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HOW
TO USE THE BOOK OF MORMON
- Dudley Ross Spears -
The
"Book of Mormon" is one of several alleged "revelations"
the followers of the late Joseph Smith, Jr. accept as divinely inspired.
While they give some credence to the Bible, "as far as it is
translated correctly" (Articles of Faith, # 8), the Book of
Mormon is their mainstay. They never speak of it "as far as
it is translated correctly." That would not only be unthinkable
for a Mormon, it would be heresy. Their founder and spiritual father,
Joseph Smith, Jr., rather immodestly said of the Book of Mormon,
"I told the brethren that the Book of Mormon was the most correct
of any book on earth, and the keystone of our religion, and a man
would get nearer to God by abiding by its precepts, than by any
other book." (History of the Church, Volume 4, page 461). Thus,
the Book of Mormon is supposedly a perfect work, translated by an
infallible device and is the true basis of the entire Mormon structure.
The late "apostle" Bruce McConkie, in a fireside satellite
transmission to Mormons world wide said, "The Bible of the
Old World has come to us from the manuscripts of antiquity -- manuscripts
which passed through the hands of uninspired men who changed many
parts to suit their own doctrinal ideas. Deletions were common,
and, as it now stands, many plain and precious portions and many
covenants of the Lord have been lost. As a consequence, those who
rely upon it alone stumble and are confused and divide themselves
among churches, all based on this or that interpretation of the
Bible." (Ensign, December 1985, page 55). McConkie has gone
now to his reward, but one wonders why he, nor any other Mormon
apologist, ever mentions the divisions among Mormons, now well in
excess of 100 various factions. It may be true that those who profess
to follow the Bible are divided, but it is not due to these imaginary
deletions, emendations, and alterations the Mormons claim for the
biblical manuscripts.
McConkie didn't stop at misrepresenting the Bible, he went even
further. He wrote, "On the other hand, the Bible of the New
World, as I choose to designate the Book of Mormon, has been preserved
for us by a divine providence which kept the ancient record in prophetic
hands. Written by inspiration on plates of gold (which were mysteriously
pirated away to heaven, supposedly. DRS) it was hidden in the soil
of Cumorah, to come forth in modern times by angelic ministration
and then be translated by the gift and power of God. "After
the translation, the voice of God, speaking from heaven to witnesses
chosen beforehand by him, declared two things -- that the translation
was correct and that the book was true. We, of course, believe the
Bible as far as it has been translated correctly, but we place no
such restriction on the Book of Mormon. And so it is that there
has come into our hands a book that is as perfect, or near perfect,
as mortal hands can make it. It is a divine book, a book like none
other ever written, translated, or published." (Ibid). So there
you have it - the Mormon estimate of their own "Bible."
It is as perfect as it is humanly possible to make it. One would
surely conclude that it is the only book they look to for guidance,
correction, doctrine, and discipline. And the Mormons make a stab
at doing that very thing. Let's look again at some of their public
statements.
At the time this was written the president, prophet, and seer of
the LDS Church was Ezra Taft Benson. In Ensign Magazine, official
organ of the LDS Benson said, "God with His infinite foreknowledge,
so molded the Book of Mormon that we might see the error and know
how to combat false educational, religious, and philosophical concepts
of our time." Benson urges his people to use the Book of Mormon
to combat religious concepts of our time. Mormonism holds several
things to be false in the religious world. In fact, Smith himself
claims God plainly declared all religious movements of his day to
be false and of the devil. When Smith went to inquire of the Lord
which church was the right one, he says the divine "Personages"
replied, "... join none of them, for they were all wrong..."
(Joseph Smith -- History, 1:18-19). So, the Book of Mormon should
be very useful in refuting all the religious movements other than
those that claim to follow the Book of Mormon. But that simply is
not true.
The truth is that the Book of Mormon not only has nothing in it
that can authentically expose anyone's error, it actually exposes
the errors of Mormonism. Consider the following examples. Lehi,
the father of Nephi, had a vision which is detailed in I Nehpi 8.
The vision is explained in I Nehpi 11. Verse 25 reads, "And
it came to pass that I beheld that the rod of iron, which my father
had seen, was the word of God, which led to the fountain of living
waters, or to the tree of life; which waters are a representation
of the love of God; and I also beheld that the tree of life was
a representation of the love of God." In this same book of
I Nehpi, Nephi himself interprets the dream as follows. "And
they said unto me: What meaneth the river of water which our father
saw? And I said unto them that the water which my father saw was
filthiness; and so much was his mind swallowed up in other things
that he beheld not the filthiness of the water" (I Nehpi 15:26-27).
Now which did the water represent -- the love of God or filthiness?
Next, consider Mosiah 12. The chapter tells of an amazing prophet
called Abinadi. King Noah swore to take his life because Abinadi
had prophesied against the king's evil. The better part of valor
urged Abinadi to get lost for two years. Then, he did an amazing
thing. But read along with me and you can see it for yourself. "And
it came to pass that after the space of two years that Abinadi came
among them in disguise, that they knew him not, and began to prophesy
among them, saying: Thus has the Lord commanded me, saying -- Abinadi,
(wonder why he bothered to be disguised, DRS) go and prophesy unto
this my people for they have hardened their hearts against my words..."
(Mosiah 12:1).
With such obvious blunders, how could the book be regarded as the
most humanly perfect book anywhere, or the means by which to refute
error? Is that the sort of material one would use to silence those
who are not convinced the Book of Mormon is the word of God? Hardly!
Benson continued, "We are to use the Book of Mormon as the
basis of our teaching." Logically, if the Book of Mormon is
to the Mormon what the Bible is to the Christian, that book ought
to be the source of their doctrinal stance in the religious community.
Not only did Ezra Benson urge this upon Mormons, their own spiritual
founder, Joseph Smith, Jr. allegedly had a revelation demanding
it. "And again, the elders, priests and teachers of this church
shall teach the principles of my gospel which are in the Bible and
the Book of Mormon, in the which is the fullness of the gospel"
(Doctrine and Covenants, 42:12). But is the Book of Mormon sufficient
for learning Mormon doctrine?
Not one single major doctrine of the Latter Day Saints can be found
in the Book of Mormon. If there be an exception to this, let the
reader of that book produce it. Find in the Book of Mormon anything
about the following doctrines.
1. Mormon Church Organization.
2. The Melchizedek or Aaronic Priesthoods.
3. The Doctrine that God is an Exalted Human.
4. The Doctrine that Men Become Gods.
5. Three Degrees of Glory.
6. The Mormon Doctrine of "Word of Wisdom."
7. The Mormon Doctrine of "Pre-existence."
8. The Mormon Doctrine of a "Heavenly Mother."
Since not a single major doctrinal tenet of Mormonism is found in
the Book of Mormon it cannot be used as a basis of their teaching.
The truth is that the contrary is so. The Book of Mormon contradicts
their doctrinal views. Here's a clear example.
Mormon 9:9-10: "For do we not read that God is the same yesterday,
today, and forever, and in him there is no variableness neither
shadow of changing? And now, if you have imagined up unto yourselves
a god who doth vary, and in whom there is shadow of changing, then
have ye imagined up unto yourselves a god who is not a God of miracles."
Mormonism is now made famous (or infamous, as the case may be) for
their doctrine of the changeable and progressive nature of their
god. The word of the founder himself affirms that their god is not
the God that casts no shadow of changing.
Here is his exact statement: "God himself was once as we are
now, and is an exalted man and sits enthroned in yonder heavens!
That is the great secret. If the veil were rent today, and the great
God who holds this world in its orbit, and who upholds all worlds
and all things by His power, you would see him like a man in form
-- like yourselves in all the person, image, and very form as a
man; for Adam was created in the very fashion, image and likeness
of God, and received instruction from, and walked, talked and conversed
with Him, as one man talks and communes with another." (History
of the Church, Volume VI, page 305). The man who claimed to have
received a divine gift for translating some imaginary gold plates
into the Book of Mormon contradicted the very doctrine on the most
essential religious question one can contemplate -- the nature of
God. The Book of Mormon is not the source of Mormon Doctrine.
Mormons think far too highly of their book. Listen to the late Bruce
McConkie. "Ponder the truths you learn, and it will not be
long before you know that Lehi and Jacob excel Paul in teaching
the Atonement; that Alma's sermons on faith and on being born again
surpass anything in the Bible; that Nephi makes a better exposition
of the scattering and gathering of Israel than do Isaiah, Jeremiah,
and Ezekiel combined; that Mormon's words about faith, hope, and
charity have a clarity, a breadth, and a power of expression that
even Paul did not attain; and so on and so on." (Ensign, November,
1983, page 73). McConkie wants to put the Book of Mormon and the
Bible in a contest to see which is the best or most uplifting aesthetically.
Such would be rank foolishness.
If one were to compare the books, you would not find a single contradiction
in the Bible, but many in the Book of Mormon. You would not find
utterly silly stories in the Bible, but you do in the Book of Mormon.
I was once told the Book of Mormon was very precise in the way it
revealed facts. To which I replied, "I know -- for instance
when the Jaredites built a barge they gave the precise measurement
of it -- it was, they said, 'the length of a tree' (Ether 2:17)."
- That is only one sample of the so-called accuracy of the Book
of Mormon.
drs4285@bellsouth.net
drs4285@bellsouth.net
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