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FightingFat
Guest
No, it seems clearly evasive to be honest. My reading (and I assert I have tried to be as objective as possible) leads me to four obvious conclusionsLike I said, part of the controversy is over whether the papyri found were specifically the ones that JS claimed contained the Book of Abraham. The eyewitness accounts militate against this conclusion, and if so, don’t you think the translation of the fragments that were found is beside the point?
(1) the papyri which came to public attention in 1967 (color photographs of which are reproduced in the book) are indisputably those which Joseph had in his possession when he produced the Book of Abraham,
(2) Joseph Smith did purport that the Book of Abraham was a translation from one of these papyrus scrolls,
(3) the scrolls are now known to date from around the time of Christ, some 2,000 years after the time of Abraham, and
(4) the scrolls have been identified by Egyptologists — including LDS scholars — as common, pagan Egyptian burial documents, that do not mention Abraham and have no connection to the contents of the Book of Abraham in the Pearl of Great Price.
You could hypothesise this or that about it, but if you apply Occams razor, it seems impossible that the Book of Abraham was translated from these scrolls.
Can you point me to some?I think the argument you remember was presented as one possible solution–not the only one, or even the best. In any case, there is quite a bit of evidence that the Book of Abraham is based on authentic ancient traditions about the life of Abraham that are not included in the Bible.
Does it? I was not aware of this, can you explain in a little more detail?Also, it turns out that all three vignettes included with the Book of Abraham have ancient connections with Abraham traditions.
Which is the case with so many Mormon ideas and teachings. This is true of issues like the fact that there is no credible evidence that a small band of migrating Israelites populated the Americas with millions of people, generated an iron-age culture, built many buildings, and fought massive wars with thousands of casualties. To the contrary, for nearly 100 years archaeologists, biologists and linguists have presented evidence that: “physical similarities, cultural and linguistic ties and archeological and molecular data all indicate a Siberian/Asiatic origin for Native Americans, not a Hebrew one.”So, while there are tough problems for LDS to deal with, there is something really odd going on here that is difficult to explain away. There is enough there that I feel very comfortable putting the question on the shelf and seeing how the research goes.
BDawg
In addition, DNA studies used to trace the ancestry of Native American peoples support the conclusions of scientists in other fields and together the evidence raises serious questions about the veracity of the Book of Mormon and the historical and theological authenticity of the Mormon faith in general.
If one studies the Bible, one finds consistant historical evidence for it’s contents as well as real prophecy and fullfillment. I am unable to draw a parallel with the Book of Mormon. There are ‘get out’ clauses used by Mormon appologists, which usually amount to a ‘wait and see’ and ‘we don’t have all the answers’ type of philosophy, but there are so many huge gaps…Does it not seem more likely that it did not happen and JS plagarised an earlier work of fiction as has been documented?
One more issue. If God sent his beloved son to suffer and die for all mankind, and the result of that chain of events was the foundation of the Church on earth, why would he desert that Church, contradicting what he had said about it, why would he found it, knowing it would fail, and desert it’s billion followers, and shift the whole shebang to the USA? Why not reveal his divine will to a Pope, and bring his Church back into line? Would he not see the present dicotomy? Does he feel that it is beneficial to have different people clinging to different understandings of his word?