The Infancy of Mesoamerican Studies, Revisited

A previous post of mine on the infancy of modern scholarship in Mesoamerica made a point regarding the lack of general knowledge about Mesoamerica among the English-speaking masses of Joseph Smith’s day – a topic of possible interest to students of the Book of Mormon and its origins. It’s not that many scholars were not aware of Aztec and Mayan ruins, but that the common knowledge of the day did not provide Joseph Smith with much guidance about the once great civilizations that had been on this continent. That can be debated, which is what I find interesting: not the post itself, but the robust discussion that followed, including the lectures of a most erudite scholar and poet out to awake Mormons from our mental slumber. Some challenges and questions have gone unanswered, and perhaps some of you will have further contributions to make on both sides of the discussion.

Perhaps the great poet herself will arise once more? My Website analytics service for this blog shows that someone has been searching for that grand name, “RadicalFeministPoet”, and coming to that old post as a result – I can only hope it’s her. As much as some of her comments were a tad harsh, perhaps even vitriolic (though too supernal in tone to stir up any but the most effete mobs, fortunately), she also brought some intelligent criticism and even some generously proffered references to the table that urged some of us to read, think, and refine our position. Enduring a bit of hostility is a small price to pay for such assistance. So RadicalFeministPoet, if you’re lurking, here’s a wink and a hello! Look forward to hearing your latest tactful thoughts. I also hope you’ll respond to Blake Ostler’s interesting challenge.

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Author: Jeff Lindsay

70 thoughts on “The Infancy of Mesoamerican Studies, Revisited

  1. Jeff,

    I’m glad you’re hoping to connect once again with RFP. I went back and read some of the comments, and frankly, I find them a little hard to stomach — on both sides. Let me explain.

    One thing about RPF’s arguments that galls me, isn’t her supposed superiority, nor her trolling for rebuttals, nor even her petty insults. It’s the QED she or he injects into every pronouncement. To her/him, the arguments are proof positive, and we dolts are just too “sheepish” (or later, buffoonish”) to get it. But, frankly, her logic just doesn’t clear the hurtle: there are simply too many possible unknowns in a fuzzy science like archeology to definitively say, as though this were a math equation, “And therefore I have proved that Joe Smith was a fraud.” Nice try, but she’s/he’s got nothing. Maybe it proves it to her (or him), but this “sheep” can see too many holes to follow the QED.

    Sadly, we “sheeple” tend to fall into the polemics of the argument, and defend Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon, our testimonies, etc., with the exact same logical fallacy. The reality is, we (correct me if I’m wrong here, Jeff) are not holding these new “discoveries” up as PROOF of the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith’s divine mission, or the church–FOR THE VERY SAME REASON: the evidence is just too flimsy, and there are too, too many unknowns. A few of your comments made the same mistake she/he did — these little facts simply don’t PROVE the Book of Mormon is true, anymore that her/his facts DISPROVE it: they’re based on evidence that is too flimsy.

    This is my BELIEF, so take it for what little it is worth: I believe that, for the time being, God will not allow us access to information to unequivocally PROVE the Book of Mormon is true, because (I believe) we’re supposed to learn FAITH from it. Contra-wise, I also believe that He will also not allow it to be unequivocally DISPROVED either (except possibly, again, to test the FAITH of the saints for a time). This is a matter of faith.

    (I’ve read enough of RFP to hear her voice in my head, “How convenient! You BELIEVE that God won’t ever prove….”) Well, yup! It shorely is conveniunt! (Sorry I couldn’t resist–the hick sheep slipped out.) That’s because this is a religion; its all about faith. Faith is when you don’t have proof, at least not the physical kind.)

    So why do we look at these kinds of things? If it were to build a testimony on, Jeff, you know as well as I that’s barking up the wrong tree entirely. You can’t build a testimony on these trinkets of fact.

    I got a kick out of the implication, raised more than once, that general authorities are teaching this stuff to help build their case! Hilarious! No, RFP, if you’re listening, they are the realm of little blogs like this one–not general conference.

    So, back to my question: why do we?

    Here’s my take: If you already have a testimony of the truth of the Book of Mormon, you can hear this with a knowing smile. Like Tevye in “Fiddler on the Roof,” when he asks his wife, Golda, “Do you love me?” When she finally answers in the affirmative, he points out, that it doesn’t change a thing, but it’s nice to know.

    If you don’t have testimony of the truth of the Book of Mormon, for heaven sake (literally) don’t base it on this stuff! Instead, exercise a little faith, read it, ask God to reveal it to you, and be prepared to follow the consequences if you get an affirmative answer. That is the only way God will allow you to find out. Every other means, I believe, will be futile.

    God Bless!

    Todd

  2. Oops had to edit hence the deletion.

    I appreciate Jeff’s work and the evidences posted. Jeff has never claimed that anything proves the BOM is true. He says something like, it allows room for faith. Something like that. I agree testimonies should not be built on temporal evidence. But the information is way interesting and may answer the questions of people investigating the Church to see if those anti’s were right. But of course we need to read, ponder and pray constantly.

  3. Todd, thanks for the comments. By way of clarification, could you point out which comments of mine you thought were claiming to “prove” the Book of Mormon? I ask because I sincerely try to avoid that kind of language or tone, recognizing that faith is essential, that we aren’t going to have “proof,” but that there can be and really should be indications that can support the plausibility of the text or refute some major arguments against it, in order that faith may find room to thrive.

  4. Jeff,

    You caught my most glaring error (one that I didn’t notice until after I posted)! It should have referred to comments in the thread, not yours specifically. On the contrary, your comments were very careful. I know you know these things, I think most of your readers/commenters do too, they just get caught up in the moment, like all of us.

    Sorry!

    Todd

  5. Thanks, Todd. Your comment makes sense. And thanks for the link – it was broken when I tried it, though. Could you send it again – perhaps using tinyurl.com.

    LDJ, I was just up for a short while in the middle of the night, tormented with the usual unbearable guilt of Mormonism (or maybe it was a loud truck that drove by), and thought I’d just check the old blog and do a bit of email before dozing off again.

  6. Another very interesting conversation.

    When I joined the LDS Church in 1981, I was shown the film “Ancient America Speaks” and was told by one of the elders that “a large number” of archeologists work in South America with “Book of Mormon in hand” so that they can find their way around.

    Ah, the good old days!

    Listening in on your conversation, I truly believe that the LDS Church is preparing for the day 20-30 years from now when it quietly closes down FARMS and reveals to the Saints that the Book of Mormon took place in a spiritual realm.

    That’s why it cannot be proven. That’s why no one can find Zarahemla or samples of Reformed Egyptian or one single onti of silver. Those would be physical things…not spiritual.

    Don’t think it will happen? I bet none of the early Mormon leaders ever thought the LDS Church would go so anti-polygamy either. But times change and things happen that we never dream of do come to pass.

    I hope that everyone has a good Labor Day with all that wonderful Bar-B-Que Curlom and Cummom!

  7. And what better place to enjoy that barbecue than in Nahom, the ancient burial place in the Arabian Peninsula which may correspond to the archaeologically confirmed ancient burial place associated with the name Nehhem and the ancient southern Arabian Nihm tribe, essentially right where First Nephi requires it to be in a very plausible journey across the Arabian Peninsula? Or better still, enjoy that meal in a plausible candidate location for the once allegedly implausible place Bountiful (in modern Oman) which, as First Nephi requires, is nearly due east of Nahom and fairly lush. Someone better get the word out to Nephi that his journey never occurred. Maybe First Nephi chapters 1, 6, and especially 39 are spiritual, but chapters 16 and 17 create the impression that someone must have actually made that journey in a non-metaphorical way. So maybe the Brethren only need to shut down part of FARMS?

  8. Will:

    If you are equating the First Presidency refusal to confirm every geographic site, every secular truth with the conclusion that these things are merely spiritual realities, well frankly, that’s an enormous non sequitur. Even more so with equating that just because polygamy was killed that the BOM’s historicty will be. We might as well say that because Abraham Lincoln issued the emancipation proclamation, we can therefore conclude that homosexual marriages will be legalized. The former was correct and the latter might well be; however, just because continuing revelation exists does not give us license to suppose what revelation will come in the future.

    That said, there is ZERO evidence from the brethren for the conclusion that the BOM is strictly spiritual. If you want to believe it, then, like the historicists, I say please feel free to do so. But don’t make those who dare to use all tools at their disposal of being Mormon hacks. How can you accuse Jeff of engaging in pseudoarchaeology when you are making speculations based in part on such postmodern dogmas about “inspired fiction”?

    Both of us accept dogma…the difference is that Mormons are generally self-conscious of their dogmas. Those who ascribe to the secularist or postmodern agenda insist that theirs is Truth with a capital T. Ironic indeed.

  9. Russ, Go read Will Dunn’s blog, and you’ll have a better idea of where he’s coming from.

    To me, it looks like he has his agenda and is not interested in learning any more about the gospel or the church.

    Will, I wish you a happy life, and healing/resolution for all the offenses and hurts you received in the church and from members.

    When I was bitter towards the church and church members, one of the things that helped me heal was reading “The Enchiridion” by Epictetus. There are a couple translations available on the web.

    He was a Stoic philosopher. He was not Christian, but there is a certain amount of over-lap, such that it helped me realize some principles, such as how we are not responsible for the sins or offenses of others. Good reading.

  10. Bookslinger,
    Yes, I have an agenda and have not tried to hide it. I truly believe that people should be informed about the dark side of Mormonism as well as the warm, fuzzy side. My desire is not to convert anyone here but to give those that may be lurking the inconvenient truths that the missionaries just don’t have time to teach. I just want them to question the authority of the Mormon Church.

    I’m as bitter as Jefferson was when he said “I have sworn on the altar of God eternal enmity against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”

    When a religion sends out missionaries to all parts of the world to convert as many people as possible and then says “but don’t question our beliefs”….that’s just silly.

    You read Epictetus? Gee man, how can you endure the 3 hours of mental novacaine each week?

  11. russ,

    No, what I’m saying (if you read my post) was that the Saints are being PREPARED to accept the BoM as something that happened in a spiritual realm. It’s not hard to change doctrine or views in the LDS Church. Just tell the members it’s “revelation” and they will go along with it.

    Of course it’s just my opinion, but trying to get the world to believe that there was this big civilization that left nothing behind is much more of a non sequitur.

    You wrote: “That said, there is ZERO evidence from the brethren for the conclusion that the BOM is strictly spiritual.”

    I can only tell you what I have seen over the last 27 years. When I joined I was told by the missionaries that there were all sorts of archaeological PROOFS for the Book of Mormon. That the American Indians were here because of Lehi ALONE. I was shown the film Ancient America Speaks.

    Is this still part of the missionary approach? No.

    It’s all about getting the warm fuzzies now.

    Mormonism makes some pretty big claims. Don’t get upset when people call you on those claims.

  12. Will said: When I joined I was told by the missionaries that there were all sorts of archaeological PROOFS for the Book of Mormon. That the American Indians were here because of Lehi ALONE. I was shown the film Ancient America Speaks.

    Is this still part of the missionary approach? No.

    It’s all about getting the warm fuzzies now.

    In my opinion, Will, you are 180 degrees wrong here – completely missing some major currents in the Church. The fact that shoddy scholarship from amateurs gained popular acclaim in the Church and was shown widely by enthusiastic members who didn’t know better is certainly lamentable. I went through that myself – getting all excited as a young high school student about some of the alleged Book of Mormon evidence from those who Nibley described as having “zeal without knowledge.” The reason you don’t see so much of that now is NOT because there is no room for scholarship, evidence, and intellectual rigor in dealing with the Book of Mormon, but is due to exactly the opposite phenomenon: the rise of serious scholars with degrees and intellectual honesty and familiarity with the evidence, good and bad. Through the influence of FARMS and other groups of LDS thinkers and scholars, there have been loud voices in the Church saying, “STOP! This filmstrip or that movie or book is based on very poor scholarship and in the long run will only hurt.” These voices have pointed out that understanding the tangible aspects of the Book of Mormon requires a more nuanced, studied approach. They have been active in pointing out the difference between fools’ gold and the real thing, whether the imitation is due to misinterpretation of data, flawed assumptions, stupidity, or in the case of some purported finds like the Padilla plates, forgeries.

    While recognizing that there are impressive evidences for Book of Mormon plausibility, faithful LDS scholars of today also recognize the danger of shoddy scholarship and have been quick to warn against getting too excited over apparent evidences that don’t have good support. For example, voices at BYU/FARMS spoke out against the popular theory that Izapa Stela 5 was a Mesoamerican rendition of Lehi’s Tree of Life vision in First Nephi. They have published reviews shredding the pro-Mormon work of some hobbyists. FARMS scholars like John Tvedtnes have, for example, pointed out possible weaknesses in the appealing interpretation of Ezekiel 37 as a Biblical prophecy of the Book of Mormon (though I’m not yet convinced that the two sticks passage in Ezekiel 37 is not also symbolic of scriptural restoration).

    The best place to find detailed refutations of pro-LDS books offering intriguing Book of Mormon evidences is actually the FARMS Review of Books, where pseudo-archeology and bogus scholarship, however faith promoting, are routinely taken to task. And the intellectual ecosystem of scholars in the Church, including groups such as FARMS, FAIRLDS, and the More Good Foundation, are increasingly offering intellectually stimulating insights that are consistent with the Book of Mormon as a real ancient record.

    Based on my interactions with the More Good Foundation and others in the Church whom I consider to be thought leaders or just plain old leaders, I am convinced that the Church cares more than ever about the reality of the Book of Mormon.

    To be more scientifically appropriate, one must recognize that science is forever tentative, and theories about particular finds and evidences may change with time. That’s why a Church that encourages thinking and academic rigor is not going to confuse matters of faith and spirituality with the fickle world of science. They will leave that to the scholars, perhaps with some encouragement, while focusing on their mission: bringing souls to Christ. And for that, they don’t need to show second-rate videos about alleged evidence for Christ in America.

    Look for the Church to be as strong as ever in encouraging us to take the Book of Mormon seriously, to think about it rigorously, and to be open to what science and scholarship might teach us about the real ancient peoples who followed Nephi south-southeast along the very real borders of the Red Sea to a very real Nahom, and then nearly due east to a very real Bountiful in modern day Oman, before they set sail and landed in a real part of the New World that we now have described in the Book of Mormon. There is much it does not say, much we do not know, and much we may need to change about our assumptions about the peoples and places involved due to our ignorance and the limitations of the text. But given the many impressive intellectual evidences for plausibility and authenticity that we already have,I can’t imagine that any reasonable Church leader would turn around someday and say that the gold plates never existed, that the journey across Arabia never occurred, that it was all just Joseph and the numerous witnesses of the gold plates smoking something a little too strong.

  13. “My desire is not to convert anyone here but….”

    Ahem. Excuse me, but it appears from your blg that you’re firmly in the anti-camp. Your blog publishes against the Brethren and against the Gospel. You don’t just question, you make rather clear claims.

    “When a religion sends out missionaries to all parts of the world to convert as many people as possible and then says “but don’t question our beliefs”….that’s just silly.”

    That’s quite a misrepresentation. One of the main themes of LDS missionaries is “Don’t take our word for it. Pray and get an answer for yourself.”

    And yeah, I was shown “Ancient America Speaks” 26 years ago too. I thought the narrator was a pompous buffoon. I didn’t like him.

    But still, the missionaries essentially told me “Don’t take our word for it, or his either, pray and get an answer for yourself.

    And guess what? I got a very powerful spiritual manifestation that the Book of Mormon is real, that Jesus did visit the Nephites.

    So I got baptized. Not because I beleived any archeaological argument, but because I got a very clear answer to my prayers.

    I fully expect to meet Lehi, Nephi, Alma, Ammon, Aaron, Mormon, Moroni, and the rest some day. Or at least listen to them give talks at firesides, or whatever goes on during the millennium.

    And I still think that narrator in “Ancient America Speaks” was a horse’s patoot, well at least in the documentary. He was probably a lot nicer in real life.

    Then I went on, and eventually did get offended and hurt by Mormons, and left the church for 15 years. But I couldn’t shake the powerful spiritual testimonies that I had about God, Jesus, the Atonement, the Bible, the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith as a prophet, and the Temple.

    So after a lot of learning and healing, I came back to church.

    Yeah, there are some real idiots in the Mormon church. What church/religion doesn’t have them?

    Was there a time in the Bible when all the believers, Old Testament or New Testament, were perfect? Nope. Somebody was always screwing up at any given point in time. Many of the central characters made big time mistakes: Aaron, Moses, David, Solomon.

    Even one of God’s prophets, Balaam, screwed up big time, and joined the bad guys, and got killed for it.

    Jonah screwed up big time too, and almost got killed for it. If he hadn’t repented, he eventually would have come out the other end of the whale, no?

    Archealogical evidence in favor of the Book of Mormon is not the slam-dunk that “Ancient America Speaks” might lead one to believe.

    But you are also patently wrong when you say there is _no_ archeaological evidence at all in favor of the Book of Mormon. There are well over 100 general data points, with likely over 1,000 instances in Latin America, not counting the instances in the Old World, like discovery of records kept on metal plates, and the recent discovery of ancient Hebrew/Jewish names that match up with some Book of Mormon names.

    I’m glad I never had a testimony of archeaology or of Church History.

    But if you bought into the archealogical evidence as “proof” back then, just forgive yourself.

    And forgive the bloomin’ idiots who pretended like that stuff was reliable enough for a testimony.

    I don’t much care, in terms of testimony, that barley is mentioned in the Book of Mormon, or that a strain of barley was finally found in an archealogical dig.

    But it is “nice to know” that it was found after all those years when anti’s mocked the church because barley was not known to have been cultivated by Native Americans.

    And so it is with horse bones. I’m not going to let the absence of horse bones cause me to re-interpret the powerful spiritual experience I had that confirmed that Jesus really did visit some people called Nephites.

    Eventually, those missing pieces will be found, like barley. And people who left the church over barley or horsebones, are eventually going to say “Doht!” and slap their spirit forehead with the palm of their spirit hand.

    They let me come back. So they’ll probably let you come back too.

  14. Will:

    Jeff and Book. preempted. Just because the scholarship was bad then doesn’t mean that scholarship is bad. Or as Clarence Darrow noted, just because ideas can cause evil does not mean that we abolish thought.

    And your talk of how members will just “go with it” is cynical, hackneyed, and adds nothing new to the topic. I don’t fall in that camp and most of those I know don’t fall into that camp either. The “Mormon sheep” model is a myth not unlike 19th century propaganda (see Givens “Viper on the Hearth” to see the comrades in arms on Mormon caricatures and mythmaking).

    You still have provided zero evidence that the BOM should be read in strictly figurative terms. We have word studies (having studied Hebrew myself, I know something of the merit of these studies), wordprint analyses, cultural analyses, and some archaeology that present plausibility.

    I sense serious dogmatism here…a refusal to grant Mormons any credit for any kind of intellectual achievement. I cite “secular” naturalist scholars all the time in my research as a graduate student…are you willing to view Mormons with the same open-minded eye?

  15. Well Dunn, said:

    “When I joined the LDS Church in 1981, I was shown the film “Ancient America Speaks” and was told by one of the elders that “a large number” of archeologists work in South America with “Book of Mormon in hand” so that they can find their way around.”

    In 1976 I was exposted to the same trap. But before they got to the weak case of BofM archeology they told me of the Joseph Smith first vision and the Holy Spirit confirmed to me the spirit I had felt many times before as a Christian. I know that RFP thinks such spiritual experiences are below her but I am thankful for a loving Heavenly Father that looks out for us fools that seek Him out with proof other than our faith in trying to keep His commandments. So all the hopeful proofs that may not be full true will not stop the witness of the Holy Spirit of truth.

  16. Jeff,

    The filmstrips and movie that I spoke of were endorsed by the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve. I used them myself when I was a missionary.

    What you call “shoddy scholarship” today was endorsed by the highest councils of the LDS Church back then. These are the same men who are charged with making sure the Mormon Church is not “tossed to and fro” with every wind of doctrine. Perhaps they just had “zeal without knowledge” back then.

    Now you imply that these men can’t be trusted! (Don’t worry because I don’t trust them anyway.)

    I agree that today’s LDS scholars have had to take a different approach after some embarrassing mistakes in the past. Yet, I think it’s fair to ask how much impact these scholars have in the LDS Church.

    For example, look at this picture:
    http://www.idumea.org/Art/Friberg/Helaman.jpg

    Note that the picture shows a man riding a HORSE into battle. This picture is used in Primary and in other presentations yet Robert Bennett of FARMS tells us “Moreover, the Book of Mormon never says that horses were ridden or used in battle, although some passages suggest that at times they may have been used by the elite as a draft animal…”

    If FARMS is right why not commission new pictures without the horse or have them riding deer?

    No, I still believe this is a slow process that will take place over the next 30-40 years. It’s already happened with the DNA issue causing a change in the scriptural introduction in the BoM. The theory that there is some hidden civilization in Central America that has been overlooked for over 175 years just won’t continue to hold up year after year.

    As I have said more than once, in the LDS Church today’s revelation is tomorrow’s personal opinion.

  17. bookslinger,

    If I am in the “anti-camp” how could I possibly convert anyone here? My desire is to give people WHO MAY BE THINKING ABOUT joining the LDS Church a different perspective.

    If it was not about missionaries converting people, the LDS Church could send out DVDs to everyone.

    You wrote:
    “I got a very powerful spiritual manifestation that the Book of Mormon is real, that Jesus did visit the Nephites.”

    People get powerful feelings about a lot of things. In the Heaven’s Gate Group they knew that there was a spaceship trailing the Hale-Bopp Comet….people in waves had such intense feelings that Hitler would redeem Germany so much so that Rudolf Hess told them “Do not seek Hitler with your brain, you will only find him with your heart.”

    Can you really put that much trust in your feelings? If you want to that’s fine. Go on and drink the Kool-Aid.

    I’ve noticed with you it always seems to come back to being offended. I’m sorry that you were offended but LDS people are no different than any other people. For me it’s reality verses fantasy. Nephites, Lamanites, Hobbits, Sith Lords, Jedi…..they are all the same to me.

    I’m sorry, your “missing pieces” are either in Middle Earth or on the planet Tatooine.

    Pray, and it will be revealed which one.

  18. Will:

    What do you believe about life? About everything? I guarantee that I can demonstrate it to be based on unprovable assumptions. Marxism, positivism, existentialism, deconstructionism, isms ad nauseum. Criticize us for extending beyond the seen world if you wish, but remember that you’re burning down your own home in the process.

    And the cheap shot about Heaven’s Gate is bumper sticker argumentation…an excellent example of the “ecological fallacy.” Indeed, one might as well indict anti-Christianity for Nietzsche’s madness or Judaism for revisionist Zionism.

    And as far as the “today’s revelation is tomorrow’s revelation,” that’s a simplistic conclusion…it betrays that you haven’t ever bothered to actually read/examine the primary source documents on how LDS revelation functions except for a few quips about “Follow the Prophet; he knows the way.” Using your analysis, one could convict Paul of being both a radical feminist and an oppressor or Jesus of being a weak pacifist and a militant. One-liners don’t get us very far in these discussions…except for throwing some fuel on the polemical fires. For your discussion of hard-nosed scholarship, you haven’t demonstrated a similar discipline in your discussion of LDS teachings.

    When you seem interested in discussing the meaningful nuance in LDS doctrine of continuing revelation, I encourage you to inquire. We are listening.

  19. Russ,

    What I believe, above all things in this discussion is that NO religion whether it be Mormonism, The Jehovah’s Witnesses, Scientology, etc. has the right to lie to people in order to convert them? I consider omitting details that would play a major part in a person’s decision to convert to another belief system the same as outright lying.

    I do like some aspects of existentialism and Buddhism but I have not declared my belief system “the only true and living” way to believe and I don’t go door to door bothering people with what I believe.

    I am sorry that I forgot to qualify my quote about Heaven’s Gate and even the Hess comment. I am not saying you fellows are a suicide cult or that you are Nazis! My point was that many times people believe in things (fervently and with their entire beings) that turn out not to be true.

    In saying that yesterday’s revelation is tomorrow’s personal opinion I just am telling you how I have seen the LDS people behave today toward the words of former leaders who were sure that they were teaching an eternal truth that God had revealed to them. The “word of the Lord” becomes just so much personal opinion (Journal of Discourses for example).

    If I want to discuss LDS revelation, then let’s start with a rock in a hat.

    I think that it has been demonstrated time and time again that the leaders of the LDS Church have no special powers (Remember Mark Hoffman?) but get along the way the rest of us do: By taking in all the facts and trying to make an intelligent decision based on them.

    Do you really think that Monson knows the future?

    I sure don’t.

  20. “The filmstrips and movie that I spoke of were endorsed by the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve. I used them myself when I was a missionary.”

    “Ancient America Speaks” was not in the missionary system when I served in 1984-1986. We did not have it on filmstrip, nor as 8 or 16mm, in Ecuador in 1984-86.

    I did see “Ancient America Speaks” movie at least twice, as investigator (1982), and as a member 82 or 83). I forget who owned the copy I saw, the ward library, or a member.

    I don’t remember if it was produced by the church, like the First Vision movie that we showed in the mission field. My memory is that it wasn’t, and it was an independent production, though it may have used BYU resources.

    Your assertion that it was endorsed at the highest level of the church is also misleading. The movie made no assertions that the President or apostles blessed the movie’s claims/conclusions with a prophetic or revelatory approval. I don’t remember a claim in the movie that “we know these artifacts to be Nephite/Lamanite by revelation”.

    My memory is that the narrator guy, who often appeared on camera, was speaking in his own name, and not as a representative of the church.

    If the Brethren approved anything, they approved the showing of the movie to members/investigators as something that appeared to support the church at the time. And why not show something that appears to support the church?

    But approving the showing of the movie on church property or to members/investigators is not the same as your statement that it was prophetically endorsed.

    Is it online anywhere, so we could check to see if it was produced by the church or by BYU?

    Overall, I can tell that you’ve re-interpreted your “Mormon experience.” But you yourself are not being totally honest now either. You’re at the point of striking back and misrepresenting the church with your hyperbole and mis-characterizations.

    You’ve apparently become as polarized and myopic as you paint the church and its members to be.

    You also need to be more up-front about what your religious beliefs are, and that you specifically disbelieve all forms of Christianity. You need to tell investigators (especially those who are already Christian) that you are NOT Christian, and that you specifically disbelieve Christianity.

    Your disbelief in Christianity taints your view of Mormonism. Because much of what you now believe to be wrong about Mormonism, is also applicable to other denominations of Christianity.

    The “stick” that you now use to attack Mormonism, is also used to attack all forms of Christianity. Specifically, your mocking of religious/spiritiual experiences, and your assertion that God doesn’t answer prayer, and your logical framework that pre-supposes that all religious leaders have to be perfect at all times.

    Sir, you’ve become dirty with the very mud that you throw.

  21. bookslinger,

    Paul Cheesman of BYU did the narration and the film was produced at BYU. Why is everyone trying to distance the LDS Church from this film now? You would think that I was talking about some Ron Jeremy movie.

    You wrote:

    “I don’t remember a claim in the movie that ‘we know these artifacts to be Nephite/Lamanite by revelation’.

    That’s because that they know, as do you, Jeff and everyone else that there are no Nephite/Lamanite artifacts…there are just artifacts that MIGHT be Nephite/Lamanite artifacts.

    You wrote:

    “If the Brethren approved anything, they approved the showing of the movie to members/investigators as something that appeared to support the church at the time.”

    So they voted for the movie before they voted against it. I can’t believe all the convoluted logic here!

    You wrote:

    “You also need to be more up-front about what your religious beliefs are, and that you specifically disbelieve all forms of Christianity. You need to tell investigators (especially those who are already Christian) that you are NOT Christian, and that you specifically disbelieve Christianity.”

    I will be more upfront about my beliefs….but I will wait until people are ready for that. I don’t want to give them more information than they can handle. You can’t be taught advanced math until you learn the basics.

    I accepted Jesus Christ as my personal savior when I was 16 years old. That was several years before I came in contact with Mormonism. Under the rules of the Southern Baptist Convention (once saved, always saved) I’m still a Christian so your claim is false.

    Right?

    As for attacking Mormonism…come on! You know you guys love that stuff. It gives you the opportunity to play the persecution card. “Oh, everyone hates us because we have the truth!”

    As for mud throwing, I never designed a ceremony in which I taught that Christian ministers were hirlings of Satan.

  22. Will, can you clarify why you think the First Presidency endorsed it? I don’t think it even had BYU’s imprimatur on it, popular as it was. Or am I mistaken?

  23. Will:

    I appreciate your apology re: the Heaven’s Gate comment and also that you are responding to sometimes uttered (and ill-informed) comments about the doctrine of continuing revelation.

    I agree on the lying part (though I would be careful on being terribly simplistic about these things…to resort to argumentum ad Hitlerum, remember the case where the Nazi comes to your door when you’re hiding a Jew? Do you tell them the truth?…just a thought). That said, you’ll be hard-pressed to demonstrate lying (intentional deceit) on the part of the brethren. Misunderstanding? Incomplete understanding…perhaps, but guess what? We might as well delegitimize THOUGHT as a means of attaining truth…it’s wrong so often!! This attack does not just address beliefs in a supernatural deity…it addresses beliefs in any kind of higher power. Karma, Allah, thought itself is vulnerable to the ideological flames you are setting.

    But you speak as though you are uttering something new, an expose. Indeed, it seems your primary opposition is to Mormon artwork, as though we all stood up to bear witness of Arnold Freiburg on Sundays! And his art isn’t woefully wrong…it just captures a certain element of it…do you know that Joseph NEVER looked at the plates? He had to have…he transcribed the characters for the Anthon transcript? And frankly, what difference does it make whether Joseph used a rock in a hat or used a handkerchief (like Peter) or two pieces of rock (like Moses) or the Urim and Thummim of the O.T.? The reason you obsess over the hat, I would guess, is really just because you object to the idea of the mundane meeting the divine.

    And I know a good deal about Mark Hoffman…maybe even more than most. And frankly (pardon me as I put on my wild-eyed apologist glasses), had not the Church purchased the documents, we would have never engaged in the rigorous study of the early history as we had. And further, Hoffman’s other forgeries would have by all measurable accounts remained unknown. Unfortunately, two people died in the process…and that is a tragedy borne of an evil man who needed exposure, even if the leadership did not know they were ultimately helping to expose him.

    And frankly, the idea that there is no true way is itself a dogma more stringent than any I believe.

    As far as the Journal of Discourses (and I have read MANY of them), we need to be willing to accept that the Brethren are in the process of receiving light as well. We also need to realize that most people NEVER EVEN HEARD those discourses. How can we possibly call it doctrine when they never learned it? Prophesy was a fluid concept to early members…hardly the strict definition we believe.

  24. “Why is everyone trying to distance the LDS Church from this film now? “

    People are trying to put it into proper perspective because you’re mischaracterizing and misrepresenting what the movie was, and how it was presented.

    If you, as a naive convert and naive missionary, thought that the movie “proved” or was even intended to “prove” anything, then you were among those in the wrong. For crying out loud, forgive yourself. Forgive other people who naively believed in it too.

    To hold mainstream Christians to the same standard, you’d have to denounce Moses as a false prophet for thinking that bats were birds.

    “That’s because that they know, as do you, Jeff and everyone else that there are no Nephite/Lamanite artifacts…there are just artifacts that MIGHT be Nephite/Lamanite artifacts.”

    Then you shouldn’t have any problems with the movie.

    However, your former declaration contradicts the 2nd declaration. We don’t know that there are no Nephite/Lamanite artifacts. There are plenty of artifacts from that time-frame. Some really could be, as you attest by your second declaration.

    “I will be more upfront about my beliefs….but I will wait until people are ready for that. I don’t want to give them more information than they can handle. You can’t be taught advanced math until you learn the basics.”

    Cool. You’re adopting the style of the church that you mock.

    But you dodged the issue, you’re still hiding your anti-christianity and not giving full-disclosure to Christian investigators who might be influenced about taking you as an authority figure if they knew you were anti-Christian.

    “I accepted Jesus Christ as my personal savior when I was 16 years old. That was several years before I came in contact with Mormonism. Under the rules of the Southern Baptist Convention (once saved, always saved) I’m still a Christian so your claim is false.”

    Good, I’m glad you still consider yourself Christian. Or, that you voted for Jesus before you voted against Jesus. 🙂

    But also, in the terminology of the Southern Baptist Convention, you would quality as a backslid Christian, unless you get your butt back on a pew in a Bible-believing church every Sunday.

    I’ve flip-flopped several times myself: born outside of the church, joined the church (1982), left the church (1987), and came back to church (2002).

    “As for mud throwing, I never designed a ceremony in which I taught that Christian ministers were hirlings of Satan.”

    Non-sequitur. The point is that you’re engaging in worse misrepresentation and mischaracterization than what you accuse the LDS church of doing.

    And for all I know, and many of your fellow-travelers might agree, Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart are or were hirlings of Satan.

  25. Jeff, said:

    “Will, can you clarify why you think the First Presidency endorsed it? I don’t think it even had BYU’s imprimatur on it, popular as it was. Or am I mistaken?”

    Jeff, you are no fun, I think you ran Will off. As a missionary at that time we use any story we could to get and keep the interest of those we taught. Even many stories of the Bible that are still taught (but are more than likely not true) by the “Southern Baptist Convention” members to teach Baptist children and adults.
    How dare they! I am now feeling so ashamed that I used that film on my mission and that I experenced the Holy Spirit of truth about the Bible before I was given the false impression that some of those stories may not be totally true. What do I now do with all those feeling of the Holy Spirit that tells me the Bible and that Jesus is the Christ the Holy Son of Heavenly Father? What to do, What to do?

  26. Jeff, I just remember being told by the missionaries at the time (those two elders whom all of you have pointed out were FULL of misinformation) that the film was endorsed by the leaders of the LDS Church. I don’t know if there are still copies of it around, but I know that it was produced by BYU and used in missionary work at the time.

    If the movie was bogus, them why did the Mormon Church include it in a video along with The First Vision and Man’s Search for Happiness?

    Russ you wrote:

    “That said, you’ll be hard-pressed to demonstrate lying (intentional deceit) on the part of the brethren.”

    “There is a temptation for the writer or the teacher Of Church history to want to tell everything, whether it is worthy or faith promoting or not.
    Some things that are true are not very useful.”

    For example, the leaders could be honest and tell people up front that Smith “translated” the Book of Mormon by putting a rock in a hat and sticking his face in it. But how useful is that when you are trying to convert people?

    You wrote: We might as well delegitimize THOUGHT as a means of attaining truth…it’s wrong so often!!

    Interesting but I think I’ll sidestep the road to solipsism and stay on message. If it doesn’t make any difference whether Joseph used a rock in a hat then why not tell new converts during the missionary lessons that’s how the translation took place? It’s not about the mundane meeting the divine it’s about being honest about recorded history and giving potential converts both sides of the story.

    “…..had not the Church purchased the documents, we would have never engaged in the rigorous study of the early history as we had.”

    I thought Arrington and Quinn were doing the New Mormon History before the Hoffman affair.

    The leadership had nothing to do with “exposing” Hoffman. They were his dupes. The Tanner’s had more insite on the matter than God’s Prophets did.

  27. Bookslinger,

    You wrote:

    “For crying out loud, forgive yourself. Forgive other people who naively believed in it too.”

    This is my point here. In 20-30 years most of the things touted in the LDS Church about “Christ in America” and Book of Mormon archeology will be talked about the same way. The process has already started with the Lamanites going from “principal ancestors” to “among the ancestors”. To paraphrase Bob Dylan “Oh the doctrine, it is a-changing”.

    As for the rest of my post, it was irony and sarcasm. Sorry I wasted it on you.

  28. “Even many stories of the Bible that are still taught (but are more than likely not true) by the “Southern Baptist Convention” members to teach Baptist children and adults.”

    Whether the stories are literal or figurative is highly debate in the Protestant Christian world.

    I have not been scared away and have found the back and forth of sharp opinions enjoyable. I will be going away for a while depending on how badly Gustav hits the coast to try and help out with recovery.

  29. I was thinking…maybe I’ve been wrong. Maybe you can pray and find out if it’s true or not! I’m going to do just that!

    In 2006 the Prophet Matthew Philip Gill received 24 brass plates from God from which he translated the Book of Jeraneck.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Jeraneck

    I guess now we all need to have an open mind. We need to read the Book of Jeraneck and find out if it is true.

    Will you good people join me in this quest?

  30. Actually, Will…that is a very interesting tidbit of contemporary religion…honestly, I was unaware of it. Unfortunately, their prophet is nothing like Joseph and is only similar to Joseph in the most superficial of ways.

    Re: the Hoffman affair, I’m not suggesting that the leadership exposed them at all. But the affair put him in a position to where he essentially shot himself in the foot.

    And re: truth-telling, alas, so many have used that quote out-of-context…he’s actually paraphrasing Benjamin Franklin there. Honestly, I would suggest that if you put you and a well-informed and believing scholar of Mormonism in a room, they would do a better job of telling the truth because they wouldn’t resort to sound bytes of supposed scandal. They would actually share context, offer explanations. I could provide more reasons “not to believe” than you could!

    And yes, ANY discipline will tell you that you can’t overload a person on truth to begin with…I was talking to my physics grad. student (hardly a historian) friend and he says that when you teach Physics 101, you essentially lie to your students…

    So before you begin thinking of the dirty lying Mormons, just try, TRY to see their reasoning. “Translation” is the easiest way to describe it…however he saw the words, he saw them and understood the concepts behind them. That’s translation, whether through a dictionary or whatever.

    Just some thoughts.

  31. To all,

    I’ve decided that I will no longer post here. I received a message on another board from a person who told me that anyone here who disagrees to much with the party line will have their IP address tracted down and will be contacted at work. Said this person:

    “If you strike certain chords with them they will drop all the veneer of civility they work toward and they will attempt to ruin people.”

    This does not really suprise me because when I first began asking the wrong questions about Mormonism 10 years ago I was met with some pretty intense hostility and I responded with the same. It was a good thing in the long run because it helped me leave the LDS Church.

    I understand that Scientology isn’t too tolerante with it’s critics either. I guess all cults are the same in that respect.

    All the best to all of you in the future!

    Will Dunn

  32. One of the things that I dislike is the use of snide comments and epithets instead of respectful dialogue. I dislike it whether it comes from a supporter or a critic of the church, because it raises the emotional stakes without increasing the knowledge (or, as I’ve heard said, heat without light.) In many ways it makes it makes the truth harder to see.

    “Ancient America Speaks” was a 15 minute or half hour film (roughly, depending on the version) that is pretty typical for a BYU production of its era. The script was written by Paul Cheesman’s wife Millie, and narrated by Paul who was a *religion* professor (not an archeologist–tho’ there are some reputable BYU archeologists listed as advisors). I remember Paul Cheesman as a decent fellow, very “institute teacher-ish,” by which I mean, more zealous that knowledgeable, though sincere. I knew some of his kids in high school. Good family.

    BYU motion picture studio of that era produced films of mediocre production values, that were considered cheesy by me and my friends even back then. If someone had asked me at the time (I served my mission from 1974 to 1976 to Japan) whether every word could be considered doctrine, I would have laughed at them.

    I’m not certain the source of the meme that it was “approved by the First Presidency” (implying that such an “approval” is equivalent to making every word “official doctrine”) but, even if it were considered by them and approved for missionary use at the time, that is no guarantee of doctrinal accuracy to the same degree as, say, the addition of Joseph F. Smith’s vision to the scriptures about that same time. The process for canon is pretty clear: it must be voted on and approved by the First Presidency, then the Quorum of the Twelve, then by the body of the church, usually in General Conference, which, obviously, that film was not. Nor do I recollect any direct reference to the film in General Conference (I haven’t searched; I just don’t remember) and certainly no recounting of the film.

    Therefore, though the film has the cachet of being produced at BYU Motion Picture Studio, an LDS subsidiary, and supposedly “approved” by the First Presidency, it is no more doctrinal, than, say, Cypher in the Snow, a story meant to inspire people to be more friendly to people, produced around the same era (and almost as cheesy).

    The film itself, as near as I can recollect and glean from online summaries, does NOT make the claim of archeology *directly* supporting details of Book of Mormon (though it DOES imply it). If my memory serves, what it basically says is, “See! There *were* great civilizations in the Americas that coincided with Book of Mormon chronology!” Then, it goes on about the Book of Mormon. If missionaries were using that film to “prove” the Book of Mormon, then their testimonies of the Book of Mormon were suspect, in my opinion.

    I’ve had occasion to talk with one of the advisors of the film more recently. When asked whether meso-American archeology directly supports the Book of Mormon, he will say, “no.” Not that there aren’t confluences that appear to support it, but being a scientist, he’s reluctant to suggest that the level of proof would meet scientific rigor. Hence my earlier statement, that archeology is NOT the way to discover if the Book of Mormon is true.

    There! Now that you all have a hopefully fact-based common ground, bash away. More in a minute…

    Todd

  33. How unfortunate..we’ve run him off!
    It saddens me that someone would lead him to feel that way…please, do come back Will Dunn, I have been enjoying your thoughts on these discussions.

    It’s funny, as a new convert, I have seemingly interested in just about any book on Mormonism (think Talmage and other members that aren’t necessarily Church endorsed) that I can find. While I was at a friend’s house I found a good-size BOM that had pictures of ancient Mesoamerican artifacts, and on one of those pages, it showed engravings on a rock that seemed to depict Lehi’s Vision! It did not say that it was proven, but that it was thought possible that it might be. It also said that when the early settlers arrived there, the mesoamericans wre practicing baptism. I was surprised, and I would say that it helped my faith, but I agree that such should not be what we base our testimony on. It is the answer I recieved and the Spirit I felt at baptism and continually after that that really have helped my testimony grow.

    Please do come back though Will, i can pledge to you that I would never seek to drive you away because of some “controversial” topic you might present. There is no reason that anyone should meet you with such hostility on the terms of your beliefs. Unfortunately, it happens, and one can get a bit too zealous. I can only hope that God can grant us to be just a little more Christ-like in our speech and interaction with others.

  34. A second thing that disturbs me, possibly precipitated by the snide dialogue, is that the critics have a different process for determining truth than we cheerleaders have. So, in effect, they are criticizing the method of truth-finding fault with us because they don’t agree with our method. It’s like criticizing a Japanese chef for not cooking the fish—their cuisine is simply different, and cannot be critiqued on the basis of western methods of cooking. So, unless you’re willing to be open minded, you’ll never try the sushi, that is, you will never understand the basis of our faith and testimonies, so we have no common ground between us as a basis for us to accept or even understand your criticism. To us, you just don’t get it. (You probably say the same thing.) What you say simply doesn’t matter at all because you don’t understand (or are unwilling to understand) the simple process by which we “feel” the gospel of Jesus Christ restored through the Prophet Joseph Smith is true.

    In this discussion, I’ve heard that “you can’t trust your feelings” concept thrown about as a criticism of the promise of the Book of Mormon, among other things. Please allow me to clarify.

    For me, at least, the word “feelings” is a close substitute for the real experience, an analogue of what I really experience when I “feel” the Spirit. I remember taking a young investigator in the wilds to kneel with him in prayer about the truth of the church. His description of what he “felt” after our prayers more clearly portrays what I experience: “I have ideas and feelings that I didn’t come up the mountain with—they come from somewhere else.”

    Now, you could argue that they are “somewhere else” because they are his imagination, or that they merely seem to be coming from somewhere else, or whatever. The fact is, the experience, while subtle, is of such power, that people will put their lives and reputations on the line for it.

    Something that powerful ought to be understood rather than ridiculed.

    Todd

  35. Todd Said:

    (Now, you could argue that they are “somewhere else” because they are his imagination, or that they merely seem to be coming from somewhere else, or whatever. The fact is, the experience, while subtle, is of such power, that people will put their lives and reputations on the line for it.

    Something that powerful ought to be understood rather than ridiculed.)

    You hit the nail on the head, Todd.

  36. Finally, if I may address the “Book of Jeraneck.” This is probably a lot of fun for the critics because here is a man who claims to have had an experience nearly identical to the prophet Joseph (perhaps a little too identical) and has produced a short book purporting to be similar to the Book of Mormon, exotic names and all!

    I downloaded the book and skimmed it, and checked out the Wikipedia article about the author, and gave it a cursory glance, but decided it wasn’t worth my time.

    I can hear the critics wail, “Ah! You ask for us to give Joseph the effort of investigation, but you’re not willing to investigate this very similar situation!” My response is simple: I have received a testimony of the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith, and the church. There is a very specific way that the Lord has set up the church for things of this sort to come to us—through his living prophets and the process I outlined in the earlier post. I not only have “drunk the koolaid,” I have covenanted to do so because I sincerely believe it to be the Lord’s doing. I’ve made my choice, and this looks like a distraction for me and my choice.

    That should not prevent you from doing so, however. If you would like, I believe you could seek the Spirit of God in all sincerity to find out if the Book of Jelaneck is from God. If you decide to do so, I’d be interested to hear what you learn. Be forewarned, however, that “in all sincerity” means you are willing to follow that church’s teachings if it is revealed to you that it is true! (Same with the Book of Mormon, by the way. That, I believe, is the hard part.)

    Best of luck with that! I hope to hear from you soon!

    Todd

    (OK. So I can be sarcastic too! I hope you’ll take it in the lighthearted way it was meant…)

  37. thatsnews,

    I’m sure that your question was rhetorical but I will throw an answer out anyway. Archaeologists were called in because they know how to uncover and preserve artifacts.

    Let me understand this. A lot of people are up in arms because we have a hard time finding a lost and destroyed civilization? Wow, that has never happened before, has it. These cities were definitely not civilizations but there certainly aren’t any disputes about the location of Sodom and Gomorrah?

  38. Okay, I checked my video-tape collection, and I did find “Ancient America Speaks”, on a tape marked catalog # VVVH0012.

    It has 4 titles on it:
    Christ in America, 6 minutes.
    Ancient America Speaks, 24 minutes.
    The Lost Manuscript, 44 minutes.
    The Three Witnesses, 30 minutes.

    The titles at the beginning of “Ancient America Speaks” do indeed say, and I’m looking at it as I type this :

    ======== frame ===========

    THE
    CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
    OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS
    ———–
    UNDER THE DIRECTION
    OF THE
    FIRST PRESIDENCY
    AND THE
    COUNCIL OF THE TWELVE

    PRESENTS

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========
    ANCIENT
    AMERICA
    SPEAKS

    Copyright MCMLXXIV Brigham Young University

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    WITH
    Dr. Paul R. Cheesman
    COMMENTATOR

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    RESEARCH CONSULTANTS

    Ray Matheny, Ph.D.
    Dale L. Berge, Ph.D.
    M. Wells Jakeman, Ph.D.
    Ross T. Christensen, Ph.D.

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    A BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY
    PRODUCTION

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    PRODUCED BY
    W. O. Whitaker

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    WRITTEN BY
    Millie Foster Cheesman

    ===== (NEXT FRAME) ========

    DIRECTED BY
    Scott Whitaker

    ===========================

    It is sort of cheesey, but I kind of like the eerie background music.

    It’s no longer available on http://www.ldscatalog.com.

    I’ll watch it as time allows, and report back.

    PS. MCMLXXIV means 1974 in Roman numerals.

  39. Why does your use of the word “brethren” creep me out? I feel like I’m reading a John Grisham novel.

    “Brethren”? It sounds so Stepford Husband-ish.

  40. Jeff,

    When the church starts cloning for new members, you’ll be at the top of the list! You’re fabulous in your Peter Priesthood ways, keep up the blind faith for those of us who are leaving in droves.

  41. How in the heck did they find out about the cloning process? We will need our IT guys over at BYU to get their ip addresses…..sheesh

    Anon at 10:25 had a cowardly drive by comment. Jeff has been a great host. Why the personal attacks. I suspect he may actually be WD in disguise?

  42. James,

    That was not me posting. Just want to clear that up.

    Also, I see that bookslinger has vindicated me on the Ancient America Speaks film. It was produced under the direction of the First Presidency and the Twelve. Looks like they lead me, you and everyone else astray.

  43. Will, welcome back. That was a short vacation. I take it you found a proxy server to mask your new IP? Maybe you better move to a new house/apartment, and adopt a new identity, just to be sure the Mormon Mafia doesn’t find you. For heaven’s sake, you wouldn’t want to have home teachers show up, or be love-bombed by the local Relief Society.

    Thanks to your recommedation, I’m going to watch Ancient America Speaks again and refresh my memory of the content. I’ve only watched the first six minutes so far. Got some other stuff to do.

    The film is cheesey, but Prof Cheesman himself isn’t as cheesey as I remember.

    I suppose he’s dead and gone to the Spirit World by now. Or is he still living? If he’s dead, I wonder if he’s been able to meet any people from the Book of Mormon.

    I mean, do dead Mormons get to meet THE Mormon, ya know, Moroni’s dad?

    How would you address him? As “Mr. Mormon” ? What would you say? “Hey! I liked your book!” ?

    Anyway, Will, I guess leaving a church over an amateurish movie made by their church school is as good a reason as any.

    Let me know if/when you find a perfect church run by perfect people. Or if you find soul-satisfying answers to the meaning of life, the universe, and everything. (Or even just where we come from, why we’re here, and where we’re going.)

    As for me, I’ll put up with some imperfections in church leaders (and a LOT of imperfections in the members) and amateurish movies in exchange for the many fulfilling and soul-satisfying experiences I’ve had in association with the LDS church, but more especially with the gospel that it preaches.

    Sure luv ya!

  44. As for the IP thing…well…I was warned. You forgot to include the SCMC in your cute little comeback…oh wait…that would make the LDS Church like a paranoid organization.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strengthening_Church_Members_Committee

    You wrote:
    “Anyway, Will, I guess leaving a church over an amateurish movie made by their church school is as good a reason as any.”

    You have been on my blog. I listed the reasons why I left the LDS Church and this film was not one of them so you are being dishonest here.

    Again….I will state…this is not about me finding the answers to all of life’s questions or is it about you having blind faith in imperfect leaders.

    This is about an organization lying to people in order make and retain converts. For a fresh perspective, let’s step out of the box. Read some of the stories of former members and what they went through:

    http://freeminds.org/stories/stories.htm

    Let me know what you think.

  45. Actually, it has EVERYTHING to do with you finding answers…and me finding answers for that matter. Let’s say that everything you say is correct…then why are you doing this…so that we can all leave the church and then what? Join some other ideological group that practices deception at some level (and trust me, even the good-hearted charitable organizations will often kowtow to government requests to keep quiet about inconvenient realities). You have all the trappings of a person who feels betrayed. The random references to old chestnuts (the old SCM committee). The refusal to see any good in the Church. You could spend your time telling us about any number of organizations that have practiced deception…and organizations that wield far more secular power than our church ever has or will. But yet you don’t. That tells me that you felt like you could trust some people and they failed you in some way. It takes a certain level of hurt to portray Adolf Hitler in the same way as Boyd K. Packer and find it in any way amusing. I’ve experienced similar hurt (not in the Church, but in other important institutions), so I can relate.

    And if you want some doozey stories about having intrigue pulled on you, I can share those with you. I can recite all the old chestnuts from the Sunday School teachers, if you would like. I can talk about mission experiences of being wrongly accused and wrongly disciplined. As Screwtape told Wormwood, I can talk about the church down the street with its bad hymns and power plays. I can talk about how family espouse intellectually unsophisticated views about some things. But yet, I don’t…

    In an honest effort at communication, Will, why is that?

  46. Will, you’re talking to an ex-member here, one who is working his way back into the church.

    I went through bad stuff in the church too. Going on a mission negatively affected me, and I lost about 15 years of my life over it. I honestly believe I shouldn’t have gone on a mission. And fortunately, the church has adjusted the missionary program for the better so that people with my personality flaws (especially lack of people skills back then) get screened out better.

    But having gone through all that, I now know that people who get hurt by “the system” can find healing.

    It’s a shame that there are casualties in a true cause, but that’s always been the case. There’s never been a war on earth where innocent people have not gotten hurt, or people get wounded or killed by “friendly fire.”

    I know what it’s like to be hurt and betrayed by people who are supposed to be on your side.

    Dude, going through tough times in the true church has been a fact since Cain slew Abel (how do you think Adam and Eve and their other children felt about that? How could God allow that to happen?), since Noah saw all his friends and neighbors die in the flood, since the children of Israel saw Moses and the Levites kill 3,000 of their brethren in the desert for their rebellion (Exodus 32:27-28).

    I’ve gone through the difficulties (ok, some of it is accurately called “crap”) that you and your fellow ex-mo’s complain about.

    I chose to still believe in God and seek HIS answers. Following those answers leads me to more answers, and more healing, and more happiness.

    You’ve chosen to reinterpret everything, and wallow in bitterness and contention.

    No, buddy, this isn’t about telling potential investigators “the full truth.” This is about way more than that. If it takes one to know one, then I see that this is about you licking your wounds and “getting back” at a system that let you down, when you took it all super-literally, and didn’t allow for when imperfect humans make mistakes.

    Here’s a hint to speed up your healing from the wounds you received: don’t fight against the church and gospel. Contending will only create more emotional and spiritual poison in you. Let it alone and move on. Find something else. Find another church, or even find another religion or philosophical system.

    Because if you don’t fill back the hole in you with something good, it will fill back up with the pus from your festering emotional/spiritual wounds, and poison you for the rest of your life. And I sincerely do not want you, or anyone else, to suffer so. I suffered way too long, and I know the bitterness, and I recognize it in you and in many other ex-mo’s.

    You can also turn to God, and seek answers to “what happened?” and “how do I get fixed up?”

    Go ahead, and think we’re crazy, stupid, deluded, etc., if that’s what you really want. But the only thing you’ll reap from contention is bitterness and misery.

    By publishing against the church, and telling your half-truths and twisted-truths, you’ve crossed a certain line. You can still come back if you want. But please consider this as friendly (or at least well-intentioned) advice, that if you continue on the road you’re on, then you will not find healing or happiness in life. You will then learn by painful experience what it means to “kick against the pricks.”

    Seriously, I do wish you healing and happiness in life.

  47. Russ,

    What you do with the information that shows the dark side of Mormonism is your business. I’m not an Evangelical Christian out to show you the “real Jesus”. If you do come to the conclusion that Mormonism is false, then it’s your responsibility to take hold of your own life and live it without advice or instruction from me.

    Are you admitting that Mormonism “practices deception at some level”?

    Look, we have ALL been betrayed by the greatest con man of the 19th Century. Some of us realize it and others don’t. I do feel sorry for those still caught in the delusion, but that’s their choice.

    I have mentioned the Jehovah’s Witnesses and Scientology several times here. I have links to sites that discuss them over on my blog. Had you bothered to look at the website of former members that I posted in my last post, you would find that it has the stories of former Jehovah’s Witnesses.

    Sorry if my Packer humor offended you. I find him to be a gasbag who needs to be taken down a notch.

    An honest effort at communication? Russ you have gone out of your way to twist everything I have said here. You and others have tried to make this whole thing about me being hurt on my mission (I was not) or hurt by the bishop, or stake president (I was not).

    What it’s about is this: Mormonism is rotten at it’s doctrinal core. People like me come along and buy into it and spend lots of time and money on it. Well, you can’t get your money back and you can’t have your time back. But you can warn others who may be thinking of joining that they had better be very careful.

    Now your mission toward people like me is simple: shut us up! You can appeal to vanity, you can be mean, you can paint us as the anti-Christ…but the main goal is to silence the critics.

    That’s the reason I have to keep speaking out. That’s the reason other like me need to speak out. I do it with humor, but at the same time I am bold.

    I think that is more of an honest effort at communication.

  48. dnzufbookslinger,

    Did you get excommunicated? Did you have your name removed from the records?

    I think your mission experience illustrates perfectly how the leaders of Mormonism hurt others by their sweeping pronouncements.

    Spencer Kimball said “The question is frequently asked: Should every young man fill a mission? And the answer has been given by the Lord. It is ‘Yes.’ Every young man should fill a mission. …”

    So then, in Mormon culture serving a mission becomes a commandment. Years after Kimball is dead and gone, the LDS Church realizes its mistake and “raises the bar”. Now people are saying it never was a commandment. Yesterday’s revelation just became today’s personal opinion.

    Still, it does not make up for the suffering you had to endure.

    You wrote:
    “Let it alone and move on. Find something else. Find another church, or even find another religion or philosophical system.”

    You forgot that “old chestnut” “People can leave the Church, but they can’t leave the church alone”.

    Sorry, the appeal to vanity does not work for me.

    I don’t see this as some bitter thing. To be honest it’s fun to expose lies and deception! Ralph Nader does it, 60 Minutes used to do it…why can’t I?

    High control groups like Mormonism, Jehovah’s Witnesses and Scientology hurt lots of people. I enjoy being there to help those hurt by helping to break the mental grip that the organization has on them.

    bookslinger, you are caught in a trap of ups and downs, feelings of happiness followed by feelings of being unworthy. The Church will ride you until the day you die…if you let them.

    It’s your choice.

  49. I have this great idea for Will: he needs to start his own church, filled with only perfect people, and led by his own perfect self. Besides giving him associates he can relate to, he’d also not have to pay taxes anymore. What a deal! I hear it’s easy to get certified by e-mail.

    Mumsy

  50. Will Dunn,

    I believe that others referencing your mission, your bishop, or your stake president were just trying to understand the source of your anger. Unfortunately, rather than being understood for what they are, their attempts at sympathy seem to enrage you.

    What they they are trying to understand is your vitriol. You don’t just disagree, you’re mad about it. You’re cynical and sarcastic, and mean-spirited. As I have said before, it generates some heat, but sheds no light.

    I think for you, Will, if you are honest with yourself, you are using this forum to vent your spleen, not to save us poor deceived Mormons. Your anger is about you, not about us believers, or the church, or “Ancient America Speaks,” or Joseph Smith, etc.

    Unfortunately for you, most people on this blog can see right through your righteous indignation. That’s why they’re not paying any attention to you. Why should they? What have you added to the conversation but vitriol? If there is an error, a clear, dispassionate statement of fact will go much farther than volumes of mean-spirited remarks.

    No doubt this attempt at sympathy will also be treated with contempt. Though I don’t know you, believe me when I say, I feel sorry for you.

    Best!

    Todd

  51. Todd,

    Let’s pretend that I never joined the LDS Church. Take me out of the picture.

    Would that mean that no one would have a problem with the LDS Church? That no one would try to expose Joseph Smith as an imposter? Of course not!

    It’s much easier (much, much easier!) to make anything that I say critical about the LDS Church about ME (ad hominem).

    It’s just not here…it’s the way the LDS Church deals with its critics.

    They are hurt and bitter.

    They are out to destroy the Truth™.

    In many ways this brings things full circle. When I first began to ask questions about the LDS Church over 10 years ago it was the same thing. It was not about the Church, it was about me. Was I doing my home teaching, was I praying and reading the scriptures? Was I ______? Every time I answered their question there was another one. I was the one with the problem.

    Again, think about what your Church does: they send missionaries onto private property to knock on the doors of people who are busy with their own lives. In other words without an appointment or any concern for what the individual might be doing they interrupt them and ask to come into their homes.

    They try to convince people to leave their religion to join another without caring how it might affect their family. If a daughter converts and the mother and father cannot attend her wedding down the road, the LDS Church could care less.

    And you expect people to be silent and not criticism such a religion?

    I’ll back off when the LDS Church stops sending missionaries door to door. I think that would be a fair compromise.

  52. Will:

    Except that I don’t particularly want questioners, even critics, to shut up. Of course, I would prefer to answer their questions to their satisfaction…but then any silence would be borne of their own contentment and not through manipulation on my part.

    You say I am in a mental grip; I could say that cynicism/skepticism has you in a mental grip. Suddenly, we find ourselves pointing fingers…

    I certainly haven’t sought to twist anything you’ve said. And if I have, I was hoping perhaps amend that by noting that we’ve all had our difficulties with various organizations. And honestly, have members of the church deceived me before? YES…companions, acquaintances, gosh, even (and especially dates!). Not all of it has been intentional and much of the deception was borne of their own ignorance or apthy…not institutional cover-ups. If there are humans in an organization, alas, what are we to do?

    But I believe in an ideal…and trust me, I’ve run the gammit in being skeptical and dealing with sticky (though incriminating) evidence.

    And you want people to take control of their lives? Well, what would you suggest we do? To where would we go? Be social workers and join a failed system? Join the Peace Corps? All good things, but all very imperfect and blunt instruments at attaining goodness. Essentially, we live in a world where mental grips are inescapable…whether they come from religion, government, or own anger.

    If you aren’t down with Mormonism, I would ask what does make life worth living for you. There are many, many other worthwhile things. But I see so much anger.

  53. I love it, this and other blogs,do much to prove or give proof of nothing. The best proof of the BOM, is no proof, and if there is proof, it doesn’t really mean proof only it is repeated as such.
    Religion is wonderful it helps fill in the blanks of what we know nothing about.
    So in the end, why bother, eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow we die. I just made that up.

  54. “Spencer Kimball said “The question is frequently asked: Should every young man fill a mission? And the answer has been given by the Lord. It is ‘Yes.’ Every young man should fill a mission. …”

    So then, in Mormon culture serving a mission becomes a commandment. Years after Kimball is dead and gone, the LDS Church realizes its mistake and “raises the bar”. Now people are saying it never was a commandment. Yesterday’s revelation just became today’s personal opinion.”

    Again, here is another one of your twisted truths. If you read the context, the very parts Kimball said before and after the “every young man” part, you’ll see that he also said that there were qualifications required. “Every young man” didn’t mean “regardless of anything else.”

    I was confused by “raise the bar” too. Until I realized it was more about more rigorously applying the standards that were there all along, but got mostly a wink and a nudge.

    “I don’t see this as some bitter thing.”

    You comments here and on your blog are about your bitterness. You’ve claimed to be angry because you discovered things in church history that the church didn’t serve up on a silver platter. You’ve made it quite clear, on your blog and on this blog, that you feel betrayed because you weren’t given all the historical details.

    You seem as if you have all the answers. So in essence, we’re wasting our time responding to you.

  55. Book is right, methinks. When I was on my mission, you can bet I was told that the problem was all me. It wasn’t…but I haven’t left the church over it. Ah the oppression of delusions!

    Good comments, Book. I generally tend to think I’ve heard it all, but you have a certain way of using old cliches in new and provocative ways…for example, i hadn’t thought of church history as something that we might need to WORK for instead of expect on a silver platter. Nor had I thought of friendly fire as being an element in the Church. Perhaps they are metaphors, but they’re effective ones.

  56. Will, you came to this blog, posting questions and demanding answers. But you’re not open to answers. You’re mind is made up. It’s been a waste of time conversing with you.

    But, thanks for teaching me a lesson about how time spent with antagonistic complainers is a waste. So there was some benefit. Hopefully I’ll remember the lesson and I won’t waste more time like this in the future.

    And I really do hope you find something to palliate that sense of betrayal and righteous indignation you wear so proudly. Not just so you’ll stop flinging boogers on Mormon blogs, but so you can just plain be happier.

    Oh, and one more benefit you’ve brought is that you make me grateful that the testimonies I received, even though I suppressed them for years, were strong enough to keep me somewhat connected to the gospel after being hurt, betrayed and offended in the church. (And I do not consider the gospel and the church to be synonymous.)

    And yes, I did request name removal, in spite of having a testimony. I would not recommend it.

    Live long and prosper, Will Dunn.

  57. bookslinger,

    If you will go back and look I came here and made a statement about how I felt the LDS Church would see the Book of Mormon in the future.

    But, in closing, I’ve seen the light! Go over to my blog and read my latest post.

    Best Wishes,
    Bitter Will

  58. Will/Well,

    “If you will go back and look I came here and made a statement about how I felt the LDS Church would see the Book of Mormon in the future.”

    You made a lot more statements than that.

    By the way, if you want to have a really good laugh, check out the Feminist Mormom Housewives blog. Um, on second thought, don’t. You might have too much in common, and get hooked.

  59. Dear Will,

    As the others here have expressed, I’m just weary of this conversation. We believers are either evil or deceived, while you are free to prophesy about the Book of Mormon and throw rude epithets around.

    I’m on this blog to learn and to teach. I’ve learned a little from some here, but not you. I hope I’ve been able to teach a little, but, again, not you. Clearly, you are not interested in learning or teaching—only in dictating and demanding. You are not interested in dialogue, only monologue. You’re not really listening. So, I’m done.

    Best of luck, Will! Goodbye!

    Todd

  60. I just finished watching (again) the BYU-produced “Ancient America Speaks” video referenced above.

    It doesn’t live up to more modern standards of documentaries. But it’s nothing that the church or believers need to be ashamed of.

    It’s sort of a mish-mash of South
    American tourism mixed with summaries of archealogical discoveries, and capped off by the personal relgious testimony of the narrator.

    The gist of the film is to point out how the history of the discovery of America by the Spanish and archealogical history of South America can be viewed to lend credence to the Book of Mormon.

    Nothing is offered as “proof”, let alone “slam dunk” proof.

    Nothing is offered as prophetic pronouncements or doctrine.

    The worst charge that I can make is perhaps too much reliance on statements that begin “it is thought that…” or “it is believed that…” without proper attribution.

    It is not guffaw-producing or outrageous or embarrassing as Mr. Dunn would have you believe.

    The film is an example of early, and perhaps unsophisticated, efforts along the lines of what Jeff Lindsay does with his web site and blog: present evidence of plausibility, not proof.

  61. This feels like an “I told you so” moment.

    That’s how I remembered it. Good to know my memory isn’t totally in the bag.

    todd

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