Continuing with more comments from the readers of our website, and our
responses:
Comment #1: “A friend gave me this statement a few days after I was telling him
about your website and ideas regarding Lehi landing in Chile: ‘I believe the idea was supported by
one of the Pratts - Orsen? He attributed it to the Prophet and many have quoted
it. I believe Joseph Fielding Smith's book. The Chilean site, though more
traditionally plausible due to normal currents and trade winds is answerable
with El Nino. It is also an arid type land and not the bountiful forested area
described in the Book of Mormon. Further there is a 1000 mile desert north of
that site to transverse with animal herds? That makes it improbable to arrive
at the Lands of Nephi which I believe to be in Peru’” Leonardo P.
Top: The
Atacama Desert covers a 600-mile strip of land on the pacific coast, west of
the Andes mountains, and is the driest hot desert in the world, occupying
41,000 square miles, composed mostly of salt lakes, sand, and felsic lava
flows from the Andes; Bottom Left: Location of the Atacama; Bottom Right: The
desert was formed after the rise of the Andes Mountains, which blocked the wind
flow from the east. Where the wind flows from the west (southern Chile), there
is no desert
Response:
Well, there are several answers here, so let me respond one at a time:
1.
Parley P. Pratt is the one who went to Chile with his wife, had a son there,
that died, and was buried. They returned to Utah after having no success;
2. The
idea came from a note on a paper written by Frederick G. Williams, the scribe
of the Prophet Joseph Smith, and the second counselor in the First Presidency.
It is claimed Joseph made that statement. However, the statement ran into fire,
especially from Mesoamericanists, claiming it was not a revelation; yet it is
not important if it was a revelaltin or not, the idea that Frederick G.
Williams wrote that comment on a paper containing other statements made during
meetings with Joseph Smith is what should be important (you might want to look
at the 5-part series of articles in this blog beginning July 6, 2010 entitled
“Where Lehi Landed.”);
3. Joseph
Fielding Smith had a lot of things to say about a lot of areas before he became
the Prophet. After obtaining that position, he never spoke of the subject of the
location of the Book of Mormon lands again;
4. El
Nino is not the type of current people like to claim. It is not a sailing
current, but the Equatorial Counter Current that is described as a doldrum, and
is where sailors for centuries were typically becalmed. El Nino is a rare
change of that current, at which time the winds and currents of are totally
devastating, bringing destruction to the islands it passes and areas it lands.
Ships do not survive during El Nino, and the area is best avoided when that
occurs—it would hardly be a method of bringing Lehi to the Land of Promise;
Chile, south of the Atacama Desert is
a pastoral paradise. It has a Mediterranean Climate where seeds from Jerusalem
would have grown exceedingly and produced an abundant crop
5. Chile
is not arid in the central and southern part. At the 30º South Latitude, it is
a Mediterrean Climate and one of the wonderful places in the western coast of
the Western Hemisphere. Most of the western U.S. get their out-of-season fruits
and citrus from there. The coastal desert area of Northern Chile is the result
of the winds and precipitation being trapped by the 20,000-foot-high Andes
Mountains; however, those mountains were not there at the time of Nephi through
the crucifixion of Christ, and it would not have been a desert when Nephi moved
escaped from his brothers and crossed the area.
6.
Nephi did not need to travel with animals, flocks, etc., northward from Chile
to southern Peru. If you read 2 Nephi you will find that he “took all those people who would go with
him, tents, and whatsoever things were possible for us, and did journey in the
wilderness” (2 Nephi 5:6-7). No animals are mentioned. He was, after all,
escaping with his life from his brothers who wanted to kill him.
If I
am not mistaken, the quote you sent in was from Don R. Hender’s webpage and it
only shows how little he knows about what he writes.
Comment #2: “Just a brief note to tell you how much we all appreciate your writing
and insight into the Book of Mormon. I, personally, have learned a great deal
about it thanks to you and your very clear and understandable explanations” Daniella
F.
Response: Thank you.
Comment
#3: “I’ve heard so many things about “it came to pass” in the BOM, what exactly
does it mean?”
Response:
It is not a change of thought,
as some have suggested, deserving a break in the record, such as a paragraph
(verse). It is simply a completion of that earlier thought--meaning “to take
place,” or in the past tense, “it took place.” Today, it is obviously
considered an archaic term. In the Book of Mormon it is often used to connect
two consistent thoughts or statements, with an incidental time in between
skipped. While most people feel it is used way too often (1330 times in 1982
English edition), and from a strict reading view, its repetition is annoying,
it does, however, serve a purpose when we realize that Mormon is abridging the
record.
Thus,
it also serves the purpose of allowing Mormon to jump ahead in an event without
having to include the parts of that event he does not want to include in his
abridgement. A secondary value is that it shows the record was originally
written with ancient Hebrew roots since it follows the Hebrew expression (wayehi) which is used 1204 times in the
Hebrew Bible, though it is only translated into “it came to pass” 727 times in
the King James Version of the Bible, showing that Joseph Smith translated the
phrase (from Reformed Egyptian) more faithfully than did the translators of the
Bible.
Therefore,
we should be able to see a connection between the Hebrew and the Egyptian in
this phrase and we do, since all Egyptian historicals begin in a similar
repetitious style, and with the identical standard words, i.e., “I opened my
mouth.” Dramatic texts constantly use the phrase khpr-n, meaning “It happened that,” which is the same as “It came
to pass.” Hugh Nibley claimed that these phrases in Egyptian were a
“grammatical necessity and could not be omitted.” While awkward and monotonous
in English, it shows accurately a text written in Egyptian by a Hebrew.
Comment
#4: “If the Book of Mormon doctrine of God differs somewhat from
the biblical doctrine, it is radically different from what since about 1916 has
been the standard Mormon doctrine of God. In this standard doctrine the Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost are three Gods; God the Father has not always been God but
attained Godhood by a process of exaltation; the Father and Son each have
separate bodies of flesh and bones; and human beings can attain Godhood by
following the same path to exaltation as that of the Father. The Book of Mormon
doctrine of God is so different from current Mormon church doctrine that we may
legitimately conclude that at least one of these two sources of doctrine — the
Book of Mormon or the Mormon church — misrepresents God and teaches blatant
falsehood about God. Either way, the Book of Mormon fails to pass the God test”
Michelle B.
Response: It is not rocket science.
They are three separate beings, and all three are one in purpose. Therefore,
there is one God (in purpose, thought, action, etc.) and three separate beings
(physical beings), God the Father, his Son Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost:
“before the bar of Christ the Son, and God the Father, and the Holy Spirit, which is one Eternal God, to be judged
according to their works, whether they be good or whether they be evil” (Alma
11:44-emphasis mine).
The following is taken from the
“Fundamental Beliefs of the United Church of God: God the Father, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit. “We believe in
one God, the Father, eternally
existing, who is a Spirit, a personal Being of supreme intelligence, knowledge,
love, justice, power and authority. He, through Jesus Christ, is the Creator of
the heavens and the earth and all that is in them. He is the Source of life and
the One for whom human life exists. We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ of
Nazareth, who is the Word and who has eternally existed. We believe that He is
the Messiah, the Christ, the divine Son of the living God, conceived of the
Holy Spirit, born in human flesh of the virgin Mary. We believe that it is by
Him that God created all things, and that without Him was not anything made
that was made. We believe in the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of God and of
Christ. The Holy Spirit is the power of God and the Spirit of life eternal” (2 Timothy 1:7; Ephesians 4:6; 1 Corinthians 8:6; John 1:1-4 ; Colossians
1:16).
They sound like the
same God, Son and Holy Ghost to me.
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