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Review of Books on the Book of Mormon 1989 2011 Volume 12 Number 2 Article 7 2000 Book of Mormon Scholar's Digest Terry Szink Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/msr BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Szink, Terry (2000) "Book of Mormon Scholar's Digest," Review of Books on the Book of Mormon 1989 2011: Vol. 12 : No. 2, Article 7. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/msr/vol12/iss2/7 This Book of Mormon is brought to you for free and open access by the All Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Review of Books on the Book of Mormon 1989 2011 by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact scholarsarchive@byu.edu, ellen_amatangelo@byu.edu.

Title Author(s) Reference ISSN Abstract Book of Mormon Scholar s Digest Terrence Szink FARMS Review of Books 12/2 (2000): 45 50. 1099-9450 (print), 2168-3123 (online) Review of Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited: The Evidence for Ancient Origins (1997), edited by Noel B. Reynolds.

BOOK OF MORMON SCHOLAR'S DIGEST Terry Szink The first volume on Book of Mormot! Authorship was published in 1982 (reprinted in 1996) and served as a kind of Book of Mormon research digest. It gathered some of the best articles dealing with Book of Mormon authorship from a variety of fields. The current volume repeats this effort. in some cases updating the topics treated in the first volume and in others presenting new areas of research that have been developed since 1982. Who wrote the Book of Mormon? This might very well be the most significant question asked about Mormonism. l Joseph Smith said that the Book of Mormon was the keystone of OUT religion. Countless missionaries have used the Book of Mormon as a tool. trusting in the logic that if the Book of Mormon is true. then Joseph Smith must have been a prophet of God. and if he was a prophet, then the church he established must be true. Furthermore. the Book of Mormon comes with a divine promise that God wiu reveal the I. Recently Mark D. Thomas has written,., believe that the origin of the Book of Mormon is not the most important question that it compels us to ask. The real question is: ' Is the Book of Mormon worth reading?'~ Digging in Cumorah (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1999). 1-2., suggest that if the answer to the question of authorship is that Review of Noel B. Reynolds. ed. Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited: The Evidence for Ancient Origins. Provo, Utah: FARMS, 1997.574 pp., with index. $19.95.

46 FARMS REVIEW OF BOOKS 12/2 (2000) truthfulness of thc book to the si ncere reader who asks in faith (see Moroni 10:3-5). Certainly, a testimony of the Book of Mormon ca n best be obtained by means of the Spirit. The ed itor and authors of this book understand this issue. Noel B. Reynolds writes: "The contributors to this volume are not trying to 'prove' the authenticity of the Book of Mo rmon. We understand from personal experience that knowledge of the truthfuln ess of the Book of Mormon is a spiritual and personal matter" (p. 3). Melvin 1. Thorne adds: I believe that the Lord does not intend the Book of Mormon to be provable intellectually, and I think that most scholars who work in th is field would agree... T hese scholars assu me th at the book is what it says it is, and the purpose of their research is not primarily to support that assumption but to gain greater understanding of the meaning and nature of the book. While the scholarly evidence for the authenticity of the book is also val ua ble to the honest inquirer, it fu nctions chiefl y as an invitation to take the book seriously and to seek primary, personal evidence-the witness of the Spirit. (pp. 192-93) That being the case, is there a need to examine the Book of Mormon's autho rship in the cold light of scholarsh ip? T he editor presents three reasons for the publication of this book: (I) to refute fa lse information regarding the Book of Mormon prese nted by its critics, (2) to summarize recent findings about the authorship of the Book of Mormon for those who already believe it, and perhaps most it was written 3ndentl y, then il is certainly worth reading. In fact, if the book was produced in Ihe w3y Joseph Smith cl3imed, then il is noi just uworth re.!ding" but should lead to 3 change in belief and behavior-something more than 3 simple intellectual 3Cknowledgment of the hook. louis Midgley explains why, in the "jew of most believing L3tter-d3Y Saints, the issue of 3uthorship is not subject to compromise (sec below). Thom3s also states th3( because of the authorship deb3te the message of the book has been ignored. He has apparently ignored the myri3d of books that dea l with the book's mess3ge (inviting readns to come unto Christ) exclusively, perhaps because they have been written by people who have already answered thc 3uthorship question for themselves and h3\'e reached 3 co ncl usion different than hi s.

REYNOLDS, BOOK OF MORMON AUTHORSHIP REVISITED (SZINK) 47 important, (3) to assure those seeking to discover the truth about the Book of Mormon that reputable scholars take its content seriously and affirm evidence for its origins as explained by Joseph Smith. To these reasons I would like to add a fourth-because study of the Book of Mormon is both interesting and fun. The editor has gathered articles that address the question of au~ thorship from a number of disciplines and organized them into four sections, each with an introduction. Part 1 deals with the evidence, both eyewitness and textual, of the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. Richard L. Bushman's "The Recovery of the Book of Mormon" reviews the first~person accounts of the recovery of the plates and their translation recorded by those who were close to Joseph Smith. He notes that critics who argue exclusively for nineteenth-century sources for the origin of the Book of Mormon fail to examine seri~ ously the testimonies of those who witnessed its coming forth. When the accounts of Joseph Smith's contemporaries are examined, the re~ ports add a wealth of detail that fleshes out and corroborates his story. In "Personal Writings of the Book of Mormon Witnesses," Richard L. Anderson notes that the first~ and secondhand reports of the testimonies of the eleven witnesses of the gold plates "are so numerous that they could fiu volumes" (p. 40). He gives a brief history of six of these witnesses and includes selections of their first-person testimonies. In my opinion. the testimonies of the eleven witnesses cause serious problems for Book of Mormon critics. I have never seen any successful response to these problems. Royal Skousen examines the eyewitness accounts of the translation of the Book of Mormon in his chapter. "Translating the Book of Mormon: Evidence from the Original Transcript." I found this chapter particularly interesting. Skousen demonstrates that the types of errors and corrections in these manuscripts support. among other concepts. the ideas that Joseph Smith used the interpreters to translate the Book of Mormon, that there was tight although not ironclad control over the text, and that Joseph worked with passages of at least twenty to thirty words at a time.

48 FARMS REVIEW Of BOOKS 1212 (2000) Part 2 examines the logi cal structure of the authorship issues. I enjoyed Noel Reynolds's introduction to this section-he points out that critics often mistakenly assume that the methodological rule that science is limited to the observation of natural phenomena means that supernatural events do not exist. In chapter 5, Lou is C. Midgley presents a brief history of the arguments against the ancient o rigins of the Book of Mormon from ea rly critics such as Abner Cole and Alexander Campbell to the socalled "new Mormon historians," some of whom question the historicity of the book while acknowledging that it may have some spiritual value. He points out that so me of the current views in this area are recycled versions of ideas that have been previously discredited and also explains clearly why there can be no compromise or middle ground regarding this issue. In "Is the Book of Mormon True? NOles on the Debate," Daniel C. Peterson answers a number of arguments that critics of the book have raised against it. What I find most interesting in this chapter is that in most cases Lauer-day Saint scholars had resolved these issues previously. That the critics continue to raise these arguments even though they have been answered is evidence that they are not so concerned with seeking truth as they are interested in destroying faith. Melvin J. Thorne restates in chapter 7 the claim often presented by Hugh W. Nibley that Joseph Smith, given his limited education and background, could not have produced the Book of Mormon because of its complexities. The third section proposes that we let the text speak fo r itself. Six chapters in this section examine the text from differing points of view. In chapter 8, "What Does Chiasmus in the Book of Mormon Prove?" John W. Welch, the pioneer of the study of chiasmus in the Book of Mormon, discusses what the presence of that literary device means. For those like myself who have been enthralled with the structure of chiasmus, this essay not only provides fascinating in sight into what chiasmus means but points toward possibilities for further research in this area. The first Book of Mormon Authorship included a chapter on wordprint studies of the Book of Mormon, using distributional analysis of noncontextual words to determine authorship. In "On Verifying

REYNOWS. BOOK OF MORMON AUTHORSHIP REVISITED (SZINK) 49 Wordprint Studies," John L. Hil ton provides an update of research in this area. He explains what wordprint studies are and how they work and briefly reviews their application to the Book of Mormon. He then applies a number of new techniques to two sections of the Book of Mormon (those authored by Nephi and Alma) and shows that the same person could not have written these two sections. Responding to charges that the Book of Mormon presents an unrealistic pictu re of population sizes, James E. Smith presents a well~reasoned examination of the data in "How Many Nephites? The Book of Mormon at the Bar of Demography" and concludes that although the book docs not provide enough information to answer all questions about demography, the picture it does present "is a realistic one" (p. 287). Donald W. Parry points out in "Power through Repetition: The Dynamics of Book of Mormon Parallelism" that chiasmus is not the only literary structure in the Book of Mormon. He illustrates the richness and variety of poetic structure in the text. In "The Voice of an Angel," John A. Tvedtnes examines various accounts of Alma's visions of an angel. He shows that each account adds new layers of meaning in a masterful presentation. Chapter 13, "The Narrative of Zosimus (History of the Rechabites) and the Book of Mormon," is an enlargement of an article published by John W. Welch in 1982 that d raws comparisons between Lehi's vision of the tree of life and that of Zosimus, an ancient narrative deating with the Rechabites, a clan or guild mentioned in Jeremiah. Welch offers several possible explanations for the parallels. Part 4 places the Book of Mormon in the real world. These studies examine the geographical and cultural evidence in the Book of Mormon and compa re it with modern lands generally thought to match the locations where Book of Mormon events took place. Noel Reynolds summarizes the recent work of various Latter-day Saints on Lehi's journey through the Arabian Peninsula. He points out that the details presented in the Book of Mormon match the geography in ways that Joseph Smith could not have possibly known. The longest chapter, "The Book of Mormon as a Mesoamerican Record," is also one of the most interesting. In this very detailed chapter, John L. So renson presents more than sixty similarities

50 FARMS REVIEW Of BOOKS J 212 (2000 ) between the culture port rayed in the Book of Mormon and that of Mesoamerica. I particularly enjoyed the epilogue in which the author presents the story of a Mesoamerican document whose validity was questioned by a number of scholars because of its unusual manner of discovery. Michael Coe defended the document, arguing that before rejecting it, it should be thoroughly exa mined and all the facts co n sidered. So renson points out the irony in Cae's treatment of the Book of Mormon, explaining that he is guil ty of dealing with it in the same way he accused the scholars of treating the disputed document. The final chapter is a reprint of William Hamblin's "The Importance of Warfare in Book of Mormon Studies," which first appeared in the 1990 FARMS publication Warfare ill the Book of Mormall. Hamblin summarizes the content of that volume. If there is a criticism of this book, it is that not eve ry article presen ts new, cutting-edge research. Of the 543 pages, 94 have been previously published. Those looking for the latest work on the Book of Mormon need to understand this. That said, this volume is an excellent overview of a number of different areas of research for those who may not be familiar with th em. I believe a need exists for this type of publication periodically, perhaps every ten to fifteen years, to provide an update to the evidence for the Book of Mormon and trends in scholarly thought. 1 doubt that Book of Mormon critics will respond to the evidence presented. Rather, they will continue to offer the same tired criticisms they have in the past, ignoring the fact that most of them ha\'e been answered in publications like this. As stated above, I believe a testimony of the Book of Mormon is best obtained through prayer. I feel I must add my own testimony regarding the Book of Mormon. [ have spent the past twenty yeihs studying ancient languages and culture, history, and archaeology at some of the finest educational institutions. While this has, without a doubt, strength ened my testimony of the Book of Mormon, the foundation of that testimony is still the powerful spiritual feelings that I experienced as a fourteen ~ ycar-o ld after I had read the book and prayed about it.