In the last 5 years, many. None related to the B.o.M. but many. That is one of the joys/frustrations with the process. They could open up Monte Verde and find all kinds of stuff immediately or they could explore for 20 years and find nothing and then as they get ready to close up a child could wander in and find something.
Therefore, I think, you can see my point.
IThink for a moment about the amount of garbage (food remnants, dead skin, hair, trash, etc.) you and say 250 of your closest neighbors generate. Now for 20 years toss it into a big hole that is open to the air so that birds and bugs and critters can get in as well. After 20 years dump 100 tons of dirt on top of it and then wait 200 years and dig it up. How much of that junk will tell you much about you and your neighbors?
One researcher finds about 100 small flat rounded sticks and determines that part of the culture was medical in nature as there are tongue depressors present. But actually your neighbors daughter loved popsicles.
It could be any amount of time.
Yep, you see my point.
I’m not claiming that archeology proves that the Book of Mormon is true, or based in fact. I believe that there will always be someone who comes up with reasonable alternative explanations for anything that is found, and that’s fine.
My problem is only with those who point to what has not been found and claiming that lack of absolute archeological proof for the Book of Mormon proves that it is untrue. Come back to me in a few hundred years, after the entire Amercian hemisphere has absolutely been covered, all archeological sites have been found, classified and accurately interpreted, and then talk to me.
In the meantime, what I see happening is that critics will claim that the Book of Mormon must be false because it mentions cement, or barley, or some other thing that hasn’t been found yet, and then cement, barley or something else GETS found, and nothing changes. the objection just disappears and the target changes.
I don’t think that finding cement cities in South America proves that the Book of Mormon is true. All it does is prove that the Book of Mormon claims that the ancient Americans used cement, and guess what—they used cement. How about that.
The objections aren’t about real archeological problems, you realize; they are about the fact that the objectors don’t believe that the Book of Mormon, or Mormonism, can possibly be true, so they will grab anything they can that seems to support that view, and trumpet it as
proof that it is not true.
…and, if one of their objections gets debunked, that’s ok–they will simply go to the next one. There is no amount of archeological evidence that would convince these people that the Book of Mormon is true. There never will be any.
That’s actually a good thing, y’know. Religious truth has to be arrived at through religious means, not physical ones.