It’s been several months since I last posted here. I think now I remember why.
The DNA issue is a lot more complicated than the critics make it seem. It’s not LEGOS. I have tried to understand this topic more fully, and it’s not easy for me. I think that it’s prett pointless to argue this unless we really know something significant about genetics. It seems that most of us here are pretty ignorant. I know I am. So unfortunately, when I hear an anti-Mormon say, “DNA disproves the Book of Mormon” and then see a BYU professor of genetic studies write a book on how that statement is probably false, I must say that it simply goes over my head. I really cannot draw a conclusion myself since I know slim to nothing about DNA. So it’s all a moot point for me. Some of you will be thinking that I’m just using an excuse to not have to deal with it. That, though, is false; I have tried to understand it, and I do, but only on a superficial level, which doesn’t help the detailed analysis much. Or you may think that I should study it so that I can justify my faith. Well, sorry, but I’d rather get a career in linguistics rather than biology. You can only do so much schooling, you know, before you run out of money. The topic is simply more complex than you believe. A blanket statement like, “DNA shows that the Book of Mormon is false” seems a bit over-simplified, doesn’t it?
Here is my take on it, in the most basic language. The critics say that since many Indians have been shown to have certain modern genetic markers on the Y-chromosone, as compared to those of modern Asia, then the Americans must be Asians, not Hebrews – and thus is the Book of Mormon theorom of American ancestry proven false. On the other side, the argument is that if the Asians crossed the strait 50,000 years ago then why is their modern DNA similar to modern Native American DNA? With a 50,000 year deviation in both parties, that’s a little strange. The fact is that we don’t know as much as we’d like about this field. The science is always changing, and we’re constantly re-evaluating what we know. Getetic markers can get lost over time. It has happened. In Iceland there were DNA studies done that showed that most people descended from two people after 150 years, even though there are historical records that say otherwise. This doesn’t mean that the tests were incorrect, but that we don’t know as much about this as the critics make us think. It’s a very new science. Anyway, some good links on this:
farms.byu.edu/publications/dna/ButlerBofMandDNA_Feb2006.php
farms.byu.edu/multimedia/viewmovie.php?id=1
fairlds.org/apol/ai195.html
The reason we LDS refer to the Bible in cases like this is because, while we do indeed believe in it, we are pointing out a double standard, which is a logical fallacy. We know which position we take, which favors both BoM and Bible; we are trying to show that the approach the critics take to the BoM (negative, false) also must apply to the Bible, logically.