In the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding, we'll do a peer review of Kno-Why #431.
https://scripturecentral.org/knowhy/where-did-the-book-of-mormon-happen?In this Kno-Why, Scripture Central goes to some length to explain why no one knows where the Book of Mormon events took place and why we should look at scholars--their scholars--for answers. In the process, they explicitly reject what the prophets have taught about Cumorah/Ramah in New York.
This Kno-Why shows precisely why it is unthinkable for Scripture Central to promote only one theory, the Mesoamerican/two-Cumorahs theory (M2C), instead of accommodating, comparing, and explaining the multiple working hypotheses developed by faithful Latter-day Saints, including those who still believe Cumorah/Ramah is in New York, and those who believe it is elsewhere.
Most Latter-day Saints would welcome transparency on this issue, but Scripture Central refuses to allow that.
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Original in blue, my comments in red, other quotations in green.This verse informs us that wherever Lehi landed, it was a location not occupied by other nations.
The "Americas" is a term used by the modern historians to blur Church history. If you do a search in the Joseph Smith Papers for the term "Americas," you get 13 results. All of them are in the notes written by modern historians to reframe Church history. The term "Americas" is a substitute for the terms used in the historical record, which shows that Moroni referred to "this country" and "this continent," as well as "Cumorah." Here, Scripture Central adopts this approach by instead teaching that these specific terms referred vaguely to "the Americas."
Actually, the historical record informs us that Cumorah was known before the Book of Mormon was even translated.Moroni instructed Joseph Smith about Cumorah even before he got the plates. Joseph's mother explained that the first time they met, Moroni told Joseph"the record is on a side hill on the Hill of Cumorah 3 miles from this place remove the Grass and moss and you will find a large flat stone pry that up and you will find the record under it laying on 4 pillars of cement— then the angel left him.She also explained that in early 1827, before he got the plates, Joseph met Moroni at Cumorah. When he came home late one night, he explained“I have taken the severest chastisement, that I have ever had in my life”. My husband, supposing it was from some of the neighbors, was quite angry; and observed, “I would would like to know what business any body has to find fault with you.”
“Stop, father, Stop.” said Joseph, “it was the angel of the Lord— as I passed by the hill of Cumorah, where the plates are, the angel of the Lord met me and said, that I had not been engaged enough in the work of the Lord; that the time had come for the record to <be> brought forth; and, that I must be up and doing, and set myself about the things which God had commanded me to do: but, Father,’ continued he, ‘give yourself no uneasiness concerning the reprimand that I have received; for I now know the course that I am to pursue; so all will be well.”
It was also made known to him at this interview, that he should make another effort to obtain the plates on the 22d. of the following September; But this he did not mention to us at that time.
In June 1829, David Whitmer traveled to Harmony to pick up Joseph and Oliver. Before leaving Harmony, Joseph had given the plates to a divine messenger. On the way back to Fayette, they encountered the messenger along the road."When I was returning to Fayette with Joseph and Oliver all of us riding in the wagon, Oliver and I on an old fashioned wooden spring seat and Joseph behind us, while traveling along in a clear open place, a very pleasant, nice-looking old man suddenly appeared by the side of our wagon who saluted us with, “good morning, it is very warm,” at the same time wiping his face or forehead with his hand. We returned the salutation, and by a sign from Joseph I invited him to ride if he was going our way. But he said very pleasantly, “No, I am going to Cumorah.’ This name was something new to me, I did not know what Cumorah meant. We all gazed at him and at each other, and as I looked round enquiringly of Joseph the old man instantly disappeared, so that I did not see him again."REPORT OF ELDERS ORSON PRATT AND JOSEPH F. SMITH to President John Taylor and Council of the Twelve.
Note 1 refers to an antagonistic article published in an Ohio newspaper in Nov. 1830 that reported on the mission to the Lamanites (D&C 28, 30, 32) by Oliver Cowdery, Parley P. Pratt, Ziba Peterson, and Peter Whitmer, Jr.
The note includes a link to the original, which is difficult to read. A transcript is available here, although it omits a portion of the original article about the discovery of the plates that is illegible:
Anyone can read the article and see it does not attribute the statement about Chile to Oliver specifically. The article does refer to Oliver's narrative regarding the plates and the translation, but then proceeds to describe "the testimony of these men" with lots of errors, such as the claim that neighbors stole some of the golden plates, that the sealed plates "escaped from them," etc.
Then the article says,
This new Revelation, they say is especially designed for the benefit, or rather for the christianizing of the Aborigines of America; who, as they affirm, are a part of the tribe of Manasseh, and whose ancestors landed on the coast of Chili 600 years before the coming of Christ, and from them descended all the Indians of America.
"They say" separates this paragraph from Oliver's narrative. It was Parley P. Pratt (and his brother, Orson) who promoted the hemispheric model, not Oliver. Orson even included the Chile landing in his footnotes of the 1879 edition of the Book of Mormon, recognizing there that it was speculative, in contrast to his footnote on the Hill Cumorah/Ramah, which was simply a known fact. See https://www.mobom.org/orson-pratts-1879-footnotes
But people forget that in the 1842 Wentworth letter, Joseph edited out Orson's speculation about the descendants of Lehi in Central America by writing instead that "The remnant are the Indians that now inhabit this country."
See the analysis here: https://www.mobom.org/wentworth-orson-pratt
Scripture Central forgot to inform readers that during this mission, Oliver specifically explained that the hill where the record was hidden was called Cumorah by Moroni."This Book, which contained these things, was hid in the earth by Moroni, in a hill called by him, Cumorah, which hill is now in the State of New York, near the village of Palmyra, in Ontario County.
"In that neighborhood there lived a young man named Joseph Smith, who prayed to the Great Spirit much, in order that he might know the truth; and the Great Spirit sent an angel to him, and told him where this Book was hid by Moroni; and commanded him to go and get it. He accordingly went to the place, and dug in the earth, and found the Book written on golden plates.
Phelps was enthusiastic about citing evidence of all kinds, but never attributed his speculation to Joseph or Oliver. He was apparently also helping to edit the 1842 Times and Seasons in Nauvoo, a topic we'll discuss below. But he was never called as an apostle or prophet. If we heed the words of the prophets, we avoid confusion because the prophets have consistently and repeatedly made two points clear: (i) Cumorah is in New York and (ii) we don't know for sure where the other events took place.
Again, Phelps was enthusiastic about citing evidence of all kinds, but never attributed his speculation to Joseph or Oliver.
"Clearly" is a rhetorical device, not evidence. There were a handful of LDS authors who expressed this speculation. That cannot be legitimately projected onto all early LDS, especially when the Wentworth letter refuted Orson Pratt's speculation.
To be clear, this passive voice Scripture Central uses here is misleading. It was only a handful of authors, mainly the Pratt brothers and Phelps, who promoted the hemispheric model.
The "fray?" There was no fight, struggle or dispute during Joseph's lifetime. Everyone knew Cumorah/Ramah was in New York. The only display of "fray" was Joseph correcting Orson Pratt's speculation when he wrote the Wentworth letter. Scripture Central frames the discussion as a "fray" to (i) cast doubt on the teachings of the prophets as merely their opinions and (ii) portray themselves as the only ones "qualified" (by their own criteria) to resolve the "dispute."But Joseph was well above any "fray" that may have existed. He was consistent and confident. He never once linked the Book of Mormon to anyplace other than North America, and everything he said or wrote put the Book of Mormon in North America, with Cumorah in New York, as we'll see below.
Joseph's observation was not part of a "fray" but simply Joseph telling Emma what they were doing.Scripture Central omitted the part of the quotation that specifically identifies Ohio, Indiana and Illinois as the setting for "the history of the Book of Mormon."The whole of our journey, in the midst of so large a company of social honest men and sincere men, wandering over the plains of the Nephites, recounting occasionally the history of the Book of Mormon, roving over the mounds of that once beloved people of the Lord, picking up their skulls & their bones, as a proof of its divine authenticity,https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/letter-to-emma-smith-4-june-1834/3
We can all see that Joseph unequivocally taught that these mounds were left by the Nephites.
Note 14 in the JSP relates the Zelph account. Modern archaeology corroborated both the dates and the geographical scope that Joseph told the men that day.
On 3 June, the Camp of Israel passed through the vicinity of what is now Valley City, Illinois, where several members of the camp climbed a large mound. At the top, they uncovered the skeletal remains of an individual JS reportedly identified as Zelph, a “white Lamanite.” Archeologists have since identified the mound as Naples–Russell Mound #8 and have classified it as a Hopewell burial mound of the Middle Woodland period of the North American pre-Columbian era (roughly 50 BC to AD 250).
It was actually two books by Stephens and Catherwood. Vol 1 was 424 pages. Vol 2 was 474 pages.The passive voice here obscures the facts that Wilford Woodruff carried the two books at the request of John Bernhisel from New York City to Nauvoo and commented in his journal about reading them along the way. He wrote "I felt truly interested in this work for it brought to light a flood of testimony in proof of the book of mormon... their whole travels were truly interesting... It is truly one of the most interesting histories I have ever read."Woodruff arrived in Nauvoo on Oct. 6. He met with the Twelve and cut wood and hay until the 16th, when he crossed the river to Zarahemla. He lists the various people he met. He returned to Nauvoo on the 19th. In his journal, the first time Woodruff mentions meeting with Joseph Smith was October 31.Woodruff may have met Joseph earlier without mentioning it. But he never mentions giving the books to Joseph. Woodruff does mention that on Nov. 5, after four days of illness, "I wrote a letter to Dr Bernhisel." That letter is not extant.
We know Joseph did not write the brief Nov. 16 thank-you note because it is in the handwriting of John Taylor. Whether Joseph dictated or delegated this letter is a question of assumptions and inferences. The letter itself does not answer that question, so we consider extrinsic evidence.The first paragraph of the letter is a thank-you note.
I received your kind present by the hand of Er. Woodruff & feel myself under many obligations for this mark of your esteem & friendship which to me is the more interesting as it unfolds & developes many things that are of great importance to this generation & corresponds with & supports the testimony of the Book of Mormon; I have read the volumnes with the greatest interest & pleasure & must say that of all histories that have been written pertaining to the antiquities of this country it is the most correct luminous & comprihensive.
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/letter-to-johnm-bernhisel-16november-1841/1
It also seems unlikely that Joseph had time to "read the volumes," which total 898 pages. Apart from this letter, there are no accounts in contemporary journals of Joseph ever reading part or all of these books, which would have been a stunning accomplishment given everything going on in Nauvoo in the fall of 1841.Like Woodruff's journal entry, the thank-you note describes the books as interesting histories that offer a testimony of the Book of Mormon. This similarity of language suggests the Woodruff may have drafted the thank-you note, at Joseph's request, separately from his own Nov. 5th letter to Bernhisel.
The scenario could have gone like this. Woodruff delivered the books to Joseph, who asked if he read them. Woodruff says yes, and says they are interesting histories that support the testimony of the Book of Mormon. Joseph says great, can you write Bernhisel a thank-you note for me? And give it to John Taylor who is responding on our real estate transaction.
The second paragraph of the Nov. 16 letter is a continuation of ongoing correspondence between Joseph and Bernhisel regarding real estate in Nauvoo. The second paragraph differs from the previous correspondence in several respects, which suggests it was delegated as well instead of dictated.
The implications of these facts and the related assumptions and inferences are discussed here: https://scripturecentral.org/archive/books/book-chapter/1841-bernhisel-letter-josephs-or-wilfords . Note: after that article was written, the Joseph Smith Papers determined that the Nov. 16 letter is in John Taylor's handwriting.
The two key points here are (i) Joseph did not write the letter, and (ii) whether Joseph dictated or delegated the letter is a question of assumptions and inferences based on all the facts.
The evidence shows that Joseph was merely the nominal editor, just as he was the nominal printer and publisher. Although Joseph was listed as the printer, no one thinks he was setting type, running the press, etc. Nor was Joseph actually editing the paper. Woodruff reported during this time that Joseph barely had time to sign the papers they prepared for him.
In March 1842, Joseph had personally written the Wentworth letter, which was largely an edited version of an earlier pamphlet by Orson Pratt. See the explanation here:
In the Wentworth letter, Joseph edited out Orson Pratt's multi-page speculation about Central America and replaced it with the statement that "The remnant are the Indians that now inhabit this country." See the comparison here:
Joseph's statement in the Wentworth letter aligns with the designation of the Indians who lived in New York through Missouri as the Lamanites in D&C 28, 30, 32.
There are no direct statements from Joseph Smith that support this. All speculation about what Joseph believed about a hemispheric setting is based on assumptions and inferences from anonymous articles and the Bernhisel letter we know he did not write. The only scriptural passage is D&C 128:20, which firmly places Cumorah in New York.
While this is true regarding "geography" generally, the one universally accepted "pin in the map" is the New York Cumorah/Ramah.
None of these are direct statements by Joseph Smith.
"Nearly every Book of Mormon place" does not include Cumorah.
These examples reflect the wisdom of Church leaders distinguishing between (i) Cumorah/Ramah in New York and (ii) all the other sites. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of possible archaeological sites that could pertain to the Book of Mormon, which is why there are so many different theories.
This is far from clear because most of the scholars who discuss this topic reject the teachings of the prophets about Cumorah.
The fallacy of this argument is obvious. The text never mentions America, the American continent, the western hemisphere, or any other modern term. The only reason to limit "the scope of Book of Mormon lands" to the American continent is because of what Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery specifically said about the setting. It's irrational to conclude that they were correct about America but wrong about Cumorah.
Again, this is the only rational position to take.
Note 15 is a good example of confusion generated by scholars. For a more complete account of that topic, see https://www.mobom.org/1990-letter-on-cumorah.
If D&C 128:20 is not revelation, why is it canonized? D&C 128:20 validates all the other historical accounts regarding Cumorah, starting with Moroni's first visit to Joseph Smith.
Everyone agrees that we don't know where the activities occurred, other than Cumorah/Ramah.
All good. These statements are precisely why it is unthinkable for Scripture Central to promote only one theory, the Mesoamerican/two-Cumorahs theory, instead of accommodating, comparing, and explaining the multiple working hypotheses developed by faithful Latter-day Saints, including those who still believe Cumorah/Ramah is in New York, and those who believe it is elsewhere.
This is axiomatic. But Scripture Central's insistence on only one interpretation--an interpretation that expressly repudiates the teachings of the prophets--is a major distraction from the true purpose of the book.