Benjamin McGuire wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 2:55 pm
I actually think that most believers don't really care about much of this stuff. When I talk about the standpoint of a believer, I am just trying to encapsulate in that the idea that the Book of Mormon is a revealed text (however you want to take that) as opposed to a modern fiction (however you want to take that). The reason why I use this dichotomy is that for one group, we only have a modern text - and any discussion of loan shifting or lexical expansion or any of that is generally going to be completely meaningless.
We do only have a modern text. We may be in agreement that a modern text that presents itself as scripture is not best described as a modern fiction. If the Bible is taken as the model for a genre, then the novel, being another genre, is not what a text modeled, to an appreciable extent, on the Bible is.
Mormons, on the other hand, come in several flavors on these issues (including those who really will never think about it). One group wants to be able to place the narrative into a specific place and time (to give it historicity). Other groups may be willing to see the text as an inspired fiction (similar - for the purposes of this discussion with the non-believer) - and there are a wide range of views between these two poles. I am not particularly attached to any model - since I tend to focus on a literary approach. And I recognize that the assumptions we bring to the text changes the way that we read the text.
I like that about your work, that you are focused on the literary approach. I don't think the foci on reading the Book of Mormon as either history or inspired fiction are ultimately helpful.
I think that Mormonism as a whole experienced a watershed moment (as far as the Book of Mormon is concerned) when there was a swing towards literalism at the beginning of the 20th century that coincided with the debates over replacing the KJV with a new translation. This was made worse with the introduction of new earth creationism primarily by Joseph Fielding Smith.
So, do you see any explicit pushback on that kind of reading from the leaders of the LDS Church?
This isn't unique to Mormonism. I think that the best description of this problem that I have ever read was written by Luke Johnson, in his book: Contested Issues in Christian Origins and the New Testament. Her writes this (p. 5-6):
The historical study of Jesus began due to Enlightenment in Europe. At the time, two related convictions became popular among those considering themselves to live in an age of reason. The first was that for religion to be true it had to be reasonable; the second was that history was the most reasonable measure of truth. The claims of Christians about Jesus must therefore also meet those standards.
I think that Mormonism as a whole is tied to this premise (as much as any other group). They want the Book of Mormon to be true and to be reasonable, and the best way to get to that conclusion is to show that it is historical. I am indifferent to that notion (generally speaking) because I am interested in a different set of questions about the text.
Yes, I am aware that it isn't unique to Mormonism. It is still a problem. Mormonism is tied to it just as much as any other group that is tied to it, not as much as any other group in existence. You may be interested in a different set of questions, but the thrust of your argument here seems to strive to accommodate or even assist people who invest a lot in their belief in the antiquity of the text.
I think that anyone who has followed much of what I have written publicly over the past couple of decades will recognize that I am highly critical of attempts to identify historicity in the text - and so I think that this description isn't very accurate. I hope that my comments above on why I am using the believer's model will help you understand what I am trying to convey there - it is about the assumptions we bring to the text.
Well, I am glad that you have reaffirmed your commitment to literary, not historical matters in the Book of Mormon. I hope you can see why your posture throughout this thread can be confusing to those who are trying to understand exactly where it is you are coming from. You consistently refer to Nephites as though we can all take for granted their historical existence. You also consistently refer to your take as a "believing" reading. That certainly suggests you equate the assumption that the Nephites are a historical people with a believing position.
Overall, in this thread about loan shifts and anachronisms, my real position is very simple - it's not really about the examples but about the idea that we would be far better off in these discussions if we recognized that between believer and critic, there are often assumptions which, while very different, are working in the same space. Both sides see a modern text. Anything that is attributable to that modern text shouldn't be considered a significant anachronism. It doesn't matter why we think it is a part of the modern text - merely that it is. And without that distraction, we can have the more important discussions about the text that I think need to be had - even if there is very little overlap and agreement. The moment we start discussing carrying a tapir into the battlefield, that is the moment that there can be no substantive discussion.
Anachronisms in a text that purports to be ancient are naturally taken as bearing on the question of historicity. If historicity is unimportant, then anachronisms are unimportant. I agree that they are unimportant because the text is, as you acknowledge, modern. I agree that there are many other interesting and important things for readers of the Book of Mormon to consider aside from anachronisms and historicity. In that effort, I join you. At the same time, as long as the LDS Church assumes the historicity of the text and that assumption is held my a large number of members, then doubting members will continue to experience the discovery of anachronisms as important. They don't really bear the blame for that, as it is a natural way of leaving behind the culture they were raised in.
From where I sit, we are not that far apart, but I am confused by the way you appear to enter the conversation only partly revealing where you are coming from, when it would be a lot more helpful for us to see you articulate clearly where you are and how that differs from the mainstream LDS position. Don't get me wrong: I don't blame you for not staking out this rhetorical territory, but you will continue to be asked to clarify your position when you make vague statements that seem to cut in the direction of the text being an ancient artifact, as it were.
Let me show you what I mean:
If the Book of Mormon is an authentic text, a good parallel might be with what happens in Marco Polo's Travels (an example I have used from time to time).
What on earth are you suggesting here? You tell me that you are not interested in the historicity of the Book of Mormon, but you compare the Book of Mormon as an "authentic" text with
The Travels of Marco Polo. Presumably, you accept that Rustichello da Pisa, using stories he had heard from/about Marco Polo concerning his travels, wrote this work in the 13th century. Now, we can be fairly confident that there was a Marco Polo who either traveled to China or heard accounts of others who had, and that Rustichello created his narrative based in some sense on what Marco Polo claimed he experienced, albeit with some embellishment and borrowing from well known legends.
So, my immediate reaction to this, as I have not read your use of Marco Polo in the past, is to say that with
The Travels of Marco Polo we have, at the very least, a text that is, however embellished, embedded in historical and cultural matrices that connect in a substantive way with the objects described. That really isn't the case with the Book of Mormon, is it? How is Joseph Smith's scriptural account of Christian Ancient America embedded in the history and culture of Ancient America in any substantive way? Did Joseph Smith travel to Ancient America or consult with people who claimed to have done so? Does what he described correspond in any reasonable way with what we know about Ancient America from other disciplines?
Of course, you have told us that the historicity does not matter. And yet, you bring up
The Travels of Marco Polo as a "good parallel" to an "authentic" Book of Mormon. What do these two very different texts arising from very different circumstances have in common that makes them both "authentic"? I would be very interested to know.
"I have learned with what evils tyranny infects a state. For it frustrates all the virtues, robs freedom of its lofty mood, and opens a school of fawning and terror, inasmuch as it leaves matters not to the wisdom of the laws, but to the angry whim of those who are in authority.”