https://scholarsarchive.BYU.edu/cgi/vie ... text=byusqtagriffy wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 5:45 amInterestingly enough, I just completed reading Earl M. Wunderli's An Imperfect Book: What the Book of Mormon Tells Us About Itself. He deals quite handily with Hebraisms and complex chiasms in chapter 7. And he makes a very good case for single authorship in chapter 3. They aren't that much of a dilemma. And without credible physical evidence the Book of Mormon peoples ever existed, it isn't very hard to place authorship squarely on Joseph. Indeed, it becomes the only viable possibility.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 4:30 amI’ve gone this route but it just doesn’t fit/work.
For example, a young Joseph creating on the fly the complex chiastic structure in sections of the Book of Mormon and other Hebraisms.
https://bookofmormoncentral.org/content ... -of-Mormon
And then you have the multiple independent/unique voices found in the Book of Mormon.
https://knowhy.bookofmormoncentral.org/ ... -of-Mormon
The critics have to out maneuver a number of roadblocks in order to come away saying what you’ve said above. I think some of these roadblocks present a real dilemma for those that would like to present Joseph as being sole author. Then you pile on the stuff found in the links provided earlier (Hales and Rasmussen) and the job to put the Book of Mormon squarely in Joseph’s becomes even harder.
Folks, you have to really go through convolutions to ignore the facts. Is it worth it?
I tried going through the contortions that critics go through and at the end of the day I had to be honest with myself and admit that there was no there there in regards to what the critics were providing in opposition to what appears to be the cold hard facts.
But the show must go on and the critics will always be there to explain away a simple story.
God, angels, plates, modern day scripture and prophets that hold keys to administer Christ’s church.
Regards,
MG
Page 13.
Wunderli’s ‘pickin’ and choosin’ is questionable.
As I’ve said the authorship question precedes the issues involved in geography, historicity, and all the rest. If Joseph couldn’t have composed the Book of Mormon on his own then we are looking at the traditional narrative as being correct. If so, the other concerns become peripheral.
Regards,
MG