mentalgymnast wrote:Goya wrote:You're comparing keystone religious texts and saying some have a lot more written about them than The Book of Mormon.Some have less written about them than The Book of Mormon.
The sacred texts and scriptures from antiquity have more written about them. The sacred texts and scriptures from the last century or so have less. The Book of Mormon, however, seems to be in a class of its own in regards to the amount of critical commentary/exegesis that has been written. For example, the Bahai faith...brought up earlier in this thread...has scripture/sacred text. There seems to be little critical exegesis/commentary on this scriptural work however....Taherzadeh's series Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh is by far the most extensive source of information on Bahá'u'lláh's various writings, giving details such as when they were revealed, to whom, and under what circumstances. Unfortunately the work has no information on the Middle Eastern social and historical context of Bahá'u'lláh, and how that context influenced his writings, and is not written critically, from a scholarly point of view, and thus must be used carefully. Extensive historical-critical scholarship on Bahá'u'lláh's writings remains to be done...
http://bahai-library.org/books/rg/rg.biblio07.htmlGoya wrote:You think it's amazing that The Book of Mormon has more written about it than the texts of religions that have less written about them.
In regards to the scriptures/sacred texts produced in the last couple of hundred years or so, yes...I think it is, at the very least, interesting to see the voluminous amount of material on the Book of Mormon juxtaposed with the material/books that have been published as critical commentary and/or exegesis on some of these other modern writings.Goya wrote:It's maybe not so obvious to some of us what your larger point about this is.
As I said towards the beginning of this thread...the Book of Mormon in some respects is unique/different/set apart from other scriptural/sacred texts that have been produced in recent times. To me, that makes the Book of Mormon worth a look. And a second look...
Worthy of taking it down off the shelf and giving it a run through and real study over and over again. When I do, I am...as you say..."amazed" at the breadth and depth of this book which came out of nineteenth century New England. THAT is quite a story in and of itself. Story of the plates. Retrieval. Translation. Publication. Wide distribution. Tool for conversion to Christ, etc.
Regards,
MG
You obviously have not read anything on Bahá'í or its scripture, which you casually dismiss based on a Google search and your own preordained misconceptions. But I'd mistakenly thought that you were serious in wanting comparisons.
There have been tonnes written about Bahá'í and its texts. The movement has been the source of enormous debate within Islam. If you read about it, you'd see that the parallels to Mormonism are striking.
Is the Book of Mormon worthy of a second look? Certainly. I'd argue that most religious texts are. However, The Book of Mormon is in no way unique. Nor set apart. Nor any more special than any other religious tome.
But perhaps, I'm wrong and you can show how it is--rather than just declare it to be so.