Book of Abraham

The Book of Abraham is a text originally published by Joseph Smith, Jr. and thought by many within Mormonism to be the translated writings of the patriarch Abraham. Some Latter Day Saint denominations, including The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, accept the book as part of their canon. Other denominations, such as the Community of Christ, and many Mormon scholars and individuals, consider it to be a work of inspired (or even non-inspired) fiction.

Contents

Origin

The work is based on a set of Egyptian papyri that Joseph Smith obtained in July of 1835, which he describes as "a translation of some ancient Records, that have fallen into our hands from the catacombs of Egypt. The writings of Abraham while he was in Egypt, called the Book of Abraham, written by his own hand, upon papyrus [the original text published in the Times and Seasons used the word "purported" in reference to Abraham being the author] ."(See History of the Church, vol. 2, pp. 235, 236, 348-351). An Irishman named Michael Chandler had brought a travelling exhibition of four Egyptian mummies and papyri to Kirtland, Ohio, then home of the Mormons. The papyri contained Egyptian hieroglyphics. As Prophet and Seer of the incipient Church of Latter Day Saints, Joseph Smith was given permission to look at the scrolls in the exhibit and revealed that "one of the rolls contained the writings of Abraham, another the writings of Joseph of Egypt" (History of the Church, Vol. 2, Ch. 17, p. 236. July 1835).

During the remainder of July, Smith reportedly "was continually engaged in translating an alphabet to the Book of Abraham, and arranging a grammar of the Egyptian language as practiced by the ancients." History of the Church, Vol. 2, Ch. 17, p. 238. He then proceeded to dictate a translation. The text gives an account of Abraham's life and is strikingly similar to the account given in the Book of Jasher (not to be confused with (Book of Jasher (Pseudo-Jasher)) as it relates to Abraham's relationship with his father. The text provided justification for important Mormon doctrines, including the exaltation of man, plurality of gods (which some compare to polytheism), priesthood, the "curse of Cain" upon blacks, and pre-mortal existence.

Smith originally published the facsimiles and the Book of Abraham as a serial in the Mormon newspaper Times and Seasons of Nauvoo, Illinois. Three etched facsimiles of hieroglyphics found with the mummy were also published in conjunction with the Book of Abraham, and often receive more attention than the book itself. For each of these facsimiles, Smith offered a detailed explaination or interpretation of various elements on the papyrus and fragments, and many believe that under his direction missing or destroyed portions of the fragments were restored by Smith or in order to make the image complete and aesthetically pleasing. Of the four carvings of the Book of Abraham facsimiles that were printed, most Mormon scholars believe the earliest is the most correct (the one used between 1928 and 1978 being the most incorrect and likely based on fragments that were damaged after the church purchased the documents).

The book along with the facsimiles was published by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as part of its Pearl of Great Price in Liverpool, England, in 1852; the denomination eventually canonized that book.

The papyrus scrolls

The papyri are thought to have been destroyed in a fire in Chicago in 1871. However, eleven papyrus fragments of the scroll Smith was handling were rediscovered in 1967 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City (The Deseret News, Salt Lake City, November 27, 1967). Dr. Aziz S. Atiya, a professor of Arabic Studies from the University of Utah, made the identification, which was quite secure, since the back of the papyri were pasted down to paper with "drawings of a temple and maps of the Kirtland, Ohio area." There was an affidavit from one of Joseph Smith's wives, Emma Smith, that these papyri had been in the possession of Joseph Smith. With the rediscovery of the papyri, not only were fragments of the original Egyptian text recovered, from which Joseph Smith was translating to create the Book of Abraham, but the original illustrations from which he reproduced his three "facsimiles" with his interpretations were now available to professional Egyptologists.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art de-accessioned the papyri, which were fragmentary, late (Ptolemaic period) and of very familiar Egyptian texts, thus of little value to a museum, and presented them to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The Joseph Smith Papyri Project at Brigham Young University is currently producing an authoritative three-volume edition based on the Smith papyri, recognized as a copy of the Egyptian Book of Breathings, an incantation to speed the journey of the deceased, and dated to the second or third century BC, which occupies volume 1. A second volume will set in context the contents from the Book of the Dead, also represented among the Smith papyri fragments. A third volume, written with Mormon Egyptologist John Gee, will look at the Smith papyri from an LDS perspective [1] (http://farms.byu.edu/display.php?table=insights&id=201).

Analysis and criticism

Academic Egyptologists have generally concluded that the remaining papyrus fragments comprise portions of a 1st Century A.D. Book of Breathings (or a manual for handling the "Book of Breathings" on a mummy) prepared for a deceased priest of the Egyptian god Amon, and accompanied by a portion of the Book of the Dead, which provides instructions on how the deceased should behave towards various gods to progress through the afterlife. One section of the papyrus deals with farm life near the Nile. Though not all of the papyrus Smith possessed was recovered, the Book of Breathings itself exists in many more complete papyri.

Several Mormon apologists have suggested a number of theories explaining how the remaining fragments do not preclude Smith's translation from being the writings of Abraham, and how it is that Abraham is mentioned twice in two nearly-identical recovered texts (of which the corresponding section in the Joseph Smith Papyri has been destroyed). The most popular theories include the following:

  1. The remaining papyrus fragments are not the ones Smith translated the Book of Abraham from
  2. The missing sections of the papyri are large and could have contained the text Joseph Smith based the Book of Abraham on
  3. Abraham's writings are esoterically encoded within the Egyptian funery scrolls
  4. The scrolls were merely a starting point for Smith's reconstruction of Abraham's original writings, which Smith did not have access to or had been destroyed
  5. Smith received the account by revelation, rather than a standard "translation" of text from one language to another, in a process similar to his translation of the Bible.

There is some dispute about the claim that Abraham lived in the land of the Chaldeans - many feel this is an error, although it appears in both the Book of Genesis, the Book of Jasher (not to be confused with Book of Jasher (Pseudo-Jasher)), and other traditions and manuscripts.

The account in Genesis mentions his home city as "Ur of the Chaldees," however some historians do not believe Abraham himself would have written the phrase "of the Chaldees" because they do not think the Chaldeans lived in Ur until many years after Abraham's time. Thus the phrase is often thought to be an anachronism, or an interpolation made to clarify the text once the Chaldeans did live in Ur.

Interpretations and contributions to Mormonism

The Book of Abraham contains information not found in other texts published by Joseph Smith, Jr. concerning the pre-existence of spirits and the nature of deity.

Africans and the Priesthood

Main article: Blacks and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Abraham 1:21-27 (http://scriptures.lds.org/abr/1/21-27#21) speaks of the denial of the priesthood to Canaanites and Egyptians. While the passage does not speak of Sub-Saharan Africans, it has been widely interpreted as justification for the LDS Church's practice of denying the priesthood to those of African descent from 1849 to 1978. As time passes, the former interpretation is being more widely seen as Mormon "folk doctrine" rather than a legitimate reading, even though the LDS church denied priesthood to Africans based on the documentation in the Book of Abraham. This belief was taught as full divine truth by LDS church leaders and apologists until the termination in 1978 of the practice of denying priesthood status to Blacks. The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints continues the priesthood denial practice.

Hypocephalus

Both Mormons and non-Mormons have expressed a large amount of interest in the large circular facsimile often printed with the Book of Abraham in the Pearl of Great Price. This figure is known as the Hypocephalus, and is believed by Egyptologists to have been placed under the head of the deceased in case he forgot some of the personalized detail needed to know what to say and how to behave in relation to 'gods' and trials after death (a sort of cheat sheet). These personalized instructions often accompany the Book of the Dead, but are either over-generalized in its text or passed over completely in highly individualized Books of the Dead.

External links:LDS

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