dianaiad:
Actually, no. There is no such Spaulding manuscript. That ‘missing’ manuscript was FOUND, and it bears very little resemblance to the Book of Mormon. The only reason there is any speculation that a second Spaulding manuscript exists is BECAUSE this one was found and has been proven to bear little resemblance to the Book of Mormon. There is absolutely no evidence of there having been more than one–the one we know about and doesn’t prove your point at all.
Then the Spaulding manuscript you read and the one I read must be different. The similarities are quite apparent.
Given that you claim that the one you read had gold plates in it, I have to conclude that the one you read was not the only Spaulding manuscript in existance…the one that I read. If you are curious for yourself, you can find the thing
here.
There is absolutely no comparison in style, in fact, in plot, in names…nothing at all except that the author claims to have found the records after lifting a rock. Unfortunately, even that is different: Spaulding claims to actually have uncovered a cave, and after entering it THEN finds the manuscripts under another rock. Joseph Smith claimed simply to have been led to a place (not a cave) where there was a stone box covered with a stone, which he lifted with a lever.
Of course, that detail was the same…the Spaulding character lifted HIS first stone with a lever, too. How very unusual to be certain–to have both characters lift a heavy stone with a lever. Of course, there is precious little in common between the two accounts after that; Spaulding tells the story of a Constantine era Roman soldier (who happened to be Christian) getting shipwrecked in the Americas while on his way to Britain, who meets (and describes) the natives if this land in very uncomplimentary and florid language, and then there is the Book of Mormon, which isn’t anything even close to that.
In fact, mentioning the Spaulding manuscript is a sure sign of anti-Mormon idiocy: it is only considered a viable option by the sort of folks who believe that Jack Chick has the truth about Catholicism.
You might want to get your own facts str8.
Ah, my friend…I have. I will also note that I’m the only one who has actually posted references and proof for what I have said. You simply make weird, wild and inaccurate claims of dubious validity.
dianaiad:
That is the most assinine thing I have ever heard. There is nothing in any account of the story of Hirum Abiff that comes close to this, and frankly, you are exposing your sources a little too much. You might want to go do a little fact checking.
I don’t have to. I did my homework. Unfortunately, it is quite apparent you haven’t.
Actually, I’m the only one in this discussion who has actually provided the references, the links, and the accurate information…such as the one disproving your assinine claim that the Spaulding book makes the claim that it’s story came from gold plates. This alone proves that you did NOT do your homework.
And, like I pointed out previously, which you choose to unfortunately ignore, the oldest biblical manuscripts we have date immediately before 325 AD. The Bible is the most prolific ancient text that we have.
Irrelevant. I have no argument against the Bible having been around a long time, y’know. I’m also going to remind you that I too believe in the miracles described therein. My point to you is that there is no archeological or scientific proof that those miracles actually happened as described.
The fact that these stories have been around awhile is NOT proof of their truth, y’know. If it were, we’d have a few problems, because other stories have been around a lot longer…and we don’t believe THEM.
The book of mormon doesn’t have a valid ancient history that can be physically seen, handled, or read.
You are confusing the book with what it contains. Don’t do that.
It is a product of 19th century America and has no linguistic similarities to the ancient cultures from which the bible sprung.
Oh, dear.
I take it that you have never heard of chiasmus?
ALL scholars will side with me on this.
No, actually, they don’t.
Besides, and again, we now know that NO native-American tribe has any connection to a “lost tribe” of Israel, not even DNA.
That’s true…so far. However, in spite of what the early Mormons fervently believed, the book itself never claimed that the people it talked about were the sole progenitors of all the peoples of the new world. In fact, quite the opposite; each one of the groups of people in the Book of Mormon that came TO the New World met folks who were already there…and there is quite a point in it of mentioning that eventually those folks were pretty much wiped out. What this means is…nothing much, except that it neither proves nor disproves the book.
The book of mormon is a disproved book
No more than the miracles and religious events contained in the bible are disproved, peary.
…and is totally irrelevent to Christians, and especially to Catholic Christians who have the fullness of Faith through the Church that Christ founded, which is the Catholic Church.
It may well be irrelevent to Catholics (though if it is true how can it be irrelevent to anybody?)
But it is not irrelevent to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which, because Jesus Christ IS at the base and heart of our faith, is Christian by definition.
Whether you like it or not.