Robert F Smith wrote:
Joseph's secretaries were working from an already complete Book of Abraham manuscript when they tried lining up glyphs with part of the text. Unfortunately, we do not have the original manuscript(s).
Fence Sitter wrote:The mummies and papyri arrived in Kirtland somewhere between June 30-July 3 1835. Immediately after the purchase of the collection we know that Joseph Smith and his scribes
Spent the remainder of the month engaged in translating an alphabet to the Book of Abraham and arranging a grammar of the Egyptian language as practiced by the ancients
Robert when do you think Ab0 was written?
I don't know when the translation was made, but (to judge from the speed of translation of the Book of Mormon) it could have been done in one day. The Book of Abraham is, after all, quite short. Adding facsimile commentary and woodcuts could come much later.
Fence Sitter wrote:If the Book of Abraham Ab0 already existed why would it have been written before the papyri arrived in Kirtland? If Ab0 was extant before Ab1-3 were produced why bother with the missing scroll theory when that would make it clear that neither Joseph Smith or his scribes knew where on the papyri the Book of Abraham was to be found? (These are Hauglids designations of the Book of Abraham manuscripts which I think you know but I mention for any others reading this thread.)
Robert F Smith wrote:
The secretaries and Joseph failed in their attempt to create a useful GAEL, et c., and gave up.
We have several references to the value that Joseph Smith and the Church placed on the GAEL. They did not view the attempt as failed.
Hugh Nibley suggested that the GAEL constituted an attempt to “reverse engineer” Champollion-style the meaning of Egyptian characters via comparison with an already extant Book of Abraham text (generated immediately after the arrival of the papyri in Kirtland). However, it appears morel likely that the available KEP documents were all part of an attempt to create a “cipher-key” for encipherment-by-substitution of portions of Joseph Smith’s revelations then being prepared for publication as the 1835 D&C.
* Will Schryver has shown conclusively that William W. Phelps began this cipher-key work before the arrival of the Egyptian papyri and mummies in Kirtland, and he was the “dominant force” in continuing that effort – which utilized an already extant, complete Book of Abraham text along with significant portions of already extant revelations (D&C 76 and 88). The conclusion of Schryver is that Joseph Smith received the Book of Abraham via revelation – the same way he received the Book of Mormon and the book of Moses.
# * Cf. Christopher Smith, “The Inspired Fictionalization of the 1835 United Firm Revelations,”
Claremont Journal of Mormon Studies, 1/1 (Apr 2011), 15-31; Samuel Brown, “Joseph (Smith) in Egypt: Babel, Hieroglyphs, and the Pure Language of Eden,”
Church History, 78/1 (Mar 2009), 26-65;; Howard J. Wing, “Cryptograms from the Fractal Chiasmus of Messianic Speech in the Doctrine and Covenants,” School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, undated; copy in BYU Special Collections, MSS 3776, Box 6, Folder 107.
# William Schryver, “The Meaning and Purpose of the Kirtland Egyptian Papers,” paper delivered at the 2010 Conference of FAIR (Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research), available online (as a video,
http://vimeo.com/user439270/videos/sort:oldest ). Cf. May 27, 1835 letter of Phelps to his wife, and the July 17, 1835
History of the Church entry.