I came across some interesting Book of Mormon geography theories. Some of which I was familiar with and a few that were new to me. I found them interesting to read through. I’m sure there are more theories out there, but here are a few for you to read through. I’ve included links for more information on each theory on the titles of the theory.
Mesoamerica Theory 1: Isthmus of Tehuantepec
As you can see in this map, this theory is the one in which people believe the main location for the Book of Mormon is in Central America and Mexico. The theory is that the land and continent formation is the same as today for the most part and that the archeological findings in that area could be related to Book of Mormon people. It is also a limited geography model in that the geography covers just parts of the Americas rather than all of North and South America.
Mesoamerica Theory 2: Part of the Caribean that sunk into the ocean
This theory is similar to the first theory, except the geography covers most of North and Central America and it also includes areas of the Carribean that have sunk into the ocean that appear to be cities and/or civilizations.
This theory is a relatively new one that I found the other day which claims that Lehi and company landed on the Baja Penninsula in Mexico. The theory is that this is one of the only locations in the world that supports a Meditteranean climate similar to the one Lehi and his family departed from.
This theory is that the whole Book of Mormon took place around the Great Lakes region.
This one is another relatively new theory. The theory is that the archeological findings in Mesoamerica do not support Book of Mormon civilizations and also that Lehi and company couldn’t feasibly make the journey 16,000 miles to the Americas. Therefore, they landed on the Malay Penninsula , which is in the area of Singapore and Thailand.
So now it’s your turn to share your thoughts. Which theory do you believe in or do you not believe in any of them? Take time to vote on which theory you believe in and feel free to leave a comment as well.
149 comments
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September 9, 2009 at 4:30 am
Jack Mormon
My goodness! I can’t believe no one has yet left a comment on this subject. Book of Mormon geography has always been one of my favorite subjects.
I picked Mesoamerica #1 because it’s best supported by the Book of Mormon itself. The BoM talks about a “day’s journey” from one place to another; without motorized transport, this would imply short distances covered, warranting a small area. In addition, another BoM verse talks about fevers, and the excellent quality of roots and plants to combat them. This sounds descriptive of a typical subtropical climate with some rain forest. Mesoamerica, definitely NOT the Great Lakes region. Also, the cataclysm accompanying the crucifixion of Jesus Christ is descriptive of massive volcanic eruptions and a possible Cat 5+++ hurricane, better fitting Mesoamerica than the Great Lakes region. Furthermore, if the Book of Mormon core homelands were subject to winter and snow, there’d be references to it in the BoM.
Of course, this brings us back to the “two Cumorah” theory. How to initialize a Cumorah in upstate New York with a Mesoamerica-based Nephite civilization is one of those metaphoric “mysteries of the kingdom” that we are simply destined to dispute for the foreseeable future.
I read about the Caribbean theory on another website which I can’t remember. It sounded enticing, except the distances seem too great.
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September 9, 2009 at 6:47 am
Mormon Heretic
This is one of my favorite topics. I hadn’t heard about the sunken Caribbean one before. That looks interesting.
I know Malay is hard for most people to fathom, but I think that’s the most intriguing one to me.
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September 10, 2009 at 3:15 am
Ralph
The popular MesoAmerican Hypothesis has no good supporting evidence, in my opinion. Major items like plants, animals, north south orientation, metals, metallurgy, wheeled vehicles, silk, peninsular setting, narrow neck of land, tillage agriculture, and many many things do not match the Book of Mormon. There are many place names (in appropriate locations) which are similar and a couple which are identical to Book of Mormon names, MesoAmerica has none. There is a Hill Mah (Ramah?) on a current day map in the appropriate location. Science has found that a group of people left there about 400 AD (the time of the last battles) and traveled with plants, animals, and beliefs and named a town in the new place Moroni. I therefore have proposed The Malay Hypothesis which has over 180 arguments favoring it over the MesoAmerican Hypothesis. Interest in the Malay Hypothesis is appreciated and more consideration of it is encouraged by fair minded people. It is an extremely important matter and should be considered seriously by all investigators. It is not a new theory, the first book was written in the early 90’s . It has been largely ignored, but deserves honest appraisal.
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May 29, 2012 at 3:27 am
robbo
By the time u received this reply, u may forgot that u’ve posted here before… So, u’re the Ralph Olsen… the man behind the Malay Theory.
Well, me live in Malay Peninsular & some names did trigger the mind ie. Cumorrah – (Cameron Highland?, a famous hill with tea plant located deep at the center of Malay Peninsular) , Moroni- Maran (? – this place located only less than 100km radius from Cameron Highland). What else…? What are the other common names?!
Awesome theory dude
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September 10, 2009 at 2:33 pm
Theodore Brandley
There is also a North American Theory
(see: “A North American Setting For The Book of Mormon” at http://brandley.poulsenll.org/ )
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September 13, 2009 at 11:53 pm
Greg
I wonder if there is some basis in Nibley on Book of Mormon Geography.
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September 14, 2009 at 3:47 am
ama49
Ralph,
I think you have some valid points, however the reason why I think the Meso theory hasn’t recieved serious analysis is because of all the prophets and church leaders who have said it was somewhere on the American continent(s).
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January 1, 2013 at 4:46 pm
Gabriel
Can you name any one prophet who has mentioned tBoM having taken place in “North” America? American continent refers to the entire land mass, from the tip of Alaska, Greenland, to the tip of Chile-Argentina, and the Caribbean. Having said that, there are no physical records of advanced civilizations north of Central Mexico, or south of Honduras (Machu-Picchu in Peru the exception)
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January 2, 2013 at 5:43 pm
Theodore Brandley
Oliver Cowdery, Second Elder of the Church and Co-President with Joseph Smith, stated in 1831 that it was Moroni who revealed that Cumorah was in Palmyra, New York. He said:
“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.” (HC 1:184)
As it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah, I think we can rely on that.
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September 14, 2009 at 4:33 am
Seth R.
Or it could have been in Peru:
http://mormonmatters.org/2009/06/01/a-south-american-setting-for-book-of-mormon/
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September 17, 2009 at 3:49 am
Ralph
The distances match very well in Malaysia–over MesoAmerica. And the directions are better. The climate is subtropical matching the BofM and the medicinal plants match better in Malaysia over Meso. Early explorers found there were an amazing number of healing plants along the Malay Peninsula. And as for cataclysmic volcanic explosions, even in recent times there have been huge explosions in the Malay area: Krakatoa & Tambora. None have been recorded in Meso America… just volcanic lava flow… not explosive volcanos. A Mexican author describes an earthquake in Mexico about the time of Christ, but it was a small one and no one was killed. There was a recent tsunami in the Malaysian area. That is a serious weather condition. The Pacific fault line goes right by the Malay Peninsula. The BofM said there was a large amount of thunder. It was probably part of the volcanic explosions that caused that noise. The BofM said there were huge east winds that they were afraid of. There are huge typhoons that blow across Malaysia from the South China Sea. MesoAmerica is protectred from east winds by the Yucatan Peninsula and winds are attenuated (slowed down) when passing over land.
As Meso fits better than the Great Lakes theory, Malay fits extremely better than Meso. And there are 180 more reasons Malay is better.
Moroni didn’t call the hill in NY Cumorah. He said the plates are in the hill. Moroni didn’t put his plates in Cumorah, his father Mormon did and Moroni left with his. Science has proven that A group of people left Malaysia about the time of the last battles (400AD) and traveled to the islands near Madagascar and named islands Cumoros and a city Moroni. They brought plants, animals, beliefs, etc with them. That is how they proved that they went there from Malaysia. It is possible that Moroni sailed from there to NY. It is more probable than carrying them to NY from MesoAmerica with no beasts of burden and no wheeled carts of any kind.
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September 17, 2009 at 3:55 am
Seth R.
Moroni was fleeing for his life.
Assuming minimal possessions and plates weighing around 60 lbs. (not factoring in the possibility of a pack animal), Moroni could very well have covered the ground between Yucatan and New York. Typical fit hiker can cover 30 miles a day with those kind of burdens. People hiking the Appalachian trail do it every year.
And we are given no time frame whatsoever for how long it took Moroni to bury the plates after the final Nephite battle. He could have wandered for over 10 years for all we know.
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September 17, 2009 at 4:01 am
Theodore Brandley
I think that the Malay theory was stated as a parody on the Mesoamerica theory, and then people started to take it seriously. Amazing!
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September 17, 2009 at 4:24 am
Voni
ama49
Moroni told Joseph that the BofM is a history of the people of this continent AND THE SOURCES FROM WHENCE THEY SPRANG. Joseph only translated a small portion & then the plates were taken from him. Perhaps the portion that we have is of the trip to Malaysia on their way to America… and we don’t have the whole trip. Joseph was a man most of the time, and only a Prophet when God told him to say something. He had an opinion most of the time that wasn’t necessarily prophetic. If a bishop tells you something it doesn’t make it true. He may have heard something from someone he believed who heard something from someone he believed … etc and the first guy had good intentions, but maybe an assumption…
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September 18, 2009 at 5:45 am
Mormon Heretic
Theodore, Ralph Olsen is the author–it’s no parody. (He is the same Ralph posting here.) If you want to download the 300 page theory, go to http://www.mormonheretic.org/2009/04/18/my-first-scoop-the-unpublished-malay-theory/
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September 18, 2009 at 4:38 pm
Theodore Brandley
Ralph,
Did not your Malay idea start as a parody?
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September 19, 2009 at 4:04 am
Mormon Heretic
Theodore,
Go to https://www.sunstonemagazine.com/file-index/12.html and read Ralph’s original Sunstone article. (You need Adobe Reader when it asks what to open the file with.) This article comes from 1993 I believe. Quoting from the article:
Initially, Book of Mormon lands were thought to occupy all of South America—“the land southward”—and North
America—“the land northward”—with the Isthmus of
Panama understood to be the “narrow neck of land” connecting the two. Those who have followed Book of Mormon scholarship for the past few decades have become aware of problems with this view. Indeed, a whole range of problems and difficulties, already well documented in many books, articles, and essays, make both the hemispheric and limited geography models seem untenable.3 Recent DNA studies of Amerindians have also convincingly shown that most of them are descended from peoples from Northeast Asia, not from the Middle East.4
Taken together, these problems have caused me to wonder for some time why very few researchers seem to have considered the possibility that Book of Mormon events occurred somewhere other than in America. In the physical sciences, when evidence indicates flaws in an accepted hypothesis, even if the inconsistencies might at first seem slight, researchers actively seek a better hypothesis. Mormonism’s Ninth Article of Faith reminds us that many truths are yet unknown, and Apostle John A. Widstoe has encouraged honest inquiry: “There can be no objection to the careful and critical study of the scriptures, ancient or modern, provided only that it be an honest study. . . a search for truth.”5 In the sciences, as in life, there is no shame in trying and sometimes failing; the shame comes in not trying at all.
Strengthened by sentiments like Elder Widtsoe’s and aware of the difficult problems with the settings currently being proposed as the site of Book of Mormon events, I have for some time now been actively searching for a more suitable location.6 And my search has led me to a surprising candidate: the Malay Peninsula in Southeast Asia.
In presenting what I label the “Malay Hypothesis,” I realize
I am suggesting that studies aimed at locating Book of
Mormon lands and accurately identifying the descendants of Book of Mormon peoples would need to undergo a radical paradigm shift—one that many would consider quite farfetched. I am fully aware that no Church leader, Joseph Smith included, has pointed toward a Southeast Asian setting, but neither have they made statements which rule it out.
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September 20, 2009 at 3:16 am
Ralph
Thanks Rick for inserting a section from my Sunstone article. No, Thoedore, I never considered it to be a parody. It is an honest scientific inquery intended to figure out where Book of Mormon events took place in hopes of proving the Book of Mormon is true.
Please consider all of my points, rather than just choose one to decide the validity of my theory. If I have 200 arguments why my theory works over Meso, finding one you question does not seriously raise a doubt about the Malay Hypothesis. There are still “199 reasons” why it is better than Meso. I don’t even claim to know how the plates got to NY. My points are only things I have found evidence for. I admit that I don’t know for sure how the plates got to NY, but neither does Sorenson. Without more evidence, all we can do is speculate about it.
There were no beasts of burden to be used in the Meso area and the plates may have weighed 200 lbs. if they were pure gold. A time frame doesn’t matter in my theory either.
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January 1, 2013 at 4:59 pm
Gabriel
Anyone who believes in the truthfulness of tBoM can accept the premise that the original Hill Cumorah was somewhere in Meso America. With this in mind, It isn’t difficult to believe that the box containing the book, or the entire mountain could have been moved to North America.
30. For the brother of Jared said unto the mountain Zerin, remove—and it was removed. And if he had not had faith it would not have moved; wherefore thou workest after men have faith. – Ether 12:30
Based on this one verse of scripture it isn’t difficult accept the Meso American theory at all. The other theories do lack any other physical evidence, such as the great cities mentioned throughout the entire book, which only exist in Meso America.
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January 2, 2013 at 6:01 pm
Theodore Brandley
You are obviously unaware of the great ancient cities that covered the eastern half of North America. For example here is the Archaeological Summation of Poverty Point in Louisiana, by archaeologist Jon L. Gibson:
“It is at the Poverty Point site where we detect a level of organization that seems to exceed that which is possible through simple kinship. It has become increasingly apparent that Poverty Point’s earthworks were built quickly, and this suggests strong leadership.
…there were…building plans to draw up, labor to organize and supervise, food to provide while work was going on, and a large camp to run.
Overarching all this was the motivation for, and the overall direction of, construction. Building the Poverty Point mounds and ridges was a huge undertaking. Millions of hours of labor were invested. The earthworks were not haphazard piles of dirt but carefully laid-out features, constructed according to a master design no matter how rough the terrain along their path. The point is that somebody decided to build the earthworks. Somebody planned them. Somebody convinced people to work on them. It was this somebody (leadership) and the circumstances that spawned such leadership that made Poverty Point different from usual kinship-based societies. The cause must have been just and good and the leadership kind and generous, because there was nothing other than strength of personality and weight of public opinion to compel people to work on a massive project that went so far beyond their individual needs. Perhaps this is what Poverty Point is all about anyway, a monument to a beloved leader and a bold testament to a belief system.” (John L. Gibson, Poverty Point: A Terminal Archaic Culture of the Lower Mississippi Valley, Second Edition with Revision 1999, p. 32.)
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September 20, 2009 at 4:24 am
Seth R.
From the descriptions of Joseph and his fellow eye-witnesses, it seems unlikely that the plates were actually “pure gold.”
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September 20, 2009 at 8:06 pm
Theodore Brandley
Ralph,
I have downloaded your thesis and have begun to read it. I can see that you have done a great deal of research and are sincere in your belief that the Malay Peninsula may be a possible location for the Book of Mormon. However, I find at the outset that there are many things that are out of sync with the text of the Book of Mormon. I am not interested in cultural or archaeological circumstantial evidence of any proposed setting if it does not first fit the text.
The first item I disagree with is your re-routing of the Jaredites from northward to southward in order to get them into the Arabian Sea (page 13). In Ether we read:
“And when thou hast done this thou shalt go at the head of them down into the valley which is NORTHWARD. And there will I meet thee, and I will go before thee into a land which is choice above all the lands of the earth.” (Ether 1:42, emphasis added)
“And it came to pass that Jared and his brother, and their families, and also the friends of Jared and his brother and their families, went down into the valley which was NORTHWARD, (and the name of the valley was Nimrod, being called after the mighty hunter) with their flocks which they had gathered together, male and female, of every kind.” (Ether 2:1, emphasis added)
Babel was located on the Euphrates River. The simplest and most direct route to the Arabian Sea would be to take boats south down the river. Why would the Lord take them northward only a few miles (as you presume) where he would then meet them, to direct them into the Tigris River so they could then go back south?
The Tigris-Euphrates Valley is all one lowland. It is all one valley. To get to another major valley (that may have been worthy to be named after the mighty Nimrod) they would have to go northward up the Diyala River. This valley has been an important trade route through the centuries. Then we read:
“And it came to pass that they did travel in the wilderness, and did build barges, in which they did cross many waters, being directed continually by the hand of the Lord.
And the Lord would not suffer that they should stop beyond the sea in the wilderness…”(Ether 22:6-7)
Notice that they travelled in the wilderness before they built barges (a vessel that is rowed or oared rather than sailed) to cross many waters. The Tigris-Euphrates Valley was not the wilderness to them. It was populated at that time. If they were going to row into the Arabian sea from Babel they would have built barges right where they lived in the Tigris- Euphrates Valley and gone southward. Notice also that they did not stop “beyond the sea in the wilderness.” A sea surrounded by wilderness is and inland sea. The only inland sea that meets the criteria is the Caspian Sea. An interesting thing about the Caspian Sea is that the largest and longest and slowest river in all of Europe, the Volga, flows into its northern end.
Ralph, I agree with you that the Jaredites did not go overland through Asia, because in these barges they crossed “many waters.” But I disagree with you that they went south into the Arabian Sea when the scriptures are clear that they went northward.
There are several other things in the text of the Book of Mormon about the journey of the Jaredites that do not fit your model, and if the Jaredites did not go to Malay then neither did the Nephites.
Theodore
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September 24, 2009 at 2:15 am
Ralph
It is true they went north. I’m not arguing whether it makes sense or not. They went north to Nimrod which is near the source of the Tigress and the Euphrates Rivers. Then they wandered in the wilderness. It doesn’t say anything at all about how far they wandered in the wilderness. Then they built barges. And on the barges they went down one of those two rivers. They crossed many waters in that river. It doesn’t necessarily mean many oceans or lakes, it can mean many waters in the river… until they came to a sea which divideth the land. That is the Persian Gulf. There they built new barges and on the barges they went in the sea to the Promised Land. As I’ve emphasized many times, being on a homemade barge with no compass, no navigational skills, no way to take enough feed or water for themselves (and families), let alone their animals… there was no way they all could have crossed the Pacific. And having 8 barges, if they hadn’t stopped every night, they would have become separated and lost. So they drifted, and they were lucky they could even float that far, to the Malay Peninsula. Part of the time they were submerged so they couldn’t possibly have had any sails. So they had to rely on ocean currents. Fortunately there are ocean currents that go from south Arabia to the Malay Peninsula. There are none that go through the East Indies. So it is very unlikely they would have made it all the way to America.
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September 24, 2009 at 4:04 am
Theodore Brandley
Ralph,
You are claiming that the Jaredites went from Babel, on the Euphrates River and about 50 miles from the Tigris River, and travelled northward about 300 to 400 miles on foot. There they build barges and sailed back down one of these same rivers, past where they started out, and on for another 300 miles to the Persian Gulf. It doesn’t only not make any sense it is totally unreasonable. This is the opening foundation of the reasoning of your theory.
The Lord told them to go Northward to the Valley of Nimrod and there He would meet them and guide them where they should go from there (Ether 1:42). You are also making the Lord to appear to be totally unreasonable.
“4 And it came to pass that when they had come down into the valley of Nimrod the Lord came down and talked with the brother of Jared; and he was in a cloud, and the brother of Jared saw him not.
5 And it came to pass that the Lord commanded them that they should go forth into the wilderness, yea, into that quarter where there never had man been. And it came to pass that the Lord did go before them, and did talk with them as he stood in a cloud, and gave directions whither they should travel.” (Ether 2:4-5)
Ralph, please notice that after they came to the Valley of Nimrod, that the Lord commanded them that they should go into a wilderness “where never man had been.” This wasn’t the final destination. It was land they had to go through to get there. And they hadn’t built the barges yet so they couldn’t have floated back down the Tigris or the Euphrates.
“ 6 And it came to pass that they did travel in the wilderness, and did build barges, in which they did cross many waters, being directed continually by the hand of the Lord.
7 And the Lord would not suffer that they should stop beyond the sea in the wilderness, but he would that they should come forth even unto the land of promise, which was choice above all other lands, which the Lord God had preserved for a righteous people.” (Ether 2:6-7)
The land that was “choice above all other lands” was beyond the wilderness where man had never been. It was so far beyond that after they crossed “many waters” in those barges they had to build a new set of barges to cross the “RAGING DEEP.” (Ether 3:3) They also had travelled “MANY YEARS in the wilderness” before they built these new barges (Ether 3:3).
You are claiming that these many years in the wilderness were spent going 300 miles north where they built barges to float 600 miles south (many waters?), past the point where they had started, where they built new barges on the shore of the Persian Gulf, which is as placid as a lake. Also, none of this area was “wilderness” because the Valley of Nimrod had obviously been settled or it wouldn’t have been named “The Valley of Nimrod.”
Ralph, I agree with you that the Jaredites did not cross the Pacific. The went northward from Babel, built barges on the shore of an inland sea, which can only be the Caspian. To continue crossing “many waters” in these barges they had to row up the Volga, and with a 15 mile portage, down the Western Dvina River to the Baltic Sea, and around to the Western coast of Norway. From there, after many years in the wilderness, they built the new barges that would take them across the “raging deep” that “divides the land,” which is an apt description of the North Atlantic, to the eastern shores of North America. This is the only route that fits the description in the text of the Book of Mormon.
I’m sorry, Ralph, but your reasoning is out of sync with the text of the Book of Mormon.
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September 24, 2009 at 6:04 am
Seth R.
Theodore, you’re being an ideologue.
You write:
“You are claiming that the Jaredites went from Babel, on the Euphrates River and about 50 miles from the Tigris River, and travelled northward about 300 to 400 miles on foot. There they build barges and sailed back down one of these same rivers, past where they started out, and on for another 300 miles to the Persian Gulf. It doesn’t only not make any sense it is totally unreasonable. This is the opening foundation of the reasoning of your theory.”
Unless, of course the way south was not a wise direction for them for other reasons. Political turmoil perhaps. Or maybe the way southward didn’t have what they needed. Or maybe the entire area south was basically one big impassable marshland.
Fact is, the story is really short on facts. You don’t know, and neither do I.
To tell the truth, I tend to agree with you that this idea is probably unlikely. But I don’t really care for how cock-sure you are about all this – and how closed to the possibilities here you seem to be.
Could it be that you’re just a tad too emotionally attached to this issue to be seeing it clearly?
Theories are fine. As long as we acknowledge that this is all that they are. You seem to be going further than that however.
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September 24, 2009 at 12:51 pm
Theodore Brandley
Hello Seth,
You write:
“Theodore, you’re being an ideologue.”
One of the first things they teach in law school is if you cannot refute the evidence attack the witness. 🙂
“Unless, of course the way south was not a wise direction for them for other reasons. Political turmoil perhaps. Or maybe the way southward didn’t have what they needed. Or maybe the entire area south was basically one big impassable marshland.”
But this was the same southward that they would had to have gone to match Ralph’s hypothesis. They had to barge down these same major rivers (that went through the salt marshes).
“Fact is, the story is really short on facts. You don’t know, and neither do I.”
You are correct that neither of us know for certain. But there are certain facts given in the text which if followed lead to the most probable conclusions. If those facts are ignored or discarded to support a predetermined hypothesis that hypothesis is probably in error.
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September 26, 2009 at 6:10 am
Mormon Heretic
Theodore, perhaps you should stick to law, not BoM geography theories…. 😀
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September 26, 2009 at 2:26 pm
Theodore Brandley
Mormon Heretic,
If you have any thoughtful geographical analysis of the text of the Book of Mormon on this issue I would be pleased to consider it. Your trying to focus on me personally, rather than on the evidence, indicates that you do not. (BTW I never went to law school, I just read about it. 😉 )
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September 26, 2009 at 4:38 pm
Seth R.
I went to law school.
And I can tell you – getting a law degree doesn’t make you an expert on law either.
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September 27, 2009 at 6:16 am
Mormon Heretic
Theodore, my comment was meant tongue in cheek. I did not intend to ruffle feathers, which is why I added the smilie. I have devoted about a dozen posts to multiple geography theories on my blog, (I note Malay and South America links here are both articles I wrote). I hadn’t heard of the sunken Caribbean one, so that sounds interesting. I recently discovered a Baja California theory that is in the early stages of development, and I look forward to the information the authors are developing.
I guess you won’t find me arguing about where any event happened–Frankly I have no idea. If somebody wants to claim it happened in NY, or New Orleans or Guatemala, or Malay or Peru and it works with their theory, you’re not really going to get an argument from me. I’m more interested in the archaeological aspects: how does the theory explain elephants, chariots, DNA, silk? To me, those are more objective measures than “well, it says they went north, not south–that doesn’t make sense.” I’d rather let Ralph answer that–I don’t have a strong opinion one way or the other, so I tend to agree with Seth’s position that we probably shouldn’t get too literal when reading these things.
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September 27, 2009 at 10:32 pm
Theodore Brandley
Mormon Heretic, you said:
“I’m more interested in the archaeological aspects…To me, those are more objective measures…
…we probably shouldn’t get too literal when reading these [Book of Mormon text] things.”
Our approaches to the this subject are diametrically opposed, and I disagree with both of your above statements. Jon L. Gibson, preeminent archaeologist at the Poverty Point archaeological site wrote the following words at the end of his booklet, “Poverty Point: A Terminal Archaic Culture of the Lower Mississippi Valley:”
“The preceding view of Poverty Point is a patchwork of facts, hypotheses, guesses, and speculations. Many equally sound interpretations can be drawn from the same data. This is the nature of archaeology. Trying to describe an extinct culture, especially its social and political organizations and its religion by means of artifacts is not an exact science, but is a rewarding and meaningful one.”
Archaeology is not at all an objective science. It is a more of a subjective art.
On the other hand, as the Prophet Joseph Smith stated, “The Book Of Mormon was the most correct book on earth”(HC 4:461). This correctness, or exactness, would also apply to the geographical descriptions contained within the pages of the book. Mormon wrote the book about three hundred and fifty years after the geological changes that occurred in America at the time of Christ’s crucifixion. He also wrote the book for our day, which he had seen. We may therefore be confident that his described geographical locations have not changed significantly from the time that he wrote it.
Discounting the text of the Book of Mormon when trying to locate the lands of the Book of Mormon is absurd. The prophets that wrote the book knew where they lived and were very careful and detailed in describing their locations. All we need to do is carefully read and follow their descriptions.
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September 29, 2009 at 5:34 am
Mormon Heretic
Theodore, I think you read my words too literally.“Discounting the text of the Book of Mormon when trying to locate the lands of the Book of Mormon is absurd.” I agree whole-heartedly, and I’m not discounting anything.
Anybody can draw a map. The first one to start showing evidence will be the one I jump on board. If that’s you, you won’t find a better advocate than me, so I ask you to use your powers of persuasion as to why your map is better. But simply drawing a map is not enough–you also need to explain certain things. I don’t want you calling an goat a sheep like Sorenson does, or a wooden club with obsidian spikes a sword (The BoM says the swords rusted, which and neither obsidian or wood rust.) Yes, I think some liberties can be taken with directions, but my lack of literalism has limits. Sorenson takes too many liberties with directions.
Find me any scientist who believes an elephant who lived in the Jaredite period for your theory, and I’ll jump on board. I’ve seen someone try to trash the theory of evolution because he says essentially, “well, this 20,000 year old elephant existed, therefore there could have been one in 2000 BC, and will help my BoM theory” This is absurd, and I hope you don’t resort to such tactics, or I’ll write you off in a heartbeat.
I’d like to hear how you rationalize your narrow neck of land–at first glance it is hard to recognize, and pardon me–I haven’t read your theory at all, so please be kind. I hope you haven’t taken too many liberties like Sorenson. (Let’s face it–all geographers have to take some liberties–though few authors will admit that.)
“The prophets that wrote the book knew where they lived and were very careful and detailed in describing their locations.”
They also knew what horses, culoms, cummins, and sheep were, as well as senines, gold, silver, wheat, timber, cement were. I’m not discounting anything here, so please don’t try to insinuate that I am. Book of Mormon geographers all try to make locations match their theory, and frankly they all have points of disagreement, which I do not find troublesome, even though you do.
I’ve already written up reviews of a few theories, including a Great Lakes Theory, Peruvian theory, and Malay theory. I have a Baja theory on the back burner. I try to be very kind even when attacked, though I have more difficulty being kind in adverse situations. I’d be happy to do a positive review of your theory some time, and attract readers to your website. If this appeals to you, then I ask you to offer a friendly tone. Some authors can be real condescending and that is a real turn-off.
I’m not an advocate of Sorenson, but I think he makes a good point when he says, “Is Los Angeles west, or south of Salt Lake City?” Most people would say west, but the reality is it is southwest. In the news, they refer to Tooele as west of SLC. I refer to Tooele as in the west too, yet I live in Utah County, and it is pretty much north-northwest of me.
Now, on the other hand, I think Sorenson gets too loose with his directions, so I disagree with his overall model. I seek for moderation in all things, which is why I try not to be too literal about locations. The first person who can find the equivalent of a “Welcome to Zarahemla” sign in the location they think it should be, will have me as a big advocate of their theory.
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September 30, 2009 at 2:32 am
Theodore Brandley
Mormon Heretic,
I also do not subscribe to theories that try to skew directional descriptions in the Book of Mormon. Mormon and Moroni both saw our day and were writing to us, and the text was translated into the American English of Joseph’s day. They were not trying to deceive or confuse us.
However, I think Larry Poulsen’s theory of directions in the Book of Mormon has merit. He explains that east was the direction of the rising sun between the solstices and west was the direction of setting sun between the solstices. Thus, east and west both had angles of 47 degrees leaving north and south with the wider angles of 133 degrees each. (See http://bomgeography.poulsenll.org/bomdirections.html ) Although I do disagree with Larry on his Mesoamerica setting.
As for Zarahemla, my investigation finds just such a welcome sign at the Poverty Point Archaeological Site in Louisiana. I describe it in the first 24 pages of my thesis if you are interested in looking at it. (see http://brandley.poulsenll.org/ )
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October 1, 2009 at 4:25 am
Mormon Heretic
I read page 24, and I’m not sure that qualifies as a “welcome to Zarahemla” sign, but I’m willing to take a look at your theory sometime here in the future. Could you email me at mormon heretic at gmail dot com? As I read the theory, I’d like to ask clarification questions if you don’t mind. (I have a long list of future posts, but I’ll try to work you in, though probably not for a couple of months.)
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October 10, 2009 at 8:49 pm
MrNirom
The Lord has often allowed man to interpret and come to their own conclusions of many things.
Personally… I stand back.. and look at the conclusions man kind has come up with.. and see what results come of it. Then.. I imagine another interpretation.. and the results that it might have produced.
So.. based on me doing that.. looking back into the 1830.. lets assume that the Lord tells Joseph.. “This is a BooK.. about an ancient people.. who lived in what you now call Thailand… and my dealings with them.”
Tell me.. What kind of interest do you think American people of that time period would have given it? Some would have automatically assumed that it had to do with or be similar to… religions of the east. I don’t think.. based on the way people are.. that they would have given it much interest.
That is still not saying that a remnant of that people did not still travel here.. and integrate with the peoples that lived here on this continent. So… in reality.. it is a story of the peoples of this continent. Just not sure which peoples.
So.. the Lord allowed the early Mormons to believe that it was of the American Indians.. and then later.. the people in Central America. It went well. Now after 179 years of not knowing exactly where the people originated from.. yet still believing the book… if the truth came out that it was from Malay… would it change your current belief in the Book or in the Church?
Not me!
And because the world today is much much smaller than it was in the early 1800’s.. For the book to have originated in Malay rather than Meso.. would now not be hard to swallow.
My vote is Malay. 🙂
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October 12, 2009 at 12:08 am
Theodore Brandley
Yes, the Lord allows everyone to believe what they want to believe, even if they ignore the testimonies of those who were there at the time.
How does the Malay theory deal with Moroni stating to Joseph Smith in Upstate New York that “there was a book deposited, written upon gold plates, giving an account of the former inhabitants of this continent”? (see Joseph Smith History 1:34)
This account begins in Babel and then Jerusalem, and ends at Cumorah.
How does the Malay theory deal with the fact that it was Moroni who first told Joseph Smith that the hill in Palmyra New York, was anciently called Cumorah?
(see HC 1:184; Milton V. Backman, Jr., Eyewitness Accounts of the Restoration, p. 233; History of Joseph Smith by his Mother Lucy Mack Smith: The Unabridged Original Version, Compiled by R. Vernon Ingleton, Stratford Books, 2005, p. 159)
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October 13, 2009 at 6:10 pm
MrNirom
Theodore – If what you are saying is the absolute truth.. just look at the words you quoted and apply them.
You said: “there was a book deposited, written upon gold plates, giving an account of the former inhabitants of this continent”?
What does the word “former” mean? As in they don’t live here anymore? If they don’t live here.. then how could the American Indians be considered a part of that? They still live here don’t they? They were still living here in 1830.. no?
So just what does “former inhabitants” mean?
I believe that a remnant of the people of the Book of Mormon are here and this history is about their ancestors.
Do you not think that the Lord had a knowledge of where in time Joseph would need to live.. what country.. the time period, the place.. before he was born? Could not Moroni be directed where to bury the plates and what to say to Joseph.. so Joseph would indeed find them?
Could not the hill in NY have anciently been called Cumorah.. as well as another place in this world be also called Cumorah? Could this not be part of the PLAN?
Do we think that all these humans that lived on this planet named the places the did with no inspiration from God to do so?
Imagine how the Lord names two places with the same name (Cumorah).. In one place.. such and such happens.. but he deposits the records in another place with the same name. It is man who makes the inference that it must be the same place… not God.
There is a PLAN.. and it is not left to chance.
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October 12, 2009 at 12:33 am
Seth R.
Theodore, I get it, you like a North American model. Right.
Now – could you can the macho posturing about how everyone who doesn’t agree with you is somehow either blinded or lacking in faith? I’ve been blogging long enough to know hyperbole when I see it, and your posts frankly reek of it.
I don’t have any particular preference about geography models for the Book of Mormon. As far as I’m concerned, they’re all neat. And I think certain people could stand to tone down the holy war on this issue just a notch (even if they have a line of DVDs they have to sell).
We don’t have authoritative designation of the hill outside Joseph’s home as being Cumorah. The only reference to the hill as such comes from its usage in early Church history – probably from Oliver Cowdery or WW Phelps.
Neither does the Book of Mormon state that the gold plates were buried there. In fact, the one time the hill and the plates are mentioned, it is made explicit that they weren’t buried there at that time (Morm 6:6). Moroni did not bury the plates until nearly 36 years of wandering later.
Theodore, that’s plenty of time to transport a 60 pound parcel from Mesoamerica to upstate New York (even by foot), if that’s what people want to believe.
It’s also possible that Moroni simply wandered around the Great Lakes region for 36 years and then stopped by upstate New York to drop the plates, if that’s how you roll.
Seriously, I don’t care. But your rhetoric is waay over the top on this. You act like anyone who doesn’t share your pet theory is some variety of either idiot, or spiritually impaired.
I don’t appreciate it.
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October 12, 2009 at 1:58 am
Theodore Brandley
Seth,
Why is it that when I present some solid evidence with documentary references, instead of a scholarly examination and discussion of it you refer to the evidence as “rhetoric” and angrily attack me personally? I think that my “tone” is far more civil than yours and it is not my intention to offend anyone. I have no DVD or book to sell. I am only seeking for the truth and seeking to counter, with evidence, what I believe to be falsehood.
BTW Mormon 6:6 does not say that Moroni did not bury the pates in the Hill Cumorah, nor could it. Mormon, who wrote that verse, was dead before Moroni finished the book and buried the plates. It was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that the hill in which he buried the plates was called by the ancients Cumorah (see previous references).
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October 12, 2009 at 2:08 am
Seth R.
Yeah, I figured you’d think I was talking about you with the DVD thing the moment I hit “send.”
I wasn’t, for the record. Probably should have left it off.
I also think you’re trying to make me claim too much with Morm 6:6. I worded it pretty carefully. See if I’m making the claims you say I’m making.
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October 12, 2009 at 2:31 am
Seth R.
One thing though, wasn’t Lucy Mack Smith’s account taken down in 1845 – well after “Cumorah” had already become the common usage for the hill among the Mormon population?
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October 12, 2009 at 3:10 am
Theodore Brandley
Yes, that is true. Following Joseph’s meeting with Moroni one year before Joseph received the plates, Lucy recalls her son as saying, “It was the angel of the Lord. As I passed by the hill of Cumorah, where the plates are, the angel met me and said that I had not been engaged enough in the work of the Lord.” So, according to his mother, Joseph knew the ancient name of the hill one year before he received the plates. He could only have known that from Moroni. By itself this testimony could be subject to question. However, it is consistent with Oliver Cowdery’s testimony and David Whitmer’s testimony, so we have three witnesses that it was Moroni who told Joseph the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah. That Lucy recalled this conversation many years after the fact does not diminish its validity. It is common that one’s long term memory is clearer with age. I now recall things in great detail that I hadn’t thought about for years. My short term memory is another issue, of which I’d rather not discuss.
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October 12, 2009 at 3:15 am
Seth R.
Or it could just be Lucy subconsciously putting the name “Cumorah” into the narrative, even though Joseph never actually said the word.
Happens to people all the time. I’ve seen my own dad do it when retelling stories from the past – he tends to add in additional context that he has since gained after the event in question.
So, I’m afraid I don’t see this as enough evidence to hang an entire geographic model from.
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October 12, 2009 at 10:36 am
Theodore Brandley
If it were Lucy’s testimony alone I might agree with you. However, Oliver Cowdery made the following statement in January of 1831, less than one year after the Book of Mormon, which he mostly wrote, was published.
“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” (HC 1:184).
So it was clear to Oliver Cowdery that Moroni had told Joseph Smith that the hill in Palmyra was called Cumorah. The Book of Mormon does not say where Moroni buried the gold plates so the only way the early saints could have known the hill by that name was because Joseph Smith told them. The only way Joseph Smith could have known was if Moroni had told him. There is no evidence for the unfounded supposition that Joseph Smith misunderstood Mormon 6:6 to mean that Moroni also buried the Book of Mormon plates in Cumorah.
“…therefore I made this record out of the plates of Nephi, and hid up in the hill Cumorah all the records which had been entrusted to me by the hand of the Lord, save it were these few plates which I gave unto my son Moroni.” (Mormon 6:6)
A high-school seminary student could not misunderstand this simple statement and to suggest that the Prophet Joseph Smith, who translated the book, and Oliver Cowdery, who wrote it, somehow both misinterpreted this passage is an insult to both of their intelligences.
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October 12, 2009 at 2:56 pm
Seth R.
So it really boils down to whether Oliver was correct or not.
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October 12, 2009 at 4:42 pm
Theodore Brandley
And the fact that there is no viable evidence nor reasonable alternative explanation as to why Joseph and Oliver and their associates referred to the hill in Palmyra as Cumorah, other than Moroni told them it was.
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October 12, 2009 at 8:16 pm
Seth R.
Sure there’s a viable alternative – Oliver simply made a mistake based on a misreading of Mormon 6:6.
As for Joseph – none of his correspondence so designates the hill. Stuff quoting him as calling it such seems to be largely after-the-fact writings from people who could easily be just taking the name of the hill for granted.
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October 13, 2009 at 12:04 am
Theodore Brandley
But Oliver didn’t say that he learned it from Mormon in the Book of Mormon. He said that the angel Moroni called the hill Cumorah. Oliver, Second Elder of the Church, who was with Joseph in the translation and whenever keys of the priesthood were transmitted from angels, certainly was in a position to know. A misreading of Mormon 6:6 is an unsupported assertion that someone made up out of whole cloth to support the Mesoamerica Theory. There is no evidence for it. If you can find any evidence to support this assertion please let me know.
As for Joseph Smith, his testimony of Cumorah is canonized in the Doctrine and Covenants.
D&C 128:20
“And again, what do we hear? Glad tidings from Cumorah! Moroni, an angel from heaven, declaring the fulfilment of the prophets–the book TO BE REVEALED.” (emphasis added)
This scripture reinforces the other evidence that Joseph Smith knew that Cumorah was the name of the hill before the Book of Mormon was translated.
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October 13, 2009 at 12:28 am
Seth R.
You can’t use D&C 128:20 to support your theory.
It’s just talking about Cumorah – no matter where it’s located. So the scriptures here reinforce nothing.
I don’t have to find any counter-evidence because you haven’t presented any evidence that I find conclusive to begin with. I’ve already demonstrated why you’re “obvious” readings are not the only possible readings here. To this, you respond with a retreat to how “obvious” it is.
That’s not an argument. That’s begging the question.
It is not obvious” that Oliver was giving an eyewitness account of what an angel said. It is not obvious that the popular concept of Cumorah being an hill in New York came from anything other than a popular folk idea based on a misreading of Mormon 6:6 (which does not say the gold plates were ever buried in Cumorah to begin with). Joseph Smith never once mentions Cumorah, except in the imaginations of others years after the fact.
The quotes you’ve provided have been nice and all – but they are not a slam dunk at all. The meaning is not “obvious” – no matter how many times you assert it.
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October 14, 2009 at 12:09 am
Theodore Brandley
MrNirom
(In response to your post above on Oct 13 at 6:10 pm)
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. You are right, when Moroni told Joseph Smith that the book contained a record of the “former” inhabitants he was speaking correctly. The Book of Mormon is a record of the Nephites. They are the ones who kept the record and it was primarily about them. When Moroni spoke those words the Nephites hadn’t lived on this continent for about 1600 years. Those Nephites who dissented and joined with the Lamanites became Lamanites (see 2 Nephi 5:23; Alma 3:9; 17:19; 43:4). The Nephites were the former inhabitants of this continent. They inhabited this continent from about 600 BC to about 400 AD.
The probability is zero that Moroni would rename a hill Cumorah, that was not the hill where his father, his family, his friends and his entire civilization fought and died. This would be like Admiral Nimitz renaming Cape Cod to Pearl Harbor. Moroni would never have let Joseph Smith misunderstand the location of the hill Cumorah. This is where lay the bones of his father, his family and his people. To Moroni, Cumorah was sacred, hallowed ground.
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October 14, 2009 at 2:56 am
MrNirom
Theodore,
I did not say that Moroni renamed it.. I said that the ancient inhabitants named it that.. and it was Moroni who told Joseph he buried the plates in the place that the ancient inhabitants called Cumorah.
There were more than just Nephites who inhabited this continent. I suppose that according to the Book of Mormon’s definition of what a Nephite is.. anyone who is not a Nephite… is a Lamanite. But that of course in no way reflects the genealogy of the peoples that lived here.
Did not the Nephites name some of their cities after the cities in Israel? Do we today not name cities after other cities? Look up the city called Paris. There are more in the USA than in France. So it is not far fetched that people move.. and name new cities for old ones they left behind. Just look at Utah if you don’t believe me.
Let me ask you this. Lets just say for example sake.. that Malay was indeed the BoM lands. So.. Joseph had received a revelation… or was told by Moroni that the Book of Mormon is a history about the people who lived in an area that we now call Thailand and many centuries later.. a remnant of that civilization migrated to this continent. How receptive do you think people of 1830 America would have responded to receive new scripture about a place and time that has nothing to do with this country they live in?
Personally.. I believe that if it had been disclosed.. the people of that time would not have been interested at all as they would have made assumptions that the Book of Mormon surely had something to do with religions of the east.. and not the west.
But in today’s world.. this big ole earth is much smaller now. And to find out that the BoM lands were in Malay.. and not in Meso… would probably not upset too many people. In other words.. it would be more acceptable today.. than yesteryear.
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October 14, 2009 at 3:34 pm
MrNirom
I also had to go back and actually read what Moroni told Joseph… he said: “There was a book deposited, written upon gold plates, giving an account of the former inhabitants of this continent, AND THE SOURCE FROM WHENCE THEY SPRANG.”
Everyone assumes that the source means Israel. What if our assumption is wrong?
The Book of Mormon clearly states where Lehi and Nephi started from. But that group moved and was taken to a “choice” land.. and that is what the Book of Mormon is actually about. Their lives in this promised land.
Through DNA testing have we not found out that the American Indian is of Asian descent? If the American Indian is a remnant of that people in the Book of Mormon.. would not the fact that they come from Malay fit the puzzle?
I guess that it is very hard to switch ones idea of what they thought was truth. Non members of the church are asked everyday to evaluate their belief system that they have had… listen to our understanding of the Gospel presented by the missionaries.. and come join our church. We ask them for an open mind.
I look at the Meso vs Malay that Brother Olsen offers and I have to question.. Why is everyone so bent on making the BoM lands Meso?
Look at what he says again about the problems with Meso.. that is cured with Malay:
Directions, e.g. the totally wrong orientation of Tehuantepec. E-W vs N-S
No Middle East script or hieroglyphics or writing material (e.g. clay tablets).
No reasonable similarity to Middle East languages.
Serious chronology mismatches, e.g., no advanced culture in 3,000 B.C. (Jaredite).
Tehuantopec is far too wide to cross in 1.5 days and is not long enough.
None of the Book of Mormon animals were there during BofM times.
Important Mesoamerican animals, including Bison, Jaguars, Turkeys and Quetzal birds are not mentioned in the B of M.
There were no useful wheels or carts or chariots or carriages or beasts of burden to pull them.
Virtually no Middle East grains, fruits, vegetables, spices, or other plants were grown there.
It has no major river (Sidon) which runs continuously north.
Virtually no Middle East grains, fruits, vegetables, spices, or other plants were grown there.
It has no narrow strip of mountain wilderness extending across the Land Southward.
It has neither East nor West Sea.
Mesoamerican Hypotheses provides no way to explain why Book of Mormon people exhibited Oriental thought and behavior.
No evidence of explosive-type volcanic eruptions to explain the cataclysmic events at the time of the Crucifixion.
Many massive stone temples (ziggurats) were constructed with huge expenditures of time and energy. Yet there is no mention of stone buildings in the Book of Mormon.
Mesoamerican Hypotheses provide no reasonable way to incorporate the Polynesians into the Book of Mormon family.
Most advanced Central American cultures originated after the Jaredites and Nephites had all been annihilated.
=====================================
For me.. there is more consideration that must be given to Malay. We have to be seekers of truth.. where ever it might take us. Not our will be done.. but his.
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October 14, 2009 at 12:26 am
Seth R.
I disagree Theodore.
You simply cannot insert yourself into the mind of a Nephite who died over 1000 years ago and talk about “zero probability.”
You don’t know what makes this guy tick. For that matter, I don’t think you or I really know what Lucy Mack, Joseph, Oliver, or WW Phelps were thinking either.
This is speculative. The end.
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October 14, 2009 at 1:55 am
Theodore Brandley
The idea that there are two hill Cumorah’s is highly speculative as there is no evidence in support of it.
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October 14, 2009 at 1:57 am
Seth R.
I’m not advocating two Cumorahs
But I agree with you that all the theories hatched on this subject – yours included – are highly speculative.
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October 14, 2009 at 3:04 am
Theodore Brandley
I think that the “Two Cumorah” theory is the Achilles’ Heel of both the Malay theory and the Mesoamerica theory.
The more evidence there is for a theory the less speculation there is.
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October 14, 2009 at 3:31 am
Seth R.
The mesoamerican model does not require “two Cumorahs.”
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October 14, 2009 at 3:23 pm
Theodore Brandley
MrNirom,
I don’t think that either the Latter-Day Saints of the Nineteenth Century, the Twentieth Century, or those of the Twenty-first Century would have cared whether the events of the Book of Mormon took place in Malay, or Japan, or New Zealand, or Siberia. I certainly don’t. As a matter of fact we are waiting for a companion volume from the Lost Ten Tribes and are quite interested to find out where in the world it may come from (2 Nephi 29:13).
However, what we are concerned about is ignoring and/or twisting the words of the prophets, both ancient and modern, who have made it very clear that the events recorded in the Book of Mormon did occur in America. This is a discredit to the prophets.
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October 14, 2009 at 4:35 pm
MrNirom
Theodore,
I can understand why you would not think that. You are not of that time period. And if you read enough about Joseph Smith.. and just look at the Book of Mormon itself.. you would begin to see that the people were NOT ready for all the truth.
We only got 1/3 of the Book of Mormon. Would you say that we could have handled the other 2/3? Someone would have to disagree with that because the Lord didn’t give it to us.
And still to this day… 179 years later the Lord has not seen fit to give it to us.. we must not be ready for it.
Joseph received many revelations about many things he did not share with the Saints.
It is recorded in Herber Kimball’s Journal that the Prophet Smith one said: “Would to God Brethren I could tell you who I am… Would to God I could tell you what I know. But you would call it blasphemy and seek to take my life.”
Think about that. What do you think the Prophet could tell them that they would consider it to be blasphemy?
Prov. 25: 2
2 It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honour of kings is to search out a matter.
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October 14, 2009 at 3:23 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth,
You will have to explain to me why you think the Mesoamerica theory does not require two Cumorahs. The whole concept of the Mesoamerica theory is that the geography of the events of the Book of Mormon were limited to a small area of Mesoamerica.
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October 14, 2009 at 4:27 pm
Seth R.
Mesoamerican theory:
One Cumorah – in Mesoamerica
Moroni simply traveled to upstate New York to bury the plates (given 36 years and God’s guidance, this is hardly far-fetched)
Modern LDS simply associated the hill in New York with Cumorah as an act of local story-telling, and the name stuck.
There you are – one Cumorah.
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October 14, 2009 at 4:33 pm
Seth R.
MrNirom,
You need to study up a bit more on the geographic theories. At least several of your objections to the Meso theory have been already addressed.
You might want to have a look at FAIR’s resources on this score:
http://en.fairmormon.org/Book_of_Mormon_geography
That should be a good place to start for you. Check the table of contents for additional resources.
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October 14, 2009 at 5:00 pm
MrNirom
Seth,
They are not my objections.. but those stated by Brother Olsen.
In reading some of the sources you provided.. here is what I see them saying:
General authorities have indicated that no one knows the location of Zarahemla.
Leaders of the Church have long been clear that there is no “official” or “revealed” geography for the majority of Book of Mormon events, including those which take place in the New World.
It is not clear exactly when the New York hill from which Joseph Smith retrieved the gold plates became associated with the name “Cumorah.” Joseph Smith never used the name in his own writings when referring to the plates’ resting place. The only use of it from his pen seems to be D&C 128:20, which uses the phrase “Glad tidings from Cumorah!”
I have not found any new answers to these questions. You seem to have easily dismissed them all with the flip of your wrist and a comment “At least several of your objections to the Meso theory have been already addressed.” Perhaps you would enlighten me as to which “several” you are talking about? You don’t have to give me a detailed explanation of how they have been answered… just which ones were.. and maybe who it was that answered them. That would point me the right direction.
Thanks.
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October 14, 2009 at 5:16 pm
MrNirom
Also.. I noticed that FAIR has not done any looking into the differences between Malay and Meso at all.
In doing a search on Malay on the FAIR website it gives one reference:
Book of Mormon geography/All models table – FAIRMormon
Olsen 2004, 2004, Non-Western Hemisphere, Malay Peninsula, Malaysia, Malaysia, Other, Kelantan, Malaysia, LDS, External, edit …
en.fairmormon.org/Book_of_Mormon_geography/All_models_table
Not much there and certainly no opinion.
I even spoke with Michael Ash in an e-mail about the Malay theory and his answer to me was:
I don’t know if anyone from FAIR has addressed the Malay theory yet. I do remember reading a Sunstone article on this a while back.
Personally, I susbscribe to the Meso theory as the best fit. I’d have to revist the Malay theory to give my reasons for a rejection of this particular model.
Mike
So.. I am waiting.
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October 14, 2009 at 6:37 pm
Seth R.
I wasn’t claiming the Malay theory had been addressed at all.
I was posting the link in response to your assertions about the problems with the Mesoamerican theory.
For example, FAIR has put up stuff explaining why livestock is not a problem for a Mesoamerican model.
Same thing with your claim of no grains being found. Likewise, the Mayan language actually is written in heiroglyphs and there are very real possibilities of semitic root contributions.
A lot of the stuff you were talking about is addressed by FAIR’s resources. Not all in the direct article I linked to, but there were quite a few additional links from that point. Did you look at those?
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October 15, 2009 at 5:48 am
Mormon Heretic
I have spoken to Ralph Olsen, and he has asked several people at BYU to review his theory. Nobody has, and it is a real source of frustration to him.
By the way, there is a guy named George Potter who has done some excellent work in Yemen. He believes he has found the location of Nephi’s harbor. It is an ancient shipbuilding harbor, which dates to the time of Nephi. I really need to do a post on it sometime, because I find his research fascinating.
Anyway, Potter has recently switched his focus to Peru. He believes Nephi landed there, and Book of Mormon lands are located there. I just did a brief post on his 10 reasons for Peru.
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October 19, 2009 at 4:39 am
ama49
Hey Everyone,
I’m not sure how I overlooked this in the past, but one big thing that makes people ignore the Malay theory is right from the introduction of the Book of Mormon.
It reads:
…”It is a record of God’s dealings with the ancient inhabitants of the Americas …”
The fact that the Church and it’s leaders have written that show the leadership of the church supports some type of theory on the American continent.
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October 19, 2009 at 8:07 am
MrNirom
ama49:
You are right.. and even the Malay theory does not state that those from the Book of Mormon did not travel to the America’s at some point in time. To say people did not leave Malay and travel to South, Central or North America is very possible. If the American Indians have Asian DNA.. and they are a remnant of the Malay people.. then the statement is very accurate.
Again.. it is spending the time to check it all out. I wonder if they did any research on the old buildings in Malay to see if they used the same cubit as measurement for their buildings. But then.. the Book of Mormon never mentions stone buildings does it? I just did a seach of the scriptures in the book of Mormon looking for the word stone.. or brick… and there is no mention of buildings made of this material. Yet Meso is full of Stone built buildings.
Hey.. we just need more people who are willing to do some deep research into it instead of just settling on what they have so far.. which isn’t that much. I mean.. even the names of cities in Malay are so much better and closer to the Book of Mormon that is Meso.
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October 20, 2009 at 4:40 am
ama49
Mormon Heretic,
The other day when i read your little post on the Peru theory, I ordered the video by Potter. He presents 20 points in the video why it is plausible for the Book of Mormon to have been in the general region of Peru/Chile.
Some of his evidences include some points that shoot down the Meso theory the MrNirom has already suggested.
I’ll have to admit, it is pretty persuasive and is worth checking out.
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October 20, 2009 at 4:53 am
MH
AMA,
It sounds like Mr Nirom has read Olsen’s theory–he states Olsen’s position pretty well. Olsen believes that his theory can integrate with any of the American theories: Great Lakes, Meso, Baja, Peru…. I also want to add that the introduction to the BoM was added by Bruce R McConkie I believe. The church as already changed it from “principal” to “among”, so I don’t know how reliable Bruce’s introduction should be since it didn’t come from Joseph Smith. But your point is well taken, and I have told Ralph that is going to be a big barrier for most people to accept his theory.
I do like Potter’s work. I purchased some of his videos about Lehi in Arabia, and I must say that the video production is a bit amateurish with bad sound quality. I’m hoping this new video is better–you’ll have to let me know what you think. I’ve purchased quite a few books and videos on many subjects, and find I need to conserve a little money. But if you like it, let me know. I’ll look into buying it if it’s good.
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October 20, 2009 at 4:58 am
ama49
MH,
The video isn’t the best quality, but for 6 bucks you get what you pay for. He basically plays some funky music on it and talks point by point about the Peru theory. It’s very amateurish at best, but worth 6 bucks.
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October 20, 2009 at 5:40 am
MH
Thanks AMA, I’ll have to check it out.
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November 6, 2009 at 4:56 am
Gary C. Williams
For an interesting read about the calamities at the time of Christ, and where they might have occured, forget about volcanoes and do a Google search for the story of Eliza Bryan and her story of the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811-1812, along the Mississippi River. When I first read this I felt that I was reading a different version of 3rd Nephi!!!
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November 7, 2009 at 10:09 pm
mike
If you want to read about earthquates & winds & tsunamis and all sorts of east winds to be afraid of …scary weather & natural disasters… the Malay Peninsula is right in the middle of it. And it also was anciently.
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November 7, 2009 at 10:26 pm
Ralph
Responses to critiques of the Malay Hypothesis:
The “More Promising Land of Promise” provides evidence, on page 10, that church authorities did not know the location of the Land of Promise. Their beliefs were based upon the notions of Joseph Smith that it occupied all of North and South America and that all American Indians are descendants of Lamanites. You will note that the ‘authorities’ have now decided that that notion of Joseph’s is wrong and it must have taken place in a smaller geographical area such as MesoAmerica. If his opinion was wrong on that, it could have been wrong on other things.
The Jaredites went north to the Nimrod area (to collect valuable plants and animals and to find trees and to learn how to build barges). Some traveling in the local wilderness would have been required. They then went down the many waters comprising the Tigris drainage system going southeast. There are several seas in the upper Tigris wilderness that they could have gone beyond. They floated down to the Persian Gulf (the great sea which divideth the lands) Eth 2:13. Here they built improved barges on which they floated in coupled gyres (refer to ‘maps’ that describe winds & currents) along the Asian coast. They were extremely fortunate to be able to go as far as the Malay Peninsula. Much later, small groups hived off to go into the Pacific Quarter (the only quarter left on earth where man had never been!). A few finally reached the Americas (the most choice lands). Marshland near the mouth of the Tigris River was probably impassable on foot.
Mormon 6:6 clearly indicates that Mormon hid many gold plates in the Hill Cumorah; a few more were turned over to his son, Moroni. The final battles, involving hundreds of thousands of combatants were raging at that time. In order to save his life AND the plates, surely Moroni would have had to flee with them. Somehow they were taken to a hill near Palmyra, NY and buried there. There is good evidence that people from Southeast Asia went to Madascar 400 AD (the time of the final battles). A group of people took plants, animals, beliefs, and artifacts which science has determined to have come from the Malay area, at that time. The existence of a city there named Moroni in the off-shore Comoros (Cumorah?) Islands provides good evidence that they were Nephites! Some could have sailed from there with the plates to the New York area and left them in a hill near Palmyra. Joseph told us that Moroni said that the plates ARE IN THE HILL. To my knowledge, he was never told it was the Hill Cumorah. And neither evidence of countless weapons, arrowheads, nor of Mormon’s other gold plates have been found in the Hill Cumorah area of New York. And, even if it was named Cumorah, in accord with the Malay Hypothesis, it could have been named after the hill on the Malay Peninsula (now called Hill Maw!). If they went to Madagascar and named the islands Comoros, there is a good chance they would also name a hill in NY Cumorah.
The gold plates provide an account of former inhabitants of this continent AND THE SOURCE FROM WHENCE THEY SPRANG. They tell virtually nothing about the Middle East! They tell a great deal about a source which is either the Malay Peninsula or a source very similar to it! And from there many hived off and sailed to the Pacific Quarter (the quarter where man had never been (Eth 2:5). Traditionally we Mormons thought Polynesians originated in America and sailed west into the Pacific Ocean. They didn’t. They sailed east from Southeast Asia! And there they were kept from the knowledge of other nations for hundreds of years. In accord with DNA evidence, only a few of these Middle Easterners ever reached America. And there is good evidence that some of them landed at locations other than MesoAmerica. There were many Lands of Promise. Not Just One!
Stubbs has recently reported the FIRST good evidence of a Middle East connection to ancient America. The Uto-Aztecan language has many similarities to Hebrew! But the Aztecs came to America from a Pacific Isle! And Long after Book of Mormon times! (1100 AD) and landed in the northwest Mexico area! (not in MesoAmerica!). All in good accord with the Malay Hypothesis.
Many thanks to those who have been willing to consider the Malay Hypothesis with open minds. I now have 220 arguments favoring the Malay Hypothesis over the popular MesoAmerican Hypothesis. . . And I haven’t stopped searching.
R.A. Olsen
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November 7, 2009 at 10:35 pm
Ralph
The Pacific fault line runs right next to the Malay Peninsula. they have had Enormous volcanic explosions, even in historical times. Earthquakes, tsunamis, destructive east winds are quite common along that fault line. The comparable events in Central America are much less common and far less destructive. At the time of Christ a Mexican author in Central America wrote of the destruction caused by an earthquake and it was so mild that no people were killed.
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November 7, 2009 at 10:37 pm
Ralph
At the time of Christ there was apparently a huge volcanic explosion in Southeast Asia. It was so destructive that it caused darkening even as far away as Palestine and some tremblilng of the earth, even in Central America… but the main explosion was in Southeast Asia.
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November 8, 2009 at 12:10 am
Ralph
In the scriptures it says that Book of Mormon people were to go to an “uninhabited quarter.” And they were to be kept from the knowledge of other nations. We Mormons have been told to believe for many decades that America was uninhabited when the Jaredites first came and they and the Nephites were to be kept from the knowledge of other nations.
Scientific evidence has indicated that America was settled thousands of years (at least 20 to 30,000) before Book of Mormon times. Now that anthropological evidence clearly indicates that the Americas were settled way prior to Book of Mormon times, and few, if any, of the Native Americans have DNA which matches the DNA of the Middle East, Now we are expected to believe that they intermarried with the numerous inhabitants so their DNA has become virually nonexistant.
Interesting that there has been almost a complete reversal in our beliefs…. but this doesn’t seem to be upsetting to many of our experts. The Malay Hypothesis is consistent with the scriptures. It proposes that the Book of Mormon people did go to an “uninhabited quarter of the Pacific.” Then, as Polynesians, they were kept from the knowledge of all others for hundreds and hundreds of years. Only a few small groups of the Polynesians came on to America so their DNA was diluted by many thousands of Native American people.
The Malay Hypothessis is consistent both with scientific evidence and Book of Mormon accounts.
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November 8, 2009 at 3:54 pm
INTRO
I think you guy can get some idea from link here
http://www.endera.info/
Hope this can assist you regarding B0fM. Thanks
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November 27, 2009 at 7:43 pm
Soni
I’m Indonesia, and my name is soni, i have read about Prom prof santos website Profesor Santos http://atlan.org/atau m
andhttp://atlan.org/articles/checklist/#checklis…
Indonesia is the atlantis and atlantis is the origin aryan place is that right?
guys are you talking about Melayu ( mala) is the aryan people (shame mode on) ,we build the bigest building in 800 AD ,Borobudur one of the seven magnificent of the world.Indonesia is now is the world no 1 , Islam country , we already have the bigest empire Shrivijaya ( Hindu) .
but i’m tann, but not proud ,
we fell we are the same with you that was the Human race , why you guys so crazy about aryan peoples ???
FB : indiglo@email.com
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February 10, 2010 at 10:29 pm
Connor Darby
Having just read a book titled “Lehi Never Saw Mesoamerica” I found at http://www.nephicode.com, I vote for the OTHER category above. This book will astound all Book of Mormon geography enthusiasts. It is different, well written, long, and with more footnotes and references than I have ever seen. More importantly, it is the only book on the subject that is not merely someone’s belief or opinion, but every point made is reference directly to the Book of Mormon text and explains things no other author or theory has so far stated to such a degree. I don’t usually recommend anything, but if you are interested in the subject, I highly recommend this read. There are also three other books in this series, and I am now reading the second one: “Who Really Settled Mesoamerica,” and find it as interesting and detailed as the first.
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August 15, 2010 at 12:58 am
Malkiyhu
Zion, August 14, 2010
Book of Mormon Geography
By
Miguel Angel Tinoco Rodriguez
Occam’s Razor theorem as understood by the logic of the scholars or the scientific community suggests to the mid that where all things are weighed equally, in order to differentiate truth from error or deviation, one must not go beyond the mark or to explain redundantly and without necessity the truth of any given thing. And also that when we are confronted with diverse or pluralistic opinions, the simplest explanation tends to be the right one.
Occam’s razor (or Ockham’s razor) is the principle that “entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity” (entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem). The popular interpretation of this principle is that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one. However, this is often confused, as the ‘simple’ “is really referring to the theory with the fewest new assumptions.”
As far as pinpointing with exactitude the geographical locations of the book of Mormon, the prophets have time and aging told us the mind of God concerning it; whoever, scientist and scholars time and again go beyond the mark to make manifest their deep ignorance.
Therefore, I do not believe any of these purported and proposed theories concerning the geography of the book of Mormon as explained, for they are only that, theories that do not conform to written facts. These theorems are all too limited in scope and too broad in ambiguity which only lead to multiplicity uncertainties or UGATH darkness in the minds of people.
In a little over five hundred year we have filled and inhabited nearly the whole continent of America. More than twice our cultural life span the Jaredites, the Nephites and the Laminates nations inhabited and dominated these lands. Here they worked and walked therein, therefore, they knew at least as much if not more than what we now know about these territories. People these days are trying to make them look ignorant as if they knew not where precise cardinal points of the world were.
I understand about the ignorance or scriptural analphabetism of the peoples of the world, but why is it too hard for a great many of the people of this Church of Jesus Christ and their cat minded scholars to take the Lord’s words as given by his mouth the prophets? It is not written in the scriptures that the Lord delight in simplicity and plainness? And is it not written also that the weak things of the world will come forth to confound and to dethrone the mighty and strong ones? That the weak and unlearned would overpower the wise and leaned?
With an eye single to the Glory of God, I will tell you what you have not previously considered about the book or Mormon words. A good heart and a willing mind of a fourteen year old Aaronic priesthood teacher can decipher this locations and geography of the Book of Mormon better than the leading scientists and scholars and their cat minded followers amongst us. For instance, if the prophets of today have told us that Lehi and his party when they were brought here by the hand of Lord, that they originally landed in the paced called Chile, so it is. Take it or leave it. Who are we to contend against the wisdom of God? Even the foolishness of the Lord is wiser and his weak things stronger than men
But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness; But unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God. Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men.
(New Testament | 1 Corinthians 1:23 – 25)
The English language must be the most direct language of earth to communicate a thought or idea, but it is also the most phonetically imperfect and misleading language of them all. But if you must know, for starters if reformed or confounded languages, the word CHILE transliterated or correctly arranged reads LECHI; or LECHEE as with a strong Latin or Hebrew pronunciation. One just has to put the syllables in the right location until it sounds right. Now, Chile is a very long and narrow country from south to North like a piece of cheese. Lehi did not have to Land in the midst or southernmost par of it. Even nowadays, a bordering location between Chile and Peru is a good enough locality as a landing port for Lehi and his party to substantiate the truth as spoken by the prophets of Today. And it also serves well as a landing place for a big ark. And that place today, if I were to land in it as Lehi did, I or my people would call it the place of the Arc. And today in that very spot, there is a place so called, even ARICA or the place of landing of the Ark or Arca. Go ahead, Google or map it and as it was yesterday, it is today and it will still be there tomorrow and forever.
Now the Lord may confound our languages due to our iniquity to keep us dumb, blind and mute, but he is not a deceiver. If the Old world geographies have kept their old names during all these millennia despite of language barriers, so does the new world places. The only difference is that we ARE SO DULL OF HEARING AND BLIND THAT WE DO NOT RECOGINZE THE WRITTEN WORD OR THE SPOKEN LANGUAGE.
If we truly read the scriptures as intended; and we try to remember the names of peoples and places therein regardless of how old and boring they are, perhaps we can learn something new. What use there would be for temples without names? And also, if we learn some basic Egyptian and Hebrew terminology; or at the very least; if we attempt to read backwards even English or Latin or Spanish as in Hebrew; plus a adding a little Ladino or a little pre-Columbian pronunciation, anyone can Identify pretty much any place in the book of Mormon in today’s world. Some examples are these:
Please visualize the locality and meaning of the word TIMNA where Joshua domiciled himself when he divided the promise land among the tribes of Israel; or the nearby place called GOLAN, or the low lands as the port of ELAT or ELIAT. These are commonly known places in the Holy land and in the scriptures. If I were to move away from there to a distant and faraway land in order to remember my roots I would use the same names or terminology in my new locality perhaps with a little word or syllable reformation. Even if my last name is ELIAB I would surname one of my children BAILE or LEIBA or IBAEL, LEBAI or if my Hebrew roots are strong I would even use the Y instead of the I as in the name BAILEY. Or if my name anciently was PETER Bar Jonah, I would be called today PEDRO or PETER BARAHONA. Or If I were to be a descendant of the inglorious sons of the High Priest Eli. OPHNI, PHINEAS, ICHABED that lived during the times of Samuel the prophet. Or even the surname CAIPHAS the killer High priest that Lived in the times of Samuel the prophet and during the crucifixion of Christ, I would look at someone that is surnamed as of OPHNI like PINO, FINNO/ FOR PHINEAS, someone surnamed as ESPINA. PINAES or FINESS or ZENIFF/ For ICHABED BEDOICHA or BEDOYA, or even FAICAS instead of CAIFAS
Now the word MANTI of the hill named in the book of Mormon, this is no other than TIMNA or TIMNAT as in the Bible. Do you see where the reformation of language words lead? Now the word GOLAN is no other than LOGAN or OGLAND, the place where the giants lived. And ELAT, in the low lands is no other than the port of TELAH. In North America, even Logan Utah, is named after the Jerusalem place Golan by some Ephratas living nearby. Even the word you already know UTAH has a self evident meaning or interpretation. As you know it means TOP of the mountains. Or HAT as in HATU or the word UTAH backwards. This is so as to say or suggest to the mind the place the HAT OF THE GIANT HILLS; or the hills with a white or snowy hat. All interpretations lead to the top. To learn these things is fun and very constructive when the spirit of the Lord takes the lead over the carnal mind, ear, eyes, mouth and flesh.
Most of these lands in America were first discovered, conquered and colonized by JEWS or undisclosed Israelites. They were the agents of the gentile nations that were expelled or sent here from their captivity to work for them. And the Lord that inspired them to navigate also gave them aid. They were the most professional and literate of men in those; and also in our days. And they were the ones that named pretty much every city and or new settlement in America. The Lord our God brought them here and it was his duty and responsibility to also inspire them to name the places anew also for his own purpose. Some places even kept redundantly both their new and primitive names.
I, for instance was born in the city of TEGUCIGALPA in Honduras, Central America. Honduras is another name that signified both Bottomless pit and Homes of wisdom without limits. The closest match of the name of this city that I did find in the book of Mormon was JACOBUGAT or Jacob-Ugath, in their native language pronunciation it would sound like CHAICALP-UGET or JAICAB-UGAT. Both of these words have strong Hebrew pronunciation as in YAIKUB UGAT or Jacob the Great. Depending wheter Ugat is pronounced with an E or with and an A at the end, this is to signify the place of bread, bakery, and brick. Or as opposite to the word UTAH, UGATH is great deep or bottomless pit, the place Masonry, secret combinations or even where the great mount or the supplanter ascends. This is the place from where the peace was taken from the earth during the times of King Jacob the government supplanter.
Now as far as the Book of Mormon geography it is concerned, these people were no fools. They were exceptional mathematicians and more earth landed than many of or modern Pharisees, Scribes and Sadducees that are eager to learn and never get to a knowledge of the truth. Our scholars should stop partaking of the forbidden fruit or of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for in so doing they are digging deep into hells mouth by looking beyond the mark.
One with a little orientation and good will and a correct heart can discover by the spirit of truth great hidden wonders, marvels and mysteries. As in the ongoing theories pertaining to the Geography of the Book of Mormon, perhaps all the three, even the Gulf of Darien, the Tehuantepec Gulf and even the Honduran Gulf may qualify as a narrow strip of land as described in the Book of Mormon. But even a small child with simple understanding knows that it refers to the Gulf of Darien in Panama, near the Panama Canal. The Lord will not be so infamous as to try to deceive a kid in search for truth. The land of abundance or Bountiful is no other than Norwest Colombia, in Antioch, Medellin. This place from Colombia has a subtropical climate good for every needful plant and roots, fruits and exotic flowers in all their varieties for textile coloring and manufacture. It is even more suitable for life than Guatemalan’s eternal spring climate.
Now, the Sidon, Pison, Gion, Gibbon, Ondis, Dibos, Donsi, Nisbon, Dison, Dixon, Xodis, Ondix, Xibon, Shiblon, or eve Xideon river pr Valley’s name is to me as spiritual as Gazelem o code name river of water is not other than the Magdalena river in Colombia. It is hidden in plain sight, but people are quick to guess but slothful to search, so they do not find. The head of the waters of this river; or the Aqua-doors of this river is where the Riplakish or great Andes mountain do end. This is right above Quito in Ecuador. The names say it all, AQUADOOR. And in that place also is where there is a small south Anti-Parrah or barren wilderness or desert that serves a s a barrier. The Sidon River runs from South to North and it empties in the North Sea. At the North end or near its delta, there is also a small portion of the river that runs from East to West. And close by to the West of the same area is the MARACAIBO basin or the inland fallen sea, the place of arms. That area serves as or leads to the so called Sea West. And on the South side of the Sidon river, opposite to the side where the Hill Manti is, nearing at the head of this river there is also a curvature that runs from it is a East to West, yet the river still flows there from West to East. This is where the Nephites ambushed the Crossing Lamanites as per the words of the prophet Alma. There is also a smaller river adjacent to the West of the river Sidon that also has a small curvature from East to West, and its waters run from East to West then to go north and empty into the Sidon.
Now, when these precise longitudes and latitudes are precisely or assertively established as landmarks one can begin to pinpoint as the Lord will reveal it where the ancient Book of Mormon Settlements and cities where, are and will continue to be. But one must first learn to walk before endeavoring to run or rush in. Here is the patience of the Saints. I am a just a scribe instructed unto the Kingdom of Heaven who is sharing things new and old from the treasures of my Lord in his Holy Name.
Jesus saith unto them, Have ye understood all these things? They say unto him, Yea, Lord.
Then said he unto them, therefore every scribe which is instructed unto the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old.
(New Testament | Matthew 13:51 – 52)
Attentively yours
This is a servant in the hands of our beloved SOTER, even Jesus Cristos, for whose glory alone, I write, amen and amen.
Miguel Angel Tinoco Rodriguez
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November 26, 2010 at 8:07 pm
MrNirom
The Danger of Theorizing – Introduction by Del DowDell
A friend sent me info from a website of “the Book of Mormon Archaeological Forum” in which 16 scriptural points were listed as having to exist for “Any Book of Mormon Lands proposal must include all of (these) to be seriously considered.” They then list a total of sixteen (16) criteria. It is interesting that the Book of Mormon itself lists upwards of sixty (60) geographical points and criteria, not just 16. They also make the sweeping statement on this website:
“There are several theories held among Latter-day Saints for the location of Book of Mormon lands. Some place the geography of the book in upstate New York or near the Great Lakes. Others look to Peru and South America, or to the Baja Peninsula, or Texas and some even propose the Malaysian Peninsula. BMAF supports a Mesoamerican context for the major Book of Mormon sites. Other locations may meet some of the following criteria, but only Mesoamerica meets all these elements required by the book itself. This list of criteria is not a cafeteria list. Any Book of Mormon lands proposal must be able to demonstrate ALL.”
Now, I couldn’t agree more. Any proposal of a Land of Promise site must include ALL of the criteria stated in the Book of Mormon. However, their list is both minimal for there are far more points illustrated in the Book of Mormon that must be matched, but many of these points are either inaccurate or do not relate to anywhere but the Andean area of Chile, Peru and Ecuador.
Here is their list of 16 points:
(1) A Major River flowing from South to North (Alma 2:15, 22:27)
(2) A Major River originating from a mountainous narrow strip of wilderness that runs from “the sea east even to the sea west” and serves as a natural feature providing protection from the Lamanites (Alma 50:11)
(3) Two High Civilizations with Kings and Priests and City-States with scribes as important officers and evidence of many major cities surrounding the Narrow strip of mountainous wilderness. No other theory can show this fact.
(4) The area of the northern culture must contain evidence of many cities made out of cement. (Helaman 3:3-18,)
(5) Two Highly Literate (Written Language) Societies living adjacent to but separate from each other between 550 BC and 200 BC, one of which lived “far northward” from the other. They must have coexisted for at least 250 years
(6) A small, narrow neck of land dividing the land Northward from the land Southward (Alma 22:32, Heleman 3:8, Ether 10:20)
(7) Multiple, functional Calendar and Dating Systems
(8) Merchant Class Using Weights and Measures tied to gold, silver and grain (Alma 11)
(9) Engineers to Build Temples, Towers, and Highways, using Cement
(10) Highly-skilled Craftsmen – working with Precious Metals, Stonework (Hel.6:11)
(11) Warrior Society – Great Battles, Structured Armies, Sophisticated Fortifications
(12) Legends of a White and Bearded God
(13) Must be in the Western Hemisphere but where Joseph Smith could not have known about in 1829
(14) The winter climate must be bearable enough for Lamanite combatants to wear loin-cloths and shaven heads (Alma 3:5, 20-25)
(15) The land must show evidence of substantial gold and silver in the Land of First Inheritance, the Land of Nephi, the land of Zarahemla and the land of the Jaredites. (Helaman 6:9)
(16) An Agricultural Base to support several millions of people, Columbus having visited the area.(1 Nephi 13:12)
In the posts that follow, these 16 points will be covered to see whether or not they match the author’s Mesoamerica model, the Great Lakes model, or the Andean area (Peru) which the author so flippantly discounts.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:11 pm
MrNirom
The Danger of Theorizing – Part I – Lamanite Attacks in Winter – by Del DowDell
As stated in the last post, the sixteen points listed in the Book of Mormon Archaeological Forum website, it is interesting to me that the author of this claim lists only 16 points. I have a list of over 45 points taken right from specific Book of Mormon scripture, plus another 20 coming out of the scriptures in general (such as wars and their location, etc.), or directly from Hebrew culture during the time Lehi lived at Jerusalem. 65 points that must be met for any place or model to qualify as a location for the Land of Promise—not just 18.
But the real problem lies in comments such as the following—his 14th point:
“(14) The winter climate must be bearable enough for Lamanite combatants to wear loin-cloths and shaven heads (Alma 3:5, 20-25)
Now the problem lies in the scriptures quoted:
3:5: “Now the heads of the Lamanites were shorn; and they were naked, save it were skin which was girded about their loins, and also their armor, which was girded about them, and their bows, and their arrows, and their stones, and their slings, and so forth”
3:20-25: Not many days after the battle which was fought in the land of Zarahemla, by the Lamanites and the Amlicites, that there was another army of the Lamanites came in upon the people of Nephi, in the same place where the first army met the Amlicites….the scripture goes on to talk about Alma being wounded and not involved, the Nephites killing many Lamanites and driving the remainder out of the land, then the Nephites returned to their homes, ending with… ”Now all these things were done, yea, all these wars and contentions were commenced and ended in the fifth year of the reign of the judges.”
There is absolutely no mention of any Lamanite WINTER campaign against the Nephites. In fact, all armies and generals know not to mount any serious attack against an enemy during the winter—both Napoleon and Hitler learned that lesson by losing most of their armies in such winter campaigns in Russia. To even consider that the Lamanites came down to do battle with the Nephites during the winter is unthinkable. In fact, any even cursory reading of the scripture shows that after any battle during the first about 900 years of warfare, the Lamanites retreated back to their lands and did not mount another attack until at least a year later—suggesting to any strategist that the Lamanites were in their homeland during the winter, sallying forth during the summer months to attack.
The point is, you can make any claim you want, but the scripture you reference MUST state that claim the way intended. In this case, and in so many cases of Mesoamerican, Great Lakes, Heartland, et all, theorists try to claim something not in scripture. In fact, the only mention of climate in the Book of Mormon is found in Alma 46:40:
“And there were some who died with fevers which at some seasons of the year were very frequent in the land—but not so much so with fevers, because of the excellent qualities of the many plants and roots which God had prepared to remove the cause of diseases, to which men were subject by the nature of the climate.”
It is a sad commentary on scholarship when someone has a model of a location in mind and then tries to find ways to defend or support it. Scholarship should be involved in finding ALL the requirements in scripture and then seeing where that might lead one—however, theorizing on locations never allows such and the result is a disingenuous approach to the scriptural record.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:17 pm
MrNirom
The Danger of Theorizing – Part II – Major River – by Del DowDell
As stated in the last post, a friend sent me info from a website of “the Book of Mormon Archaeological Forum” in which 16 scriptural points were listed as having to exist for any site claiming to be the Land of Promise in the Book of Mormon to be considered. Last post we discussed point 14 and its inaccuracy. Below are the other 15 points with comments:
“(1) Major River flowing from South to North (Alma 2:15, 22:27).”
It is unlikely that any river’s location and course would have remained constant through the upheaval “thus the face of the whole earth became deformed” because of the quaking of the earth (3 Nephi 8:17), and “the whole earth was about to divide asunder” (3 Nephi 8:6), and the earth was carried upon cities with great mountains forming (3 Nephi 8:10), and “the highways were broken up, and the level roads were spoiled, and many smooth places became rough” (3 Nephi 8:13), and “the rocks were rent in twain and found in broken fragments, and in seams and in cracks, upon all the face of the land” (Mormon 8:18), all of which lasted for the space of three hours (3 Nephi 8:19). The only mention of the Sidon River after these events is in Mormon 1:10 in which they are referred to as “the waters of Sidon” not the Sidon River as prior to the cataclysm. We do not know from scripture whether or not these waters remained as a river and flowed to the sea in the last 400 years of the Land of Promise topography, as they did before the cataclysm. To make this an absolute (and first) claim seems out of place here.
“(2) A Major River originating from a mountainous narrow strip of wilderness that runs from “the sea east even to the sea west” and serves as a natural feature providing protection from the Lamanites (Alma 50:11).”
First of all, the river did not provide the natural feature of separation, but the narrow strip of wilderness did (Alma 22:27). Second, one can read in this verse that the a river originated in the narrow strip of wilderness and ran to the west sea; however, it is not conclusive. We know from other scripture that the narrow strip of wilderness ran from the west sea to the east sea, separating the Land of Nephi from the Land of Zarahemla (Alma 22:27). Obviously, there was the head of a river along this narrow strip, but the verse does not say specifically that it ran clear to the west sea—only that the line between the two lands ran from the west sea to the east sea. “The Nephites possessing all the land northward” of this narrow strip of wilderness has been stated (Alma 22:27). To claim a river has to be in this wilderness area running into the west sea is not at all conclusive, nor can it be a requirement for a land to be the Land of Promise.
Though this cannot be a requirement for the Land of Promise as indicated above, there is such a river in the Andean area that not only meets this, but also makes a necessary loop around the Land of Jershon. But one of the issues is that Mesoamerican theorists will claim this river ran clear to the west sea when it does not say this specifically, but reject the narrow neck of land running form the west sea to the east (Alma 22:32)—claiming it does not say that specifically. Both statements were written by Alma or Mormon and, therefore, must be taken both to mean the same, or neither means that. You cannot pick and choose a meaning to match your own thinking a is being done here by these theorists.
Lastly, the area of the ancient Andean civilization from Ecuador to Chile has such factors as any archaeologist and anthropologist can tell you, and most have written about.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:25 pm
MrNirom
The Danger of Theorizing – Part III – Major Cities – by Del DowDell
As stated in the last post, a friend sent me info from a website of “the Book of Mormon Archaeological Forum” in which 16 scriptural points were listed as having to exist for any site claiming to be the Land of Promise in the Book of Mormon to be considered. Last post we discussed point (1) and its inaccuracy.
“(3) High Civilizations with Kings and Priests and City-States with scribes as important officers and evidence of many major cities surrounding the Narrow strip of mountainous wilderness. No other theory can show this fact.”
First of all, there is no mention of a mountainous wilderness. This strip of wilderness mentioned in Alma 22:27 only states that it lies between the Land of Nephi and the land of Zarahemla. Since “wilderness” literally means “a tract of unoccupied land,” it can mean any topography so long as it is not permanently inhabited.
Thus, we must eliminate that requirement.
Second, there is no mention or suggestion of city-states in the scriptural record. In the Land of Nephi, we know that there were sub-kings (Lamoni) and an overall king (Lamoni’s father), which might qualify for a city-state, but in the Land of Zarahemla and the Land of Bountiful, there is no such suggestion.
There is no mention of a king or city-state leader, or any leaders other than judges, after the time of king Mosiah II, and at no time during Mosiah I, Benjamin, or Mosiah II, is there any mention of a city-state arrangement. Only a mention of cities and their lands, which also included other cities within those lands.
King Zeniff, King Noah and King Limhi, were not in the Land of Zarahemla, but in the Land of Nephi temporarily, and the Lamanites never considered them a separate city state, but a vassal of the Lamanites. Nor can we say that scribes as important officers are mentioned.
As for cities surrounding the area of the strip of wilderness separating the Land of Nephi and the Land of Zarahemla, we only know that the Lamanite occupied areas high up in the highlands, with the city of Lehi-Nephi (city of Nephi), Shemlon and Shilom probably being the closest one to the Land of Zarahemla. Trying to place specific cities in specific areas other than the City of Nephi and the City of Zarahemla and the city of Bountiful, is extremely hazardous with the bare information provided in the scriptures.
As for the most ancient civilization in the Western Hemisphere, archaeologists claim it is the city of Caral, 170-acre settlement in the arid Supe Valley 120 miles north of Lima and just inland from the coast. Not only is it the most ancient city in the Americas, it predated the Inca by 4000 years, and was flourishing a century before the pyramids of Gizeh. It has six stepped pyramids, the tallest is 4 stories tall with a base of 500 feet It also has many other small platforms, two sunken circular plazas and diverse architectural features including densely packed residences.
Civilization in South America has the largest ancient register, spanning from 4,500 years from Norte Chico to the Inca Empire. Caral’s date is by carbon-dating reed and woven carrying bags that were found on the site. These bags were used to carry the stones used for the construction of the pyramids. The town itself had a population of approximately 3000 people. But there are 17 other sites in the area, which allows for a possible total population of 20,000 people in the valley. An even older city has been recently uncovered in the same general area north of Lima referred to as Sechin Bajo, considered to be 500 years older than Caral.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:29 pm
MrNirom
The Danger of Theorizing – Part IV – Cement – by Del DowDell
Continuing with the sixteen points listed in the website of the Book of Mormon Archaeological Forum, the following picks up with point #4:
“(4) The area of the northern culture must contain evidence of many cities made out of cement. (Helaman 3:3-18)”
Helaman makes the following statements regarding this issue: “And there being but little timber upon the face of the land, nevertheless the people who went forth became exceeding expert in the working of cement; therefore they did build houses of cement in the which they did dwell” (Helaman 3:7); “And the people who were in the land northward did dwell in tents, and in houses of cement” (3:9),
Two important points should be made here: 1) Only residential houses are indicated that they were made of cement, and 2) it is not likely that a house would be made entirely of cement, since cement requires some type of framework. Today that framework is metal rebar within the cement, and metal frames for doorways and window openings. In the time of the Nephites, it is likely these areas were supported with rock, and that the cement was used as mortar to cement the rock together. According to the website “Mormon Mesoamerica,” the Ancient Mesoamericans “made a type of “cement” out of limestone. It was then used as a plaster overcoat on top of rubble and stonework.”
The same type of construction was used in places in South America, where a type of limestone cement was used as a covering over rock.
Also “(9) Engineers to Build Temples, Towers, and Highways, using Cement.”
However, the scriptures do not say that those in the Land Northward built temples out of cement. It says “they did suffer whatsoever tree should spring up upon the face of the land that it should grow up, that in time they might have timber to build their houses, yea, their cities, and their temples, and their synagogues, and their sanctuaries, and all manner of their buildings” (Helaman 3:9).
Thus, it should be noted that temples, synagogues and major structures and “all manner of buildings” were not built until the trees had grown so that “in time they could use timber” for such construction.
In addition, it should be noted historically that “The Maya constructed cities with complexes that could cover many football fields and pyramidal ones that rose to heights of 230 feet, yet they built their cities with Stone Age technology. No steel beams supported pyramids or vaults, no metal tools were available to quarry stone or to carve it. Instead, wooden beams, stone, and lime cement were the structural building blocks; rope-and-water abrasion and stone and obsidian tools provided the basic technology of Maya cities.
The same can be said of all the temples and major construction found in ancient Peru, northern Chile and Ecuador, including western Bolivia. Referred to as the Quicha technique by the University of Peru, earth was utilized as a secondary filling element, to which straw, plaster and cement (limestone) are added. The foundations were made of plain concrete with considerably large stones, utilizing one part of cement, 4 of sand, 6 of pebbles or stone, and ten of large stones, plus water. The thickness of these ancient foundations were at least twice the width of the wall built upon them. Mostly their major buildings were made of cement and carved stone in the north, and mud brick, adobe, rock and wood in the south.
Lastly, Helaman says, “And thus they did enable the people in the land northward that they might build many cities, both of wood and of cement” (3:11).
While it is true that buildings and structures in the Great Lakes and Heartland areas of present day United States were not built of rock or cement, it would probably surprise most people to learn that the ancient Egyptians used concrete in the construction of buildings, and the Romans had refined the art of concrete making down to a precise technology, and such construction is found throughout the Andean area of South America as well as Mesoamerica. Thus, cement cannot be used to prove Mesoamerica is the Land of Promise any more than it can be used to prove the Andean area is the Land of Promise.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:35 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part V – Gold and Silver a Criteria – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with Gold and Silver. The author of these sixteen points states:
“(15) The land must show evidence of substantial gold and silver in the Land of First Inheritance, the Land of Nephi, the land of Zarahemla and the land of the Jaredites. (Helaman 6:9).”
Actually, the author of this should have pointed toward Nephi’s statement: “And it came to pass that we did find upon the land of promise as we journeyed in the wilderness…all manner of ore, both of gold, and of silver, and of copper” (1 Nephi 18:25).
Both Gold, Silver, and Copper in a single ore sample
Now, this statement by Nephi is extremely important and overlooked by Book of Mormon scholars and theorists. “Both of gold, and of silver, and of copper.” The word both means two, that is “two, as considered distinct from others, or by themselves.” At first glance, one might think Nephi used improper language in stating “both” and then followed with three items. However, Nephi was correct in this usage, as was Joseph Smith in translating it.
Gold and silver are precious ores, and of the same kind. Copper in not a precious ore, and is a different kind. Thus, “both gold and silver” is one kind, or precious ores, “and of copper” is a separate kind, or a non-precious ore. Thus, both gold and silver as one and copper as another.
Gold, Silver and Copper bubbled in a single ore
The importance of this is not in the grammar, but in the concept of ore. When gold and silver and copper are mentioned together, it refers to a single ore that contains all three metals. That is, Nephi, who by this time had become quite an expert in ore containing metals for the Lord has so instructed him (1 Nephi 17:9), found ore in the Promised Land that contained gold, silver and copper within single ore.
Interestingly, such a combination is found in abundance in Chile and Peru, but rarely in any other place in the Western Hemisphere. In the book “Lehi Never Saw Mesoamerica” the ore and mines in the Western Hemisphere are covered, including the extensive mining in Chile and Peru of gold, silver and copper in single ore. In fact, Chile is the world’s largest copper producer and hosts about 30% of the globes known copper resources and accounts for over 35% of global copper production. Much of this copper is found within ore that also contains gold and silver. The latter is mined for the sole purpose of paying for the mining and production of copper.
According to the U.S. Geologic Mapping of ores in the Western Hemisphere, gold, silver and copper in single ore is found only in one location in Honduras and nowhere else in Mesoamerica. But, again, it is found in numerous sites in Chile and some in Peru.
When this author makes the statement: “Other locations may meet some of the following criteria, but only Mesoamerica meets all these elements required by the book itself,” he is making the same mistake almost all Book of Mormon scholars and theorist make. They get so involved in proving their model, they ignore the facts that are easily checked by anyone so interested. Part of the problem of people buying into someone’s theory, is they do not check out the facts and references involved.
In addition, Peru is the fifth largest producer of gold in the world, behind Africa, China, Australia and the United States. Chile is the 14th largest producer of gold. Mexico is the 18th largest, producing only 17% of that of Peru. Guatemala is 36th in the world, producing only 2.5% of that of Peru. Honduras is 39th.
So where is the all-important match of Book of Mormon criteria in his list of points?
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November 26, 2010 at 8:37 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part VI – Calendaring and Dating Systems – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with a calendaring system used by the Nephites. The author of these sixteen points required calendaring to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site. He states:
“(7) Multiple, functional Calendar and Dating Systems”
First of all, and the main point here is that, there is no mention of any calendaring in the scriptures. Thus it simply cannot be used as a criteria for a suggested Land of Promise site. Of course, Mesoamerican theorists would like to claim this, because of the famous and highly controversial Maya Calendar, and the less known Aztec Calendar—both stone carvings found in Mesoamerica.
But the fact of the matter is, there simply is no mention in scripture of calendars or anything like it.
Basically, the Book of Mormon writers reckoned their time by the number of years since an event. This is shown in the first verse in Alma: “Now it came to pass that in the first year of the reign of the judges over the people of Nephi” (Alma 1:1), and “thus ended the eleventh year of the judges” (Alma 1:9), or “in the commencement of the fortieth year of the reign of the judges over the people of Nephi” (Helaman 1:1), or “that the ninety and first year had passed away and it was six hundred years from the time that Lehi left Jerusalem” (3 Nephi 1:1). Mormon equates the years according to his age: “Therefore it came to pass that in my sixteenth year I did go forth at the head of an army of the Nephites, against the Lamanites; therefore three hundred and twenty and six years had passed away.” (Mormon 2:2)
The closest we come in the Book of Mormon to a system of reckoning, is: “And now it came to pass, if there was no mistake made by this man in the reckoning of our time, the thirty and third year had passed away” (3 Nephi 8:2)
The thing is, we do not know the system of reckoning among the Nephites. We do know they had observatories to determine the time of year for such things as planting and harvesting since several have been found in the Andean area of South America as well as in Mesoamerica–in fact, almost all ancient cultures had some type of observatory for such important dates. But for a multi-functioning calendar, that is simply someone’s idea to inject the Maya Calendar into the Book of Mormon. No such concept is ever mentioned in the Book of Mormon.
The Dating System used by the Nephites is also unknown, however, it can be assumed they had such, since both years and events were of major importance, especially from the time that King Mosiah ended the kingship method of government, and instituted the government of judges (Mosiah 29:11; 26) which took place in 92-91 B.C.
In addition, Alma writes that “there were some who died with fevers, which at some seasons of the year were very frequent in the land” (Alma 46:40), which could be assumed to be in the summer months—but no mention of any calendar or reckoning system is even implied. Nor is any mention of the Jaredite or Nephi planting seasons implied—we only know they planted their seeds brought from their old homelands (1 Nephi 18:24; Mosiah 9:9; Ether 6:13).
It is disingenuous for any scholar or theorist to make adamant claims that cannot be shown to exist within the Book of Mormon record. The fact that we can assume the Nephites had some type of calendaring and dating system is probably a given, yet we do not know what that was, nor do we have any record of it in the scriptures by which to claim such a system and its “multi-functional” method having to exist.
If one is going to claim certain points must be met, they HAVE to be taken from scripture, not from something found in some location.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:40 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part VII – Working with Precious Metals and Stonework – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with working with precious metals and stone of the Nephites. The author of these sixteen points required to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site, states:
“(10) Highly-skilled Craftsmen – working with Precious Metals, Stonework (Hel.6:11)”
Now this one is almost laughable. The stonework of craftsman in the Andean area of South America, especially in Peru, is unmatched anywhere in the world. Engineers today cannot understand how the walls of huge stones could have been crafted, carved, and moved into such superior fittings and without mortar that not even a piece of paper or knife blade can be inserted between them.
The stepped pyramids and structures of Mesoamerica are, without exception, amazing accomplishments. However, that stonework does not even compare with what is found in Peru. As one engineering journal has stated: “The laying of the stones are impossible for ancient man to accomplish unless they were more advanced in engineering than we were some 50 years ago! Unless they already had Brown’s Gas, they could not have created this facade. It would also have required laser and computer backup to do preliminary requirements for future stones. Overunity might have been known back then, but the keyword pliability, was needed in order to “lock” these stones due to the potentiality of earthquakes. These ancients did not put the base stones down but they did put little stones on top of the highly engineered bases. When the Spanish built their churches on top of the base stones, the earthquakes destroyed them but the old stones still stood easily. Meaning, the ancients were highly advanced.”
The stonework in the Andes demonstrates the tremendous construction skills of the early Andean people. Stones of up to 125 tons make up many of the buildings found in the area, Tiwanaku itself is as much a marvel of engineering as it is of early spirituality. Though it predates the Incas by more than a millennium, the ruins suggest an advanced irrigation system, using raised fields, and the ability to transport large amounts of stone over long distances. Tiwanaku has many stone gates of huge proportions and some stones weighing over 100 tons, which align with the arc of the sun on the solstices or equinoxes. Some experts claim that early Andeans had decoded the migration of constellations and and incorporated these patterns into the structures as well. The hills around Tiwanaku have huge ruined cities, and south of the city of Llave there is the most beautiful stonework that can be imagined, but it can only be seen from the air, like the canals around Lake Poopo and the Nasca lines.
As for the metalwork, the working of precious metals in Peru is legend. Their skills outstripped any other by centuries, and were comparable with those of the highest order of Europe of a later date. The designs of these ancient workings are remarkable and unmatched anywhere else in the Western Hemisphere.
Simply put, metalworking in Mesoamerica dates no earlier than the first century B.C., and actual archaeological findings show it not present before 900 A.D. A fact John L. Sorenson bemoans in his book “An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon,” claiming that “we can only hope that some future findings will show metalwork was done anciently in Mesoamerica.”
Again, the disingenuous approach by the author of this website is evident in such claims that simply do not match the record. Mesoamerica in most of these 16 points simply does not satisfy the points, whereas the Andean area of Peru does in all cases that can be traced to the Book of Mormon record and not to someone’s imagination or localized findings in a particular model.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:43 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part VIII – Narrow Neck of Land – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with the Narrow Neck of Land that separated the Land Southward from the Land Northward. The author of these sixteen points required to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site, states:
“(6) A small, narrow neck of land dividing the land Northward from the land Southward (Alma 22:32, Heleman 3:8, Ether 10:20)“
This is another of those points that simply does not fit Mesoamerica. The point of a narrow neck in their model is the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, an area 140 miles from the Bay of Campeche to the Gulf of Tehuantepec.
The narrowing of the land in this area is only slight, and would hardly even be noticed when moving along the north or south shorelines. Today, of course, with satellite photos, map making, and aerial photography, a person can tell there is an actual Isthmus, though quite wide, it is still a narrowing of the land in Mesoamerica. But in 600 B.C., in 421 A.D., etc., no one could have obtained a position to have viewed this slight narrowing of the shoreline. The gentle curve of the north shore in the Bay of Campeche, the distance from one vantage point to the other is 340 miles. In the Gulf of Tehuantepec, the distance is 375 miles.
That is, a person’s view of the narrow of the shoreline in the north coast would have to cover about 340 miles to notice a narrowing of the land. That distance along the south coast would be 375 miles. Obviously, no one can see anywhere near that far with the naked eye and, therefore, could not have seen any narrowing of the land to know there was a “narrow neck of land.”
In addition, any qualified narrow neck would have to allow a ship to be launched into the west sea and be able to sail to the north. We find in Alma that when Hagoth’s ships were launched into the west sea: “they took their course northward” (Alma 63:6). In Mesoamerica, it is impossible to launch a ship from the narrow neck of land—the Isthmus of Tehuantepec—and sail northward.
In order to leave the Mesoamerican Narrow Neck of Land, a ship would have to sail 120 miles in a south-southwestern direction, then 25 miles in a west direction, then 750 miles in a west, northwest direction, for a total of 895 miles before it could reach a point where it could turn northward.
Simply put, there is no Narrow Neck of Land in Mesoamerica. And any attempt to claim that the Isthmus of Tehuantepec was the narrow neck of land described by Mormon is without merit.
Thus, while the requirement for a Narrow Neck of Land is certainly one of the points that is made in the Book of Mormon to describe the Land of Promise, Mesoamerica does not qualify as having such a feature.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:46 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part IX – Legends of a White and Bearded God – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with Legends of a White and Bearded God in the Land of Promise. The author of these sixteen points required to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site, there must exist:
“(12) Legends of a White and Bearded God“
Naturally, such a requirement is an absolute must. But it is not limited to Mesoamerica. In fact, the legends in Peru are even more fascinating.
First of all, it is well-known that almost all Indian tribes in the Western Hemisphere preserve oral traditions about the ancient appearance of a white god who came down from heaven to instruct and organize his people. Some of the most interesting versions of this widespread tradition come from Peru, where this legendary deity is known variously as Kon Ticci Viracocha, Tunupa, Pachacamac, Tarapaca, or Arnauan, depending on the region of the country being considered. Four of the more highly acclaimed Peruvian historians, Pedro Cieza de Leon, Sarmiento de Gamboa, Betanzos, and Santacruz Pachacuti, have written especially interesting accounts of this white and bearded god, and when considered together, they give us a reasonably detailed description of the traditional hero’s physical appearance, personality, and activities among the ancestors of the Andean Indians.
Pedro Cieza de Leon arrived in Peru in 1548 as a simple soldier in a military group sent to quell an uprising that had turned into a civil war between the Spanish rulers of the country. He remained until 1550, during which time he visited almost every part of the newly conquered land, observing and recording descriptions of the terrain, the plants, the customs of the natives, and the major facets of their history. He had been keeping a journal of his observations ever since beginning his travels in Colombia in 1541, but now Cieza became fascinated with the idea of writing a history of Peru and its peoples. After completing his military duties, he would interview the amautas and orejones, the surviving wise men and noblemen of the Incas, as well as qualified Spaniards to learn all he could about the history and traditions of the conquered Inca empire.
“Before the Incas ruled, or were even heard of in these kingdoms, these Indians speak of another thing much greater than all others which they tell, because they affirm that they went for a long time without seeing the sun, and, that, suffering tremendously with this deficiency, they raised great prayers and supplications to those they revered as gods, asking them to restore the light they lacked; and in this manner, there arose from the island of Titicaca, which is in the great lake of Collao, the sun shining brilliantly, which made them all very happy. And afterwards, they say that from the land of the noon sun, there came and appeared to them a white man of large build whose aspect and person showed great authority and veneration, and this man had such supreme power that he leveled the mountains and raised up the plains into large hills, making water flow from boulders; and since they recognized his supreme power, they called him the creator of all things, their originator, father of the sun, because even this notwithstanding, they say that he did many greater things, because he gave life to men and animals, and from his hand, they received notable benefit. According to the Indians who told it to me, who heard it from their fathers, who also heard it in the songs they preserve from antiquity; this man went towards the north, working many miracles in his journey through the mountains, and they never saw him again. In many places they say that he gave commandments to the men about how to live, and that he spoke with love and much humility, admonishing them to be good and not cause harm or injury to one another, but instead, to love each other and have charity. Generally they call him Ticiviracocha, even though in the province of Collao, they call him Tuapaca, and in other places he is known as Arnauan. Many temples were built to him in different places, where they erected stone statues in his likeness before which they offered sacrifices. The large stone figures in the city of Tiahuanacu are said to date from that era, and even though by tradition inherited from the past, they recount this that I tell of Ticiviracocha, they say nothing else about him, nor that he ever returned to any part of this kingdom.”
White Bearded God represented on the 10-ton gateway to ancient Tihuanacu (Tiwanaku). It would be hard to find any other Western Hemispheric civilization with such documented information regarding a white and bearded God, than what has been recorded by several historians of the time in Peru.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:48 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part X – Legends of a White and Bearded God Part II – by Del DowDell
In the last post the comments of a white god as written by Pedro Cieza de Leon in 1541 was listed. Continuing with the information regarding the legends of a white god who visited the Peruvian area in antiquity, the following is from Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa.
Gamboa (often called Sarmiento) was a celebrated navigator and captain in the Spanish army. While stationed in Cuzco, Peru, he was ordered by the Viceroy, Francisco de Toledo, to compile a history of the natives. Summoning some of the oldest wise men still living in the ancient Inca capital, Sarmiento interviewed them individually, then compared their testimonies to draw his conclusions and make his compilation.
The manuscript he prepared was called Historia de Los Incas, La Segunda Parte de La Historia Llamada Indica, the second of what was originally projected to be three separate books. The manuscript remained unpublished in the custody of the Spanish crown for many years, finally finding its way by sale to the library at the University of Göttingen, [Germany], where it was discovered and published in 1906. Sarmiento’s version of the white god legend is as follows:
“All the Indians agree that they were created by this Viracocha, who they believe was a man of medium height, white and clothed in a white robe gathered around his body, and that he carried a staff and a book in his hands. After this, they tell a strange story; that is, that after this Viracocha created all the people, he came walking to a place where a large group had congregated … Viracocha continued his journey, doing the works of piety and instructing the people he had created … and wishing to leave the land of Peru, he gave a speech to those he had created, advising them of things which were to happen in the future. He warned them that people would come saying that they were the Viracocha, their creator, and that the people should not believe the impostors, but that in the coming ages he would send his messengers to teach and support them. And having said this, he and his two companions went into the ocean and walked away over the waters, without sinking, as if they had been walking on land.”
Then there is the record of Juan de Betanzos who was among the first conquistadores who invaded Peru with Francisco Pizarro. Immediately upon entering the country, he began studying Quechua, the language of the Incas, until he became proficient enough to be named official interpreter for the royal court. He was skilled enough in the native language that his first publications were Spanish-Quechua dictionaries. Betanzos married one of the former Inca princesses and lived in Cuzco, compiling data and observations first hand until 1551, when his major treatise on the traditions and history of the Andean Indians, Suma y Narracion de Los Incas, appeared. He took special care to preserve the “order of speaking of the natives” in his writings. This is Betanzo’s description of the god Viracocha:
“Asking the Indians what idea or figure they had of this Viracocha when the ancients saw him according to their traditions they had received, they told me that he was a man of tall stature, and that he had white clothing that came to his feet, and that his robe he had drawn at the waist, and that he had short hair, and that he had a crown on his head like a priest would wear, and that he walked with his head bare, and that he had a certain thing in his hands that looked to them like the small religious books the priests carry around with them today. I asked them the name of this person in whose honor the stone monument was erected and they told me that he was called Con Tici Viracocha Pachayachachic, which in their tongue, means, ‘god, creator of the earth.’ ”
An additional account is from an Indian of the southern sector of the Inca empire who prided himself on having been “Christianized.” He wrote under the unwieldy name of Don Joan de Santacruz Pachacuti Yamqui, and his manuscript, a curious mixture of Spanish and Quechua words, remained unpublished until 1880. Santacruz Pachacuti’s version of the white god tradition, though, is most interesting:
“Some years after the devils had been cast out of this land, there came to these provinces and kingdoms of Tabantinsuyo a bearded man of medium build with long hair, wearing a rather long tunic, and they say that he was more than a youth. He had white hairs, was slender, walked with a staff, and he taught the people with great love, calling them all his sons and daughters. When he journeyed through the provinces he performed many miracles visibly: he healed the sick by touching them with his hands. He had no belongings or possessions, and spoke all of the languages of the provinces better than the natives, and they called him Tonapa or Tarapaca Viracochanpa Chayachicachan or Pacchacan and Bicchhaycamayoc Cunacaycamayoc. He chastised the people with great love and they listened to him with rapt attention, receiving what he preached to them, indicating and emphasizing each chapter of the discourse.”
Legends in Mesoamerica fall far short of these extremely detailed accounts, shortened her for sake of space, but extensive in their descriptive nature of this white God.
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March 19, 2012 at 11:57 am
Jimmy Dee
Why have so many people decided the main BOM events happened in Central America when the tribe of Ephraim is here in North America , not in Central America ? The bible takes place in a limited geography , yes , but it didn’t get it’s start in China or anywhere else but Israel . The BOM lands are limited as well but not to a country non-relevant to the tribe of Ephraim . The New York area is the perfect setting for the BOM . New York is financial Capital of USA and just like Israel of old , it will fall unless we get back to Jesus . God isn’t concerned with us proving the BOM to be physically correct , he wants us to gain spiritual proof so I doubt he cares that the majority of the people are searching far away from the truth, in fact it’s probably meant to be that way . . and if as much time and effort were put into the Great Lakes theory I think the true geography of the BOM would be known by now . Here’s a link with some study that has been done . http://www.toddjumper.com/cumorah/research5.htm
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March 19, 2012 at 7:46 pm
MrNirom
MesoAmerica was peopled by those who left on Hagoth’s ships and sailed north. That is why you find similar structures in both South America (Peru) and MesoAmerica.
In the 1830’s, North America, Central America, and South America were considered to be one continent.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:50 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part XI – Warrior Class and Sophisticated Fortifications – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with a warrior class of people in the Land of Promise, and sophisticated fortifications. The author of these sixteen points required to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site, there must exist:
“(11) Warrior Society – Great Battles, Structured Armies, Sophisticated Fortifications“
The first two of these three requirement stated above could probably be found in all societies across the Western Hemisphere for seldom does one find in antiquity a peaceful people without a warrior class and structured armies of some sort. The third part, sophisticated fortifications is another matter. But let us take them one at a time.
1. Warrior Society with Great Battles. The structure of the Andean area in South America is one of continual battles of a warrior society from the most ancient of records right up to the period of the Inca before the Spanish arrived. Warfare moved back and forth across this Andean area, especially in the middle areas of Peru and southern Ecuador.
2. Great Armies. The roads that criss-cross the Andean area long held the movement of armies marching forth, dating back into B.C. times. Archaeologists have given all these different societies names, though in reality they were all Nephites or Lamanites, but show that each society they name was supplanted through war by another, strong society. This happened for at least two thousand years in the Andean area right up to 1541 when the Spanish defeated the Inca, the last of the native warrior societies.
3. Sophisticated Fortifications. Scattered all over the Andean area are both major fortresses and small, minor lookout forts (called resorts in the Book of Mormon). The Andes is a series of canyons and valleys and along almost every mountain pass, canyon wall, and hillsides overlooking where an enemy could approach, these small resorts or forts can be found.
In addition, there is a unique feature found in Peru and that is a series of fortified walls stretching from east to west across the land whose purpose, archaeologists claim, is to keep a southern enemy from gaining further ground to the north. Perhaps the most famous of these walls is dubbed “The Great Wall of Peru,” which stretches from the Pacific Ocean for a hundred miles inland, down through valleys, across river beds, and up over mountains. The wall is as high as fifteen feet in most places, but higher where it dips down into river beds, and was built with its north side easily scaleable by a defending army, but the south side is steep and slick, almost impossible to scale.
Discovered by Shippee and Johnson in 1931 in an aerial reconnaissance of Peru, most of the wall is not even observable at ground level because of the forests, mountains and riverbeds. Nor is most of it accessible because of the inhospitable terrain. Built of large rocks and mortared in place, the wall matches closely the wall that Moronihah built to successfully stop the northern advance of the Lamanites, which enabled the Nephites to then gain back much of the land to the south lost earlier.
While almost any location could boast of ancient armies, wars, and military societies—which describes the American Indians of North America as well as throughout the Western Hemisphere–the fortifications of the Andean area set apart South America as a perfect match for this point. The fortress of Kuelap (shown here) is a most convincing fortress built for defense, as is the fortress of Sacsahuaman above Cuzco.
In fact, while most cities now viewed in Mesoamerica were obviously not built for serious defense, just about every structure in the Andean area of South America shows a strong defensive purpose in its construction. In fact, most archaeologists who have worked on the ruins in the Andean area have commented on how the temples, palaces, cities, etc., were all built with strong defenses—more so than anywhere else in the Western Hemisphere.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:52 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part XII – Two Highly Literate Societies – by Del DowDell
Another of these points has to do with two distinct languages both spoken and written in the Land of Promise. According to the author of these sixteen points he requires to be met in order to determine a Land of Promise site, there must exist:
“(5) Two Highly Literate (Written Language) Societies living adjacent to but separate from each other between 550 BC and 200 BC, one of which lived “far northward” from the other. They must have coexisted for at least 250 years.”
Peru, of course, has boasted only two languages for millennia, with Quichua and Aymara the languages of the two distinct groups of people in the Andean area. This is even true today, where these two languages dominate all the natives over the entire Andean area. Quichua, of course, is the predominant language that survived among the natives from antiquity clear into Inca times.
Aymara (Aymar aru) is one of the major languages (of which there are 8 to 10 dialectic varieties) of South America, spoken by more than two million people in the Andean region of Bolivia, Peru, Chile and Argentina. Some linguists think Aymara may be distantly related to Quechua, but this has not been conclusively shown.
Quichua (Quechua) is a native South American language family and dialect cluster spoken by 6 to 8 million people primarily in the Andes of South America (called runa simi by indigenous Andean people), and derived from an original common ancestor language. Quichuas specifically is spoken in Ecuador (also called Kichwa), highlands in north-central Peru, and highlands of southern Peru, including the Puna, Bolivia, and north-western Argentina.
It is interesting that a Mesoamerican theorist would pick the subject of two distinct languages when the area of Mesoamerica had numerous such languages back into antiquity. John L. Sorenson comments liberally about these different languages as his excuse to claim that other than Jaredites, Nephites and Lamanites occupied the Land of Promise—as did Hugh Nibley before him, a linguist of the highest order.
The major problem here is the literacy factor. Written languages have been found in Mesoamerica—they have not been found to any degree in the Andean area of South America. However, in the book, “Lehi Never Saw Mesoamerica,” this subject is covered quite thoroughly regarding the written languages that have been found coming out of Peru.
In fact, any written language surviving within the area of the Land of Promise from Nephite times is more suspect than it is supportive. The reasoning for this is simple. Nephite prophets time and again showed their concern over the Lamanites finding their records, for they knew the Lamanites would destroy them—in fact, the Lamanites would have destroyed anything Nephite because of their hatred. As Mormon said, “having been commanded of the Lord that I should not suffer the records which had been handed down by our fathers, which were sacred, to fall into the hands of the Lamanites, (for the Lamanites would destroy them)” (Mormon 6:6), it would be difficult to find any records of a written language in the Land of Promise once the Lamanites had annihilated the Nephite nation and purged the land–carvings in stone on large structures undoubtedly the only thing that survived.
While Mesoamerica structures were built of rock (there were few walls) and stone, which survived into our time, their carvings on the buildings also survived—which is the source of the written language of the Maya, etc. In Peru, while stone and rock were used to build the defensive walls, almost all of the building structures were made of mud brick and adobe, which did not survive the centuries, thus there were no carved edifices showing a language. And those few rock structures, like Tiwanaku, were utterly destroyed by later societies.
By the time the Spanish Conquistadores entered the Andean area, there was no written language had among the Lamanite descendants—and to think there would be such is simply a lack of understanding of the conditions Mormon and others wrote about. But to think that ancient Peruvian people did not have a written language in light of their fantastic accomplishments is foolhardy.
In fact, the history of early Easter Island emigrants claimed to have brought a written language with them from Peru. Today, that language is called Rongorongo and has withstood all attempts at interpretation.
In addition, the ruins of Tiwanaku when the Spanish first saw them may well have held carvings of some type, however, the Spanish, then later the Peruvian railroad, not only tore down all the ruins there, but broke them up into crushed rock for the rail beds. Then, too, the written Rongorongo language taken to Easter Island from Peru shows a written language of the ancient Andean area. But nothing remains in Peru, Ecuador or northern Chile today to verify any written language. And if Mesoamerica ruins had been decimated by the superstitious and sanctimonious Spaniards to the extent of Peru, we would not know of any written language of the Maya.
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November 26, 2010 at 8:55 pm
MrNirom
Danger of Theorizing Part XIII – Weights and Measures & Agriculture – by Del DowDell
Following are the last three points of the 16 listed by the author claiming all must exist for a Land of Promise location to be taken seriously. They are:
“(8) Merchant Class Using Weights and Measures tied to gold, silver and grain (Alma 11)”
First of all, there is no proof that the Nephites used weights and measures as their monetary system. This would imply that gold and silver were exchanged in bulk or bar/ingot form. Such is definitely impractical in any society. But especially in the case of Zeezrom offering 6 onti of silver to Amulek (Alma 11:25); and also in such understanding as the judges “received their wages according to their employ” (Alma 11:20). None of this would make sense if an onti of silver was a weight in the form of a bar or some other bulk form.
In addition, the Nephite monetary system had been in place for several centuries by the time of Alma’s writing, and when Mormon abridged that record over 400 years later, he saw no reason to alter, change, or explain further, suggesting that whatever system was in place in 82 B.C., was the system used in 385 A.D. Rarely in history, if ever, would you find a monetary system of a 1,000 year old culture (with more than a thousand years history before that in Palestine) using weights and measures for their money exchange. Besides, the Nephite culture by 82 B.C. had been building fantastic buildings, temples, cities, highways, etc. Nor can it be said, as the author did above, state that only the merchant class used money—Zeezrom and his fellow judges were a professional class and not involved in merchandising of any kind.
For a complete understanding of the Nephite monetary system and how it operated and how it compares to monetary exchange of today, see the future 3-part posting entitled “Nephite Monetary System.”
The second of these last three is: “(13) Must be in the Western Hemisphere but where Joseph Smith could not have known about in 1829”
The author of this list probably included this having a comparison with the Great Lakes and Heartland theories in mind. Obviously, areas and places within the eastern and mid-American area would have been known to Joseph Smith. However, this could also be used to show that the Andean area of South America fits this very well. Joseph would not have known anything about Peru, Chile or Ecuador in 1829. These countries were just obtaining their independence from Spain and divesting themselves of direct Catholic control. Not much commerce or any other news would have been coming out of the Andean area at this time because of the constant warfare going on.
The last of these three is: “(16) An Agricultural Base to support several millions of people, Columbus having visited the area (1 Nephi 13:12).”
First, the agricultural area of Peru and Chile are legendary, and far more than Guatemala and the rest of Mesoamerica in terms of production and food source. The Mediterranean climate of Chile is a producer of just about every kind of food that can be grown. And as for size, the population of Mesoamerica today is about 83-million, and the population of the Andes is about 65-million. Both areas would certainly qualify for the “several millions of people,” but the Andean area is even more productive in the growing of food.
It is always interesting to see how the many theorists pick on those items for proof of location that match their model. However, there are many other points to be included. As an example, what about:
1. Two unknown animals that are valuable to man? (Ether 9:19)
2. Two unknown grains on a par with corn, wheat and barley? (Mosiah 9:9)
3. A metal used for decoration–ziff? (Mosiah 11:3)
4. Highways that go from city to city and from place to place? (3 Nephi 6:8)
5. A society where circumcision was practiced under the Law of Moses? (2 Nephi 5:10)
6. Herbs, such as quinine, that cured fever? (Alma 46:40)
7. Climate where seeds from Jerusalem would grow abundantly? (1 Nephi 18:24)
8. A land where towers were built and remains are still found? (Mosiah 2:7; 11:12-13)
9. A land where winds and currents flow to from the Arabian peninsula? (see any Atlas)
10. A land of Promise that is an island as Jacob said? (2 Nephi 10:20)
11. A land that has “mountains whose height is great”? (Helaman 14:23)
The list could go on, but suffice it to say that only the Andean area of South America can qualify for ALL the points that could be raised about the Land of Promise as shown and listed in the Book of Mormon as has been pointed out and listed in numerous other posts.
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November 26, 2010 at 9:13 pm
Seth R.
Nirom,
How about next time you just post your essay online and provide a link here?
That’s waay too much content for a discussion format like this.
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November 26, 2010 at 10:24 pm
MrNirom
Seth,
Sorry about that. I thought that because each section was titled and it shows their are VIII parts.. it would be easier to ask questions regarding the individual parts.
Also.. the last 2 comments were made in Feb.. and then in Aug of 2010. Not much action anymore. I was hoping that if I posted something that gave a bit more in depth info.. they would be more likely to respond to it rather than post a link and then have to come back here to respond.
But hey.. I will do it your way next time.
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November 26, 2010 at 11:18 pm
Seth R.
I wouldn’t call it “my way.” It’s not my blog. It’s just that there’s really a ton of content here. Some may certainly want to read the whole thing. But a lot of readers will probably just want the highlights. So a post summarizing them with a link to more detailed content would probably do the trick.
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January 2, 2011 at 12:26 am
Jim F
Very interesting dialogue among you over the last year or so. Some allude to the Baja theory being developed. That theory has now been fleshed out with a website – http://www.achoiceland.com. Some of you have obviously spent a lot of time considering these matters. Any of you have an opinion about the Baja theory as outlined on their website?
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January 2, 2011 at 7:36 am
ama49
Hi Jim,
Thanks for the website! I think this theory is plausible. I sent it to my brother in law who is serving in that area now.
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January 2, 2011 at 4:00 pm
MrNirom
Jim,
In looking at the Book of Mormon Lands.. there is one scripture that must be followed above all other scriptures first. And that is Nephi 10:20
“We have been driven out of the land of our inheritance; but we have been led to a better land, for the Lord has made the sea our path, and we are upon an isle of the sea.”
They were on an island. The Jaredites we find out in the Book of Mormon were in the Land Northward. The poisonous serpents kept them from going into the land Southward. (Ether 9:33)
33 And it came to pass that the Lord did cause the serpents that they should pursue them no more, but that they should hedge up the way that the people could not pass, that whoso should attempt to pass might fall by the poisonous serpents.
If they could not expand into the land Southward and they lived on the Baja Peninsula.. they could have easily gone north. Nothing kept them from expanding to the north.
In Helaman 3:8.. Mormon, in his abridgment records that the people “did multiply and spread, and did go forth from the land southward to the land northward, and did spread insomuch that they began to cover the face of the whole earth, from the sea south to the sea north, from the sea west to the sea east”
Just where is the sea north?
As soon as you start dismissing scripture in your model.. this is where you have created square pegs being fit into round holes.
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May 20, 2011 at 5:40 pm
Timothy B. Wilson
Back then, “isle” meant “continent”, not “island”. Sorry, no Gilligan theory today. (:
Tim
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May 20, 2011 at 5:12 pm
Timothy B. Wilson
I’d love to put this whole thing to rest, if I may.
Go to my website, plainBookofMormon.com, and click on Alma. Then do a “control F” and type in “chapter 23” to go straight there. Scroll up just a bit, and YOU’LL SEE MY DETAILED MAP THAT EXPLAINS IT ALL QUITE SIMPLY!
The Book of Mormon era people traveled in terms of days to get from this land to that land. To get from one side of the “narrow neck” to the other was about 1.5 days journey (about 40 miles).
Joseph mentioned where Lehi landed, there at the 38th parallel. Going “up” to the land of the Lamanites was the edgy mountain range, hiking westward from the Yucatan, not north. Up is not necessarily north. The Lamanites had taken over the place where Lehi first landed on the western shore, thus they were in “the land of our father’s first inheritance.”
The water has since dried on the Yucatan, but it’s quite flat and marshy to this day. The locals say the flood of Noah has not quite receded there. The elevated center of the land was the ancient “narrow neck”.
The land northward was where the Jaredites lived.
In Bountiful, they said they would have been nearly an island, had it not been for the narrow neck.
Every description I’ve come across in my extensive lifetime of studying The Book of Mormon fits this map perfectly, with no exceptions. All the other silly scenarios (like the great lakes) are shots in the dark with endless holes.
The Hill Cumorah was NOT in New York. Moroni never told Joseph the place with his stone box was the Hill Cumorah. The Hill Cumorah is on the Yucatan. All of The Book of Mormon history was in that 200 square mile area.
The people populated the areas, then wiped each other out on a regular basis (as in Jaredite and Nephite extinctions), keeping the population at bay. Even early on, Lehi’s son Jacob mentions the “many wars” they had had with his brother’s and their people.
Only a fraction of today’s Native Americans (mostly in Central America) are descendants of Lehi or Mulek’s people. This also explains the lack of Jewish blood “DNA proof” that many anti-LDS use.
We tend to think “we’re all that” when it comes to The Book of Mormon. But really, it’s a small part of history and geography, (and only partly translated), and Jared’s vision (his 24 plates) have been withheld, too, because we’re not very pure, as a whole people, and still under condemnation, by the way (see section 84).
The brass plates handed down to Laban are promised to be read to all people, but they’re not here yet. And the other tribes will tell of their people, and history and dealings with Christ, but they are not here yet.
Yes, the Book of Mormon info we have now is a small part of history and geography. Let’s get humble and get real here.
So much of the covenant is to the Latter Day Jews and Lamanites (only those descended from Laman, folks), not all the Native South, Central, and North American people.
Tim
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October 4, 2011 at 3:00 pm
The Legend of the Lost Book of Gold (Part 1 of 4) | Wheat and Tares
[…] Brandley, Theodore. “Book of Mormon Geography: Which Theory do you Believe?” Weblog comment #1745. Grace for Grace: Developing Spirituality line upon line. 17 Sept. 2009. Accessed Sept. 2011. <https://graceforgrace.com/2009/09/08/book-of-mormon-geography-which-theory-do-you-believe/#comment-17…>. […]
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October 23, 2011 at 6:59 pm
atructured settlement
Nice blog , I like your article
I have entried your blog on my bookmark . Thanks
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March 8, 2012 at 8:00 pm
danial1
Here is another article by Linda Schaffer that might support the Book of Mormon Geography :
http://books.google.com.my/books?id=DSyqVAW04VIC&lpg=PA13&ots=3jv5LqnkCE&dq=jong%20malay&pg=PA11#v=one page&q=jong%20malay&f=false
Scroll down the book search for “Malay Sailor” subtitle
Where the Malays have such ocean navigating technology earlier than the western , probably early than Chinese and Arab. Maybe this point out that their ingenuity has it origin from their ancestors that is from the Semitic races in Middle-East a.k.a the..
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January 2, 2013 at 3:42 pm
Seth R.
Gabriel, you don’t even have to believe in the plates being removed by miracle.
Moroni could have simply walked from Meso America to New York in the years of his wanderings after the Nephites’ destruction.
People hike the Appalachian trail in a matter of months carrying 60 lb packs. Not implausible at all for Moroni to make the hike.
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January 4, 2013 at 8:48 pm
Theodore Brandley
“Now I, Moroni, after having made an end of abridging the account of the people of Jared, I had supposed not to have written more, but I have not as yet perished; and I make not myself known to the Lamanites lest they should destroy me. For behold, their wars are exceedingly fierce among themselves; and because of their hatred they put to death every Nephite that will not deny the Christ. And I, Moroni, will not deny the Christ; wherefore, I wander whithersoever I can for the safety of mine own life.” (Moroni 1:1-3)
It is highly implausible that under the threat of death, and the destruction of the gold plates, that Moroni would try to carry them through enemy territory. Also, he did not just leave the plates in the stone box, but the Urim and Thummim with its breastplate, the Liahona, and the sword of Laban. 3,000 miles with this load, dodging the enemy, plus finding food? Not likely!
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January 5, 2013 at 9:24 am
Seth R.
Theo, who says it was “enemy territory?”
Besides, considering the Nephites had been destroyed, wouldn’t sitting around in his current location be “enemy territory”?
Also, let me introduce another revolutionary traveling concept – pack animals.
Besides, once he’d traveled a couple weeks, he was probably outside the range of Lamanite territory anyway.
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January 5, 2013 at 10:42 am
Theodore Brandley
Seth,
Moroni said that he wandered wherever he could for the safety of his life, so it appears that there could have been Lamanites almost anywhere. (Moroni 1:3)
Your pack animal has some merit, but brings up another problem as to how Moroni could have kept a pack animal concealed from the Lamanites. Pack animals needs to graze several hours everyday and grass grows in open meadows. He could not have kept one hidden in a cave somewhere.
One of many problems with the Mesoamerica theory, is the idea that the entire Jaredite/Nephite/Lamanite civilizations were confined to the tiny area of Mesoamerica for 2600 years, but then it was a simple matter for one man to hike 3000 miles with a heavy pack. What, then, kept these huge civilizations confined for that long? It was only 200 years from Jamestown to Lewis and Clark! A careful reading of the Book of Mormon confirms that it required and immense territory.
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January 5, 2013 at 11:01 am
Seth R.
Theodore, this isn’t a problem at all.
We know from archeological evidence that civilizations like the Maya, Inca, Olmec, Aztecs and so forth were all about the size of the civilizations described in the Book of Mormon. Massively populous civilizations who had battles about the size mentioned in the Book of Mormon.
And they were all only confined to a small area.
Once you find a good place to have a civilzation – people tend to stay there.
Americans with their expansionist and isolationist impulses are weirdos. Most people in history haven’t done it that way.
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January 5, 2013 at 3:40 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth, there are many details in the text of the Book of Mormon that disallow these civilizations being confined to the small area of Mesoamerica. To begin with, are you aware that the entire Mesoamerica theory is based upon how far a herd of fat hogs can be driven in a day on their way to market? John L. Sorenson, who started this greatest of all Mormon myths, uses this as the basis of how far Alma and his converts went from the waters of Mormon to the city of Zarahemla (An Ancient American Setting For the Book of Mormon, page 8). Sorenson conveniently leaves out the fact that Alma’s party did the 20 day journey in two different segments of 8 days and 12 days, and in both cases they were fleeing for their lives while being pursed by the armies of their enemies. “And the Lord did strengthen them, that the people of king Noah could not overtake them to destroy them.” (Mosiah 23:2) So, they were not moving at the pace of a fat hog on the way to market, but they were strengthened by God so they could move faster than a pursuing war party. Ancient armies on a forced march would move 40 to 50 miles a day. Joseph Smith and Zion’s Camp moved 40 miles on many days. Even if we cut this back to 30 miles a day, that is still 600 miles from the waters of Mormon to Zarahemla. Mesoamerica is only about 1,000 miles from south to north, and the Land Northward was an “exceedingly great distance” north of Zarahemla. (Helaman 3:3-4). That is just one example, and I can give you many more, that the Book of Mormon saga just won’t fit into Mesoamerica.
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January 5, 2013 at 7:52 pm
Seth R.
Actually Theodore, if you’re basing this all on the story of Alma and his converts, then you don’t really understand Sorenson’s work at all.
The distances in the Book of Mormon under not just his model – but that of many scholars is based on the march times in the war chapters throughout the book of Alma. Not just one story in Mosiah.
Even if we allow your assertion of 40-50 miles (which I don’t find all that plausible – the established daily march distance for a Roman legion was around 30 miles), it still doesn’t make for that large of an area.
And incidentally, even a few hundred miles could qualify as “an exceedingly great distance.”
As for the time of the journey – you don’t know how many days they camped and rested, and where they stopped. The lord could strengthen a group of civilians a great deal and still not have them move a full 30 miles. Furthermore, the journey was not on paths or roads. But in the “wilderness” – that makes a good deal of distance.
So no, I don’t find your argument particularly convincing. I don’t particularly need the Book of Mormon to have taken place in any particular spot. I don’t find it relevant to my testimony of the church. I’m fine with it being in all sorts of locations. But it’s clear from the text we aren’t talking about an intercontinental civilization. The plain text of the book doesn’t even remotely describe that.
You seem pretty adamant about it though, and I wonder why you need this to be a certain way so much?
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January 5, 2013 at 9:35 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth, my testimony also is independent of the geography. My testimony comes from the witness of the Spirit that Jesus is the Christ, that the Book of Mormon is factual and accurate, that it occurred at a real time in a real place, and that Joseph Smith was a true prophet of God. The thing that irks me about the Mesoamerica theory is that it ignores, twists and contorts the words of Joseph Smith and the text of the Book of Mormon itself, by people of influence who should know better, in order to justify their position. For one example, as I mentioned in an earlier post, it is clearly documented that it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that Cumorah was the name of the hill in Palmyra (HC 1:184). Yet that evidence is ignored, and refuted, and an alternative theory was made up with absolutely no supporting evidence, that Joseph Smith somehow misunderstood Mormon 6:6, and that is why he called the name of the hill in Palmyra, Cumorah. Mormon 6:6 is so clear that my former seminary students couldn’t misunderstand it. The Mesoamerica theory doesn’t allow for the hill Cumorah to be in Palmyra so the supporters of it have to denigrate the prophet. Another example is the vision of Zelph. It has to be contorted, or discounted as being Joseph’s imagination or the Mesoamerica theory doesn’t work. If the Zelph vision isn’t true then what about the First Vision? You can’t have it both ways. My interest and persistence in this subject is primarily in my defense of the Prophet Joseph Smith, and the accuracy of the text of the Book of Mormon.
As for distances, the 30 mile/day military march that you mention has been the standard march from ancient to modern times. What I said was that 40 to 50 miles was the “forced” march distance. This was done when necessary, such as pursuing an enemy, and was not a faster pace but rather simply marching for more hours per day. As I mentioned, the journey of Alma is just one item of evidence that Mesoamerica is not large enough to contain the saga of the Book of Mormon. Here are a few more:
It took the Nephite Captain, Moroni, the most part of a year to move a portion of his army through friendly territory from Zarahemla to Bountiful. (Alma 52:11,15,18) This makes no sense if the distance was only two or three hundred miles across Mesoamerica, or some narrow peninsula. An ancient army would march that in ten days, as you mentioned. Later, Helaman, an officer of Moroni’s army, wrote a lengthy epistle from the war theatre near the west sea to Captain Moroni near the east sea. Helaman’s epistle described the battle situation over a period of four years. ( Alma 56:1, 9) If the distance between them had only been two or three hundred miles, runners could have kept them in regular communication. The fact that these military officers only communicated about the conduct of the war once in those four years is further evidence that there was a great distance between them.
Helaman, son of Helaman, described how a great many people, about fifty years before the birth of Christ, migrated from Zarahemla to the land northward. He states that, “They did travel to an exceedingly great distance, insomuch that they came to large bodies of water and many rivers”. (Helaman 3:3-4) To the Nephites, who had a recorded heritage of long-distance travel, an exceedingly great distance would surely be more than a few hundred miles.
Mormon wrote that in AD 375, “from this time forth did the Nephites gain no power over the Lamanites, but began to be swept off by them even as dew before the sun.” (Mormon 4:16-18) This final rout lasted ten years and culminated at Cumorah in AD 385. (Mormon 6:5) A military rout lasting ten years speaks of a vast territory. A similar situation occurred previously amongst the Jaredites. When the armies of Coriantumr and Shiz faced off at Ramah (Cumorah) for their final battle, they paused in their fighting to gather their survivors. It took them four years to gather their people for battle (Ether 15:14), indicating a very large territory from which they were gathered.
The Nephites and the Jaredites coexisted on this continent for 400 years without contact. That would be highly improbable in an area the size of Mesoamerica. I don’t believe that the narrative was intercontinental but I am sure that it covered much of the North American Continent, from Cost Rica to Cumorah.
I could write a book on the fallacies of the Mesoamerica theory but I doubt if anyone would read it. It has been so ingrained into the minds of so many Mormon academics over the past 30 years, that they could not stop believing in this Mormon myth they have created unless Moroni himself appeared and told them they were wrong. And then I’m sure they would still argue with him. 🙂
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January 6, 2013 at 8:09 am
Seth R.
Theodore, you have a rather selective and limited understanding of what Joseph Smith actually said. Joseph himself was a lot more open minded about the location. His views on it evolved over time, and when he heard of ruins in Mesoamerica, he was actually quite excited by it – and the possible connection it might have to the Book of Mormon.
And no – an “exceeding great distance” need not be more than a few hundred miles. A few hundred miles sounds like an “exceeding great distance” to me Theodore. I imagine the only reason it doesn’t sound like a big distance to you is because you own a car.
Your citation to Alma 52 proves nothing because Moroni happened to be in the middle of a military campaign. The reason he could not come, was not the distance. It was because he was busy fighting the Lamanite armies. He had other fights to fight, and wasn’t able to turn his attention to that part of the land for the period you mentioned.
The communications also prove nothing because the Book of Alma never claims to catalog all of Helaman and Moroni’s letters and reports to each other.
And a military route of ten years does not automatically entail vast amounts of territory. Nor is it even describing a “route” (armies in constant flight). It’s talking about a series of defeats. For example – besiege one city for a few months with the Lamanites victorious. Then move on to the next city and work on that for a few months. Then the next, then the next…
You see Theodore, you are not basing your views on that actual text, but rather on your imagination of what warfare was like based on the text. You read Mormon saying that the Nephites had no advantage over the Lamanites from that time, and immediately your imagination conjures up some dramatic constant flight of Nephite armies over plains and rivers and forests (like Mao Zedong’s “Long March”). But that is just your imagination at work. The text does not demand the interpretation you have given. In fact, to those who have studied ancient military campaigns, your scenario seems the more unlikely of the two. It’s the same story with gathering armies for four years. That doesn’t require a geographic area the size you are thinking. It merely requires a lot of logistical and political problems. For all you know, Corianton and Shiz were actually making political alliances for three years. What does “gathering” entail? You make a lot of assumptions here.
As for the distances of “forced marches in the wilderness” – have you ever tried to move a large body of men by foot in the jungles of Mesoamerica Theodore?
I would be in absolute awe if you managed more than 15 miles a day.
And incidentally Theodore – Joseph Smith never called the hill in New York “Cumorah.” Oliver Cowdery and other church members started calling it that later. There is no clear indication that Joseph Smith ever identified the hill in New York as Cumorah.
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January 6, 2013 at 2:29 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth, Thank you for confirming my last point. Give my regards to Moroni. 🙂
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January 6, 2013 at 8:11 am
Seth R.
A quote for you on the Zelph story:
“If the history of the church were to be revised today using modern historical standards, readers would be informed that Joseph Smith wrote nothing about the discovery of Zelph, and that the account of uncovering the skeleton in Pike County is based on the diaries of seven members of Zion’s Camp, some of which were written long after the event took place. We would be assured that the members of Zion’s Camp dug up a skeleton near the Illinois River in early June 1834. Equally sure is that Joseph Smith made statements about the deceased person and his historical setting. We would learn that it is unclear which statements attributed to him derived from his vision, as opposed to being implied or surmised either by him or by others. Nothing in the diaries suggests that the mound itself was discovered by revelation.
Furthermore, readers would be told that most sources agree that Zelph was a white Lamanite who fought under a leader named Onandagus (variously spelled). Beyond that, what Joseph said to his men is not entirely clear, judging by the variations in the available sources. The date of the man Zelph, too, remains unclear. Expressions such as “great struggles among the Lamanites,” if accurately reported, could refer to a period long after the close of the Book of Mormon narrative, as well as to the fourth century AD. None of the sources before the Willard Richards composition, however, actually say that Zelph died in battle with the Nephites, only that he died “in battle” when the otherwise unidentified people of Onandagus were engaged in great wars “among the Lamanites.”
Zelph was identified as a “Lamanite,” a label agreed on by all the accounts. This term might refer to the ethnic and cultural category spoken of in the Book of Mormon as actors in the destruction of the Nephites, or it might refer more generally to a descendant of the earlier Lamanites and could have been considered in 1834 as the equivalent of “Indian” (see, for example, D&C 3:18, 20; 10:48; 28:8; 32:2). Nothing in the accounts can settle the question of Zelph’s specific ethnic identity.”
Kenneth W. Godfrey, “What is the Significance of Zelph In The Study Of Book of Mormon Geography?,” Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 8/2 (1999): 70–79.
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January 6, 2013 at 8:16 am
Seth R.
In 1993, Elder Dallin H. Oaks of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles made the following statement:
“Speaking for a moment as one whose profession is advocacy, I suggest that if one is willing to acknowledge the importance of faith and the reality of a realm beyond human understanding, the case for the Book of Mormon is the stronger case to argue. The case against the historicity of the Book of Mormon has to prove a negative. You do not prove a negative by prevailing on one debater’s point or by establishing some subsidiary arguments.
For me, this obvious insight goes back over forty years to the first class I took on the Book of Mormon at Brigham Young University. . . . Here I was introduced to the idea that the Book of Mormon is not a history of all of the people who have lived on the continents of North and South America in all ages of the earth. Up to that time I had assumed that it was. If that were the claim of the Book of Mormon, any piece of historical, archaeological, or linguistic evidence to the contrary would weigh in against the Book of Mormon, and those who rely exclusively on scholarship would have a promising position to argue.
In contrast, if the Book of Mormon only purports to be an account of a few peoples who inhabited a portion of the Americas during a few millennia in the past, the burden of argument changes drastically. It is no longer a question of all versus none; it is a question of some versus none. In other words, in the circumstance I describe, the opponents of historicity must prove that the Book of Mormon has no historical validity for any peoples who lived in the Americas in a particular time frame, a notoriously difficult exercise. One does not prevail on that proposition by proving that a particular . . . culture represents migrations from Asia. The opponents of the historicity of the Book of Mormon must prove that the people whose religious life it records did not live anywhere in the Americas.”
Dallin H. Oaks, “The Historicity of the Book of Mormon,” in Historicity and the Latter-day Saint Scriptures, ed. Paul Y. Hoskisson (Provo, Utah: BYU Religious Studies Center, 2001), 238—39. This talk was first given at the annual dinner of the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies in Provo, Utah, on 29 October 1993.
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January 6, 2013 at 7:48 pm
Seth R.
Let me introduce you to a word Theodore.
“Bulverism”
You can look it up on Wikipedia and reflect on it a bit.
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January 7, 2013 at 9:55 am
Theodore Brandley
Seth, I understand why you have applied the word “Bulverism” to me, as I do have considerable confidence in my position. I have been debating this issue with the learned proponents of the Mesoamerica theory for thirty years, and have been getting the same responses of either ignoring the evidence I provide, returning with unsubstantiated claims, obfuscations, discrediting of the witness, or distortions of the evidence. All of which seems necessary for them to support the theory. So, when I saw the same stuff coming back from you I could see there was little point in continuing the debate.
I’ll start with one example:
In my post of January 2, 2013 at 5:43 pm I wrote in response to Gabriel:
“Oliver Cowdery, Second Elder of the Church and Co-President with Joseph Smith, stated in 1831 that it was Moroni who revealed that Cumorah was in Palmyra, New York. He said: “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.” (HC 1:184) As it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah, I think we can rely on that.”
I mentioned this again in my post to you January 5, 2013 at 9:35 pm and again gave you the reference, which is documentary evidence of May of 1831. What was your response to this?
“And incidentally Theodore – Joseph Smith never called the hill in New York “Cumorah.” Oliver Cowdery and other church members started calling it that later. There is no clear indication that Joseph Smith ever identified the hill in New York as Cumorah.”
I had just given you clear documentary evidence, which you ignored, and then made an erroneous and unsubstantiated statement expecting it to put the issue away.
I’ll give you another shot at it. What are you going to do with the documented statement of Oliver Cowdery in May of 1931, that it was Moroni who said that the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah?
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January 7, 2013 at 1:56 pm
Seth R.
This is a long thread, I suppose I missed those items in it. If you’re talking about this quote:
“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.” (HC 1:184)
Then that is actually taken from the autobiography of Parley P. Pratt – which wasn’t published till 1874, some time after Pratt’s death – and then this quote was included in a footnote in the HC by B.H. Roberts in 1902. As such, it isn’t actually a direct quote from Cowdery, but merely secondhand.
And at any rate, this quote at least – it should be pointed out – never actually says that Moroni himself called the hill Cumorah. So I’m failing to find the divine or revelatory seal on your assessment here Theodore.
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January 7, 2013 at 2:28 pm
Theodore Brandley
Ah, yes, next tactic, discredit the witness. So what, if the autobiography was published later? It was taken from his journal which he wrote at the time. So what, if it was not in Oliver’s handwriting? This is a sound witness. And you are also misstating the fact that quote does say that it was Moroni that called the hill Cumorah.
Let me give you three more supporting documented pieces of evidence:
Joseph Smith knew that Cumorah was the name of the hill in Palmyra before he received the gold plates. Following Joseph’s meeting with Moroni at Cumorah, one year before Joseph received the plates, Joseph told his parents that he had “taken the severest chastisement that I have ever had in my life.” Joseph said:
“It was the angel of the Lord. AS I PASSED BY THE HILL OF CUMORAH, WHERE THE PLATES ARE, the angel met me and said that I had not been engaged enough in the work of the Lord; and the time had come for the record to be brought forth…”
(History of Joseph Smith by his Mother Lucy Mack Smith: The Unabridged Original Version, Compiled by R. Vernon Ingleton, Stratford Books, 2005, p. 159; emphasis added)
David Whitmer confirmed this in an interview when he stated:
“[Joseph Smith] told me…he had a vision, an angel appearing to him three times in one night and telling him that there was a record of an ancient people deposited in a hill near his fathers house CALLED BY THE ANCIENTS ‘CUMORAH,’ situated in the township of Manchester, Ontario county N.Y…” (Milton V. Backman, Jr., “Eyewitness Accounts of the Restoration,” p. 233; emphasis added)
Additionally, we read in Doctrine and Covenants 128:20, “Glad tidings from Cumorah! Moroni, an angel from heaven, declaring the fulfillment of the prophets — the book to be revealed.” The angel Moroni, at Cumorah, declaring that the book “would be revealed.” It was called Cumorah before the book was translated.
So, we have 4 items of documentary evidence that it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that Cumorah was the name of the hill in Palmyra.
I am sure that you will try to discredit the evidence, because you have nothing else. What documentary evidence do you have that Moroni did not tell Joseph Smith that the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah?
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January 7, 2013 at 3:08 pm
Seth R.
You know Theo, you’re acting rather arrogant here.
I’m just talking about the reliability of the historical data. This isn’t really reliable. It’s certainly nothing to base the sort of certainty you are exhibiting on.
And the quote didn’t say that Moroni called the hill Cumorah. Who is “him?”
Anyway, I’m pleased that you are at least providing other quotes for me to research rather than just relying on poison-the-well tactics.
“Oh look at this guy – he’s using all the usual tactics!”
What does that have to do with anything other than empty ego posturing? Let your evidence stand on it’s own without acting like a jerk about it.
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January 7, 2013 at 3:46 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth, OK, I apologize for sounding like a jerk.
According to the rules of the English language, in the sentence, “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,” there is only one person that the pronoun “him” can refer to, and that is Moroni.
I repeat my question, “What evidence can you produce that it was not Moroni who told Joseph Smith that the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah?
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January 7, 2013 at 4:19 pm
Seth R.
Well, I’d have to look at the full passage and read what came before it. For all I know, the subject of that sentence could actually be Joseph Smith himself rather than Moroni. I presume Pratt is saying that Oliver said that Joseph told him this, right?
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January 7, 2013 at 4:20 pm
Seth R.
And it’s fine. I’ve gotten carried away with topics I felt I’d studied a lot too.
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January 7, 2013 at 4:25 pm
Theodore Brandley
No, Joseph is not mentioned until the following paragraph, where he states, “In that neighborhood there lived a young man named Joseph Smith…”
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January 7, 2013 at 4:31 pm
Seth R.
Yeah, I managed to find a Google Books copy of the passage and read the whole page. It seems clear that Oliver Cowdery – in the speech he was making to local Indians when he made this statement – believed that Moroni had called the hill near Palmyra “Cumorah.” Moroni is the only possible subject in that paragraph.
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January 7, 2013 at 9:40 pm
Theodore Brandley
Yes, and Oliver Cowdery was in the best position to know, next to the Prophet. He was with Joseph everyday through most of the translation of the Book of Mormon. He was with Joseph when all the authority and keys of the priesthood were received from angelic beings. He held the office of Second Elder and Co-President of the Church, next in authority to Joseph (even after Joseph had counselors in the First Presidency). He is the most credible witness of those times next to Joseph Smith himself.
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January 8, 2013 at 7:12 am
Seth R.
I think that’s going a little far.
This isn’t Cowdery directly. This is Pratt many years later recalling Cowdery’s speech. The Lucy Mack Smith and David Whitmer accounts are also years after the fact recollections if I understand correctly. Also, neither Lucy’s account, nor the D&C say that Moroni told Joseph the name of the hill.
I’m not really wedded to any particular theory on this. But I get really suspicious of anyone telling me that I have to buy into their theories about the Book of Mormon or I’m “not taking Joseph Smith at his word” or “not taking God’s revelations seriously” or similar blanket statements.
I’m fine with the “two Cumorah’s” theory. I’m open to the New York theory. I find Meldrum’s Heartland theory interesting. I’m even willing to consider out-there options like Malaysia or Peru.
But as things stand, Mesoamerica simply fits my understanding of the actual text in Mosiah and Alma the best. And second-hand accounts from Joseph’s acquaintances, written decades after the fact, and often going through multiple hands are not really a deal-clincher for me.
Sorry.
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January 8, 2013 at 7:14 am
Seth R.
Oh, the “two Cumorahs” idea simply means that Moroni himself named the hill near Palmyra after another already-existing hill Cumorah located somewhere else.
It doesn’t seem far-fetched to me that Moroni would commemorate the final resting place of the gold plates with the same name of another hill containing records.
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January 8, 2013 at 4:04 pm
Theodore Brandley
Seth, Parley P Pratt’s Autobiography was taken from his journals which he wrote at the time. As for Lucy Smith and David Whitmer recalling in later years, long-term memory actually improves with age. It is the short term memory that deteriorates. Joseph Smith’s direct testimony in the D&C was written by him and is canonized. I have provided four items of documentary evidence which testify that it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah, and that Joseph knew that before he translated the plates. All of the four testimonies agree and are in harmony. As there are no testimonies or evidence to the contrary, the fact that 3 of these testimonies are not in the first person is irrelevant. It is not as if you were comparing the quality of competing testimonies.
If I understand you correctly, you are ignoring or rejecting these testimonies because of some perceived flaw in them, in favor of an alternate position for which you have no evidence. I find it remarkable, and it verifies the adage that a man will believe what he wants to believe regardless of the evidence.
I also find absurd your suggestion that Moroni would deceive Joseph Smith by calling another hill by the name Cumorah. Moroni would never have even let Joseph Smith misunderstand the location of the hill Cumorah. It was around the hill Cumorah where Moroni’s father, Mormon, and the remainder of his family, his friends, and his people, his entire civilization were annihilated. This is where lay the bones of his father, his family and his people. To Moroni, Cumorah was sacred, hallowed ground. It would be like Admiral Nimitz renaming Chesapeake Bay to Pearl Harbor.
You mentioned that Mesoamerica fits your understanding of the actual text in Mosiah and Alma the best. I would be interested to know specifically what in these books you are referring to that best fit Mesoamerica.
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January 9, 2013 at 7:26 am
Theodore Brandley
Seth, Here is a quote from a sacred hymn, selected by Emma Smith and published in 1835. Emma Smith, wife of the Prophet, produced this under instructions and directions from the Lord.
“And it shall be given thee, also, to make a selection of sacred hymns, as it shall be given thee, which is pleasing unto me, to be had in my church.” (D&C 25:1)
“An angel came down from the mansions of glory,
And told that a record was hid in Cumorah,
Containing the fulness of Jesus’s gospel;”
(Collection of Sacred Hymns, 1835, Hymn 16, page 22,
http://josephsmithpapers.org/paperDetails/collection-of-sacred-hymns-1835?dm=image-and-text&zm=zoom-inner&tm=expanded&p=24&s=Cumorah&sm=none )
This is consistent with the previous four quotes I have supplied. It is clear from the documentary records of the Church, that it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith that the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah.
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January 9, 2013 at 7:44 am
Theodore Brandley
Any theory of Book of Mormon geography that does not include the Hill Cumorah in Palmyra, New York as the Hill Cumorah of the Book of Mormon, cannot be true.
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January 9, 2013 at 10:09 am
Seth R.
Why would it be deceptive of Moroni to call both hills “Cumorah?” I see no reason to reach that conclusion.
And I feel like my own preferred geography does have evidence. I like Sorenson’s work quite a bit. Maybe you don’t, but that’s your affair. I feel I have evidence. And I feel like it’s stronger than these accounts you’ve shared.
And I see little reason to treat Emma’s hymns as canon.
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January 9, 2013 at 11:21 am
Theodore Brandley
Seth, It would have been highly deceptive to lead Joseph Smith and the Latter-day Saints into believing that the hill in Palmyra was the hill Cumorah in the Book of Mormon, if it were not true.
Seth, what you choose to believe is entirely up to you.
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January 16, 2016 at 8:08 pm
rrosskopf
Joseph Smith never referred to the hill where he obtained the plates as anything other than the hill in New York. He never called it Cumorah. Nor does Moroni say that he left the land of his birth, only to go back many years later to bury the book where he originally dug it up. The hill in upstate New York is one of hundreds of similar hills, and offers no strategic benefit in war, unless one hopes to hide from the enemy, in a place without sufficient food or water. The evidence indicates that the hill in New York is a name sake, and not the original hill.
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January 18, 2016 at 4:01 am
Theodore Brandley
There are six documentary testimonies that Moroni told Joseph Smith the name of the hill in Palmyra, New York, prior to the translation of the plates.
1. The only first-person source comes from the epistle that Joseph Smith dictated on September 6, 1842, which was later canonized in the Doctrine and Covenants, Section 128.
“Glad tidings from Cumorah! Moroni, an angel from heaven, declaring the fulfillment of the prophets — the book to be revealed.” (D&C 128:20)
The inference is that Joseph knew the name “Cumorah” before the book was revealed. That knowledge could only have come from Moroni. This is substantiated in the subsequent documents.
2. An early documentary source confirming the above, are the lines from a sacred hymn, written by W.W. Phelps. William Phelps lived with the Prophet in Kirtland and was in essence his executive secretary during the Nauvoo period.
“An angel came down from the mansions of glory,
And told that a record was hid in Cumorah,
Containing the fulness of Jesus’s gospel;”
(Collection of Sacred Hymns, 1835, Hymn 16, page 22)
It was the angel who told Joseph that the record was hid in “Cumorah.” This hymn was selected by Emma Smith, wife of the Prophet, approved by the Prophet, and published in 1835 with a collection of hymns, under instructions and directions from the Lord. “And it shall be given thee, also, to make a selection of sacred hymns, as it shall be given thee, which is pleasing unto me, to be had in my church.” (D&C 25:1)
This hymn was also included in the 1841 edition as hymn #262.
3. Oliver Cowdery, Second Elder of the Church and Co-President with Joseph Smith, stated the following in 1831:
“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.” (Autobiography of P.P. Pratt p 56-61)
The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt was complied, edited and published in1881 by his son, from the documents and records left by his father after his death. From the length and detail of the address given by Oliver Cowdery in 1831, from which the above quote is taken, it had to have been recorded by Parley P. Pratt at the time it was spoken. “In writing his autobiography, Pratt relied heavily on his previous writings. After extensive analysis, Pratt family historian Steven Pratt concluded that almost ninety percent of the text is either based on or copied from earlier works” (Matt Grow, assistant professor of history at the University of Southern Indiana.)
4. The Prophet’s mother, Lucy Mack Smith, provides two separate items of evidence in the original manuscript of her memoirs. In the first item, Lucy is remembering what Joseph told her after Moroni first appeared to him. The quote begins with what Moroni had told Joseph:
“Now Joseph beware when you go to get the plates your mind will be filld with darkness and all man[n]er of evil will rush into your mind. To keep you from keeping the comman dments of God and you must tell your father of this for he will believe every word you say 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 — then the angel left him.” [sic] (Lucy Mack Smith, History 1844–1845, Original Manuscript, page 41)
Lucy dictated the above about 20 years after the fact, but it is consistent with other evidence. In the following, Lucy recalls directly what her son said in her presence. Following Joseph’s meeting with Moroni at Cumorah, one year before Joseph received the plates, Joseph told his parents that he had “taken the severest chastisement that I have ever had in my life.” Joseph said:
“it was the an gel of the Lord— as I passed by the hill of Cumo rah, 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 brought forth; and, that I must be up and doing, and set myself about the things which God had commanded me to do:” [sic] (Lucy Mack Smith, History 1844–1845, Original Manuscript, page 111)
In both of these quotes from the Prophet’s mother, she demonstrates that in her mind it was Moroni, who told Joseph, prior to the translation of the plates, that the hill in Palmyra was named Cumorah.
5. David Whitmer confirmed this in an interview in his later years when he stated:
“[Joseph Smith] told me…he had a vision, an angel appearing to him three times in one night and telling him that there was a record of an ancient people deposited in a hill near his fathers house called by the ancients “Cumorah” situated in the township of Manchester, Ontario county N.Y…” (Milton V. Backman, Jr., “Eyewitness Accounts of the Restoration,” p. 233)
6. Parley P Pratt wrote the following, which was published in 1841:
“An Angel from on high, The long, long silence broke – Descending from the sky, These gracious words he spoke: “Lo! in Cumorah’s lonely hill A sacred record lies concealed.””
How often have we sung this song without noticing that it was a quote from Moroni?
All of the documentary evidence is consistent that it was Moroni who told Joseph Smith, prior to the translation of the Gold Plates, that the ancient name of the hill in Palmyra was “Cumorah.” There is no evidence to the contrary.
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January 18, 2016 at 4:09 am
Theodore Brandley
Regarding the Hill Cumorah in New York as having no strategic military value:
The text, written by a military commander, refers to Cumorah only as a hill and does not give it any strategic value from it’s size or its shape. There are indications in the text that its strategic value was in its historical sacredness.
Why did Coriantumr gather all his people to the hill Ramah/Cumorah for their final battle? Why did Mormon think he would have an advantage by gathering his people to the hill Cumorah for their final stand? Do not a people frequently gather to the temple of the God of their fathers to invoke the assistance of their father’s God in the day of their greatest peril? The ancient Jews have always gathered around the temple of their fathers’ God in their darkest hours, and will again in the last final battle.
When the second great-grandson of Jared, Omer, had his kingdom overthrown and the Lord warned him to flee with his family, the Lord led him to the Hill Shim, where the Nephites first stored their sacred records. He was then led to Cumorah where the Nephites lastly stored all of their sacred records. The fact that the Lord led Omer to the two places where sacred records were going to be stored by the Nephites hundreds of years later, indicates that these places were sacred locations before the Jaredites landed. That means that they were sacred places before the flood. That means that they were sacred places in the days of Adam, Enoch and Noah.
Perhaps the land of Cumorah was the ancient land of Cainan, where dwelt Enos, grandson of Adam, and his descendants, and all the other righteous saints of his day. (See Moses 6:15-17, 41-42) The land of Cainan had remained a land of righteousness into the days of Enoch and there would have been a great temple there. It probably stood on the top of a special hill; perhaps a hill where all the sacred records were to be left when all the righteous in the days of Enoch were translated into heaven.
Cumorah may be a more sacred place than we know.
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January 13, 2013 at 7:33 pm
Cal
Theodore has succeeded in giving me doubts about the Mesoamerica theory—not that I ever had much confidence in it. I’m way, way, way too ignorant to have confidence in any position.
Theodore also convinced me that it was Moroni who told Joseph that the name of the hill in Palmyra was Cumorah.
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February 10, 2013 at 4:23 am
Anas
I’m amazed about the research on the Malay Theory, as I am a Malay myself and from Malaysia, and after reading the Malay Theory, I find some of the theory being laid down as accountable. It describes the Malaysian Peninsular as accounted by Claudius Ptolemy as the Golden Chersones. 🙂
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February 10, 2013 at 4:44 am
Anas
http://malay–history.blogspot.com/2011/05/golden-chersonese.html
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March 16, 2013 at 2:33 am
Christian Louboutin
You really make it seem really easy along with your presentation but I in finding this matter to be really something that
I think I might by no means understand. It kind of feels too complex and very large for me.
I’m having a look ahead in your next put up, I will attempt to get the grasp of it!
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May 29, 2015 at 7:28 am
Sithu
I am from Myanmar and find the Malay idea very interesting. My people were the first in this area and are known as the Mon (not Mormon). But in the past we were the Raman people and our history goes back many thousand years. Could it be the Laman people?
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May 29, 2015 at 7:32 am
Sithu
Interesting video about the ancient people in the Malay area.
https://plus.google.com/111765639142618871732/posts/NRmNhF12LD5?pid=6015173213115163202&oid=111765639142618871732
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May 3, 2021 at 5:32 am
The Legend of the Lost Book of Gold (Part 1 of 4) – Wheat & Tares
[…] Brandley, Theodore. “Book of Mormon Geography: Which Theory do you Believe?” Weblog comment #1745. Grace for Grace: Developing Spirituality line upon line. 17 Sept. 2009. Accessed Sept. 2011. <https://graceforgrace.com/2009/09/08/book-of-mormon-geography-which-theory-do-you-believe/#comment-17…>. […]
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