http://www.architectmagazine.com/histor ... ets_o.aspx

So, how do we resolve the presence and actions of Sherem in the Book of Mormon?
subgenius wrote:So, how do we resolve the presence and actions of Sherem in the Book of Mormon?
Discoveries of Maya occupation at Cuello, Belize have been carbon dated to around 2600 BCE.[2][3] The people built monumental structures. The Maya calendar, which is based on the so-called Mesoamerican Long Count calendar, begins on a date equivalent to 11 August 3114 BC.
subgenius wrote:I understand how difficult it can be to focus but the presence of and behavior of Sherem merits resolution.
subgenius wrote:. . . seemingly odd for someone to have to "seek out" another in a community of maybe 50 people in such a newly formed community[.]
Verse 4 notes that Sherem was fluent in a language that was perhaps not his own.
subgenius wrote:The OP mentions the infamous stela at Tikal. Sherem is an adult male seemingly meeting Jacob for the first time.... seemingly odd for someone to have to "seek out" another in a community of maybe 50 people in such a newly formed community... especially to debate religion.
Tikal illustrates the reality of Nephi test interacting with outside communities.
Jacob 7:1 says "there came a man among the people of Nephi, whose name was Sherem," suggesting that he was not originally part of the Nephite group. Verse 4 notes that Sherem was fluent in a language that was perhaps not his own.
Jacob 7:
[26] And it came to pass that I, Jacob, began to be old; and the record of this people being kept on the other plates of Nephi, wherefore, I conclude this record, declaring that I have written according to the best of my knowledge, by saying that the time passed away with us, and also our lives passed away like as it were unto us a dream, we being a lonesome and a solemn people, wanderers, cast out from Jerusalem, born in tribulation, in a wilderness, and hated of our brethren, which caused wars and contentions; wherefore, we did mourn out our days.
Each of Sherem’s accusations can be traced to specific provisions in pre-exilic Israelite law:
1. Causing public apostasy. Leading other people or a city into apostasy was recognized as a serious infraction under the law of Moses and the Talmud. Deuteronomy 13:1–18 condemns to death any person, whether a prophet, or brother, or son, or wife, who says to the inhabitants of their city, “Let us go and serve other gods, which ye have not known” (Deuteronomy 13:13; see 13:2, 6). “Thou shalt not consent unto him, nor hearken unto him; . . . but thou shalt surely kill him” (Deuteronomy 13:8–9).
In essence Sherem first claimed that Jacob had led the people away, i.e., into a state of apostasy from the way of God. Sherem claimed that Jacob had caused the people to pervert the right way of God, to keep not the law, and to convert the law into the worship of an unknown god. Indeed, the law of Moses defines the crime of causing apostasy as trying to thrust the people “out of the way which the Lord [their] God commanded [them] to walk in” (Deuteronomy 13:5).
Moreover, Sherem’s point that Jacob had converted the observance of the law of Moses into the worship of an unknown future being seems to have been based on the Deuteronomic prohibition against turning to serve new gods “which ye have not known” (Deuteronomy 13:2, 6, 13).
2. Blasphemy. Sherem’s second accusation also raised a capital charge. It was a felony under the law of Moses to blaspheme (see Exodus 20:7; Leviticus 24:10–16). Leviticus 24 established that any person who blasphemed, even in a brawl, was to be stoned to death. Sherem raised the charge of blasphemy against Jacob when he formally accused him, saying, “I, Sherem, declare unto you that this is blasphemy” (Jacob 7:7).
While the ancient history of the crime of blasphemy is obscure, this offense apparently embraced many forms of insolent or seditious speech, whether against God, against the king (see 1 Kings 21:10), against another man, or against holy places or things, including the law (compare Acts 6:13).
3. False Prophecy. Sherem’s words also advanced a claim of false prophecy. The test for whether a prophet had spoken truly or falsely was usually to see “if the thing follow not, nor come to pass” (Deuteronomy 18:22). Apparently Sherem tried to preclude this defense when he objected that Jacob had spoken of things too far distant in the future. When Sherem asserted categorically that “no man knoweth of such things” (Jacob 7:7), he seems to be arguing that prophecies of that nature should not be easily tolerated under the law. With shorter-term prophecies, one has the chance to test them within a reasonable time.
Dr. Shades wrote:subgenius wrote:. . . seemingly odd for someone to have to "seek out" another in a community of maybe 50 people in such a newly formed community[.]
Were the people of Tikal, or were the neighboring Kaanul (or the "Snake Kingdom"), the original Lehite colony?
no commentVerse 4 notes that Sherem was fluent in a language that was perhaps not his own.
Did the people of Tikal and the neighboring Kaanul (or the "Snake Kingdom") speak different languages?
subgenius wrote:but the point being made speaks more to a lack of isolation for the people that settled there.