SteelHead wrote:Verifiable marks of authenticity?
Do tell.....
I listed a number of verifiable marks of authenticity above, and there are many more. I'll give another example:
My friend the late Rev. Welsey P. Walters (an anti-Mormon Presbyterian minister) once published his view that the Book of Mormon prophecy that Jesus would be born 600 years after Lehi left Jerusalem was a major anachronism. Why? Because one could not shoehorn those 600 years into the time from that exit from Jerusalem in 597 BC (the proven first year of the reign of King Zedekiah of Judah) and the birth of Jesus before the well-known death of Herod the Great in the Spring of 4 BC.
In fact, however, the major Long Count calendar of the Maya and other Mesoamerican cultures used a 360-day year. This is the same 5,000-year long calendar cycle which ends and resets on Dec 21, 2012. Such a year-count places Jesus' birth in 5 BC, where most scholars place it, exactly 600 Long Count years after Lehi left Jerusalem.
In addition, the Book of Mormon tells us that Jesus lived 33 years, dying on the fourth day of the 34th year. We already know from the New Testament that Jesus died at Passover, which is in the Spring. Counting by 360-day years, we lose 6 months time in 33 years, putting Jesus' birth in the Fall, probably on Jewish New Year in late September, a time when shepherds were still in the fields (not so on Dec 25, which was originally a pagan holiday).