than previously thought) and linguistics that some words like "horses" which presumably did not exist in North America in the period of the text actually refer to other words such as "tapirs", or that chariots in the Book of Mormon may have been carried vehicles, rather than drawn. (Alma 18:10-12)
The Book of Mormon and the Bible have whole chapters in common. Critics argue Smith plagiarized them from the King James Version (KJV) of the Bible. The Book of Mormon even includes "clarifying words" added to the KJV in AD 1611. These words were not in the original manuscripts. If the purpose were for clarification, critics ask, why was the Book of Mormon translated in an archaic form of English? LDS scholars often point out that of the 400+ verses quoted from the KJV, over half differ in some way from the KJV and some are more similar to translations of the Septuagint than the KJV. Critics argue that Smith could have made these changes in an attempt to show he was not plagerizing.
Chiasmus is one of several types of poetic style apologists point to in the Book of Mormon.
Stylometry or Wordprinting, a sophisticated, though not undisputed statistical analysis developed at UC Berkeley by both LDS and non-LDS scholars to determine authorship of various texts such as some of the Federalist Papers, has been used on the Book of Mormon. Apologists point out that results of the test indicate that it was written by multiple authors, and also excluded Joseph Smith, Samuel Spaulding, and known associates as authors.
The book itself repeatedly refers to the authoring and abridgement process, which is quite complex. (See http://danieljordi.halfstrong.com/mormon/reverse_engineering_the_bom.htm )
Another controversial issue is whether there is DNA evidence that modern American Indians are descendants of the Hebrews as implied by the Book of Mormon.
As with other potential sources of evidence, data on comparisons of genetic markers in the DNA of different races is in its infancy. Recent evidence on whether some native americans are genetically linked to old world races currently indicates that most genetic traits and genes of modern Jews are not found in Native Americans, although some mitochondrial DNA analysis shows that others are found in both Israel and Native Americans
The most controversial of these studies was published in the late 2002 by anthropologist Thomas W. Murphy. This subject is currently under extensive discussion. Also see Lamanites.
External Links:
(Pro) http://www.jefflindsay.com/LDSFAQ/DNA.shtml
(Neutral)http://www.religioustolerance.org/lds_migr1.htm
(Con)http://www.ericbarger.com/mormon.dna.htm
Critics point to changes since first publication and charge the Book is inconsistent with Mormon doctrine.
There have been at least 3,913 changes to the text of the Book of Mormon between 1830 and the mid-1970's [1]. Most of these were changes in punctuation (the original manuscript had no punctuation, and was added by the printer), but some of these changes affect interpretation of the text.
This is more of a theological issue since changes to the text are not relevant to the question of authenticity in the sense of is The Book of Mormon an ancient document. Some critics charge that this is, at worst, an issue of either is The Book of Mormon inspired by God or is the Church changing its doctrines or meaning of the text in the book. They also point to the changes as evidence of re-writing history and practices. LDS scholars, however, claim that many of the changes to text were from pre-publication manuscripts and early edits by Joseph Smith, as stated in the introduction of the current edition (see below) of the Book of Mormon. This statement conveys the meaning there may have been some errors made by the transcriber and printer when the typeset was cast for the printing of the book. Other possible reason for changes, according to these scholars, were made to bring the book into conformity with current language usage, replacing words that are no longer used with their modern English counterpart, as done in other religious books such as the King James Version of the Bible that is used by the Mormon church.
According to the Church the original translation was done by placing two "seer stones" (known as the Urimm and Thummim) in bows attached to a breast plate, Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon from gold plates "one character at a time." Smith dictated the interpretation to Oliver Cowdery, who would repeat it to Smith. According to Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon is "the most correct of any book on earth." After translating the plates, he said "These plates have been revealed by the power of God, and they have been translated by the power of God. The translation of them which you have seen is correct."
Critics argue the translation process does not allow for even one error, as a) Smith called it the most correct book and b) the translation was directed by God.
An example of a change - after the church reported that black men would be permitted to enter the priesthood, on June 9, 1978, a change was made in the 1981 printing of the Book of Mormon. In 20 Nephi 30:6, which formerly said:
Lists of the changes since the first printing can be found numerous places online, and Project Gutenberg has the text of an early edition which can be compared with current editions.
The church considers this to be an invalid criticism, explaining that the church's doctrines are established and sustained by repeated affirmation by its leaders, not by isolated passages of scripture. The 1981 edition of the Book of Mormon includes this notice:
Critics charge the Book of Mormon is inconsistent with Mormon doctrine. Though called "the fullness of the everlasting gospel," it does not dictate important doctrines including polygamy, humanity of God, baptism for dead, and preexistence. Believers in the Book of Mormon, however, point to a statement made by Joseph Smith, to the effect that the only real doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are Faith, Repentance, and Baptism, and that all other doctrines and practices are but appendages to those tenets. They comment that no official statement on the humanity of God has been been made since it is unrelated to those 3 things; that no mention is made of plural marriage since it is not a doctrine but a practice, rarely entered into and then only by commandment of God; that Baptism for the Dead is included in the doctrine of Baptism; and that knowledge of the preexistence has been given by divine revelation in our day, and increases our knowledge and understanding of Our Heavenly Father, but may not be included in the Book of Mormon precisely because our Salvation is not contingent upon that knowledge.
The following passages appear to conflict with Mormon doctrines, when taken literally:
Critics have offered various alternate explanations for the origin of The Book of Mormon.
The Bat Creek Cave Stone
Linguistics
Word Usage
Common passages
Chiasmus
Stylometry/Wordprinting
DNA
Treatment by contemporary Mormons
One problem critics find with the Book of Mormon is its light treatment by its supposed primary proponent, the LDS Church. They reason that the LDS Church uses the Book of Mormon as a mere bait and switch tool for making converts.Changes Since First Publication
The word white was replaced with the word pure. Such textual changes to the Book of Mormon are presented by critics as proof of changing doctrines within the church, or of the imperfection of the book as a scriptural foundation.
The change from "white" to "pure" was first made in an 1840 edition edited by Joseph Smith, but the change wasn't perpetuated in later editions until 1981.Inconsistent with Mormon doctrine
Alternate explanations for the origin of the book
Smith as Author
Smith wrote, not translated, the book himself.
Smith Colleague as Author
Someone else (Sidney Rigdon or some close friend of Smith) wrote the book and allowed Smith to take credit for it.
Smith as Plagiarist
Smith plagiarised the book either: