Amazon Hot New Releases – Whatever Happened
https://www.amazon.com/gp/new-releases/books/12430/ref=zg_bsnr_nav_b_3_16009761
The paperback edition was at #10 in best sellers in Mormonism:
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
"Moroni's America" – The North American Setting for the Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon in North America
"Moroni's America" – The North American Setting for the Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon in North America
"Moroni's America" – The North American Setting for the Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon in North America
https://www.amazon.com/gp/new-releases/books/12430/ref=zg_bsnr_nav_b_3_16009761
The paperback edition was at #10 in best sellers in Mormonism:
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
Those who have read my books The Lost City of Zarahemla and Brought to Light will be interested to see the full letter from Peter Hess to Hyrum Smith, Joseph, and the Twelve regarding Benjamin Winchester. Here’s an excerpt from the postscript on page 4:
“Brother Joseph i would here mention that Elder Winchester Prophecied before Elder Adams that the church would go down and you Know when a man phopecies [sic] in his own name he will use every means to see it accomplishd [sic].”
Here is a link to the letter http://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/letter-from-peter-hess-16-february-1843/1
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
For long-time readers, the introductory material may be repetitive, but there are new readers coming all the time, so the intro is necessary.
Let’s say you still believe in a Mesoamerican (Central American) setting for the Book of Mormon. I empathize. I believed that for most of my life, too. How could I not, when pretty much every teacher I ever had in Church and at BYU taught it? We even taught it as missionaries. Still today, it is being taught, albeit indirectly, in the “blue book” missionary editions of the Book of Mormon, on Temple Square, and in most meetinghouses thanks to the official artwork.
Or, you might believe in another setting for the Book of Mormon, such as Baja, Panama, Chile, Eritrea, Malaysia, etc. In my opinion, it doesn’t really matter where you think the Book of Mormon took place if you reject the New York Cumorah.
There are only two categories: those who believe Cumorah is in New York, and those who believe it is somewhere else.
If you’re among the group who believes the Hill Cumorah is not in New York, you believe in a “two-Cumorahs” theory. This is the theory that the hill in New York where Joseph got the plates is Moroni’s hill and it should not have been named Cumorah; some unknown early Mormon named it that and the false tradition stuck. Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery perpetuated that false tradition. The two-Cumorahs theory also claims that the “real” Cumorah of Mormon 6:6, known as Mormon’s Cumorah, is somewhere else. For example, if you accept the Mesoamerican setting, you think the “real” Cumorah is somewhere in southern Mexico. (I can relate, because I accepted the “two-Cumorahs” theory enough to visit ruins down there, thinking they were related to the Book of Mormon.) There are LDS people actively scouting around southern Mexico in search of Cumorah.
If you’re a “two-Cumorahs” believer, eventually, like me, you will be confronted with a fact you didn’t know before that conflicts with your belief. There are four general categories that I’ve discussed in my books and blogs.
These four items are triggers for cognitive dissonance.
Here’s how it works.
When we are confronted with a fact that conflicts with our beliefs, and we refuse to change our beliefs, the fact triggers a response in our mind. We can:
1. Deny the fact or explain it away.
2. Filter it through confirmation bias.
3. Live with the cognitive dissonance somehow.
All three options are a form of hallucination; i.e., our minds deal with discrepancy by creating a new reality that denies the reality of the triggering fact.
Here’s a graphic that explains the options:
I’ll go through the options with one of the triggers in a moment, but first I’ll list the four categories of triggers for those who still believe in the two-Cumorahs theory:
1. How Letter VII establishes the New York Cumorah.
2. How anonymous articles were wrongly attributed to Joseph Smith (i.e., 1842 Times and Seasons, Benjamin Winchester, Bernhisel letter, etc.)
3. How the BoM text describes North America.
4. How Joseph translated two separate sets of plates.
Each of these triggers directly contradicts the two-Cumorahs theories, so it doesn’t matter which one I choose for an example. I’ll go with #1, Letter VII.
Because it is the most heavily promoted, I’ll use the Mesoamerican theory as a proxy for all two-Cumorahs theories.
______________
For a moment, pretend you still believe in the Mesoamerian theory of Book of Mormon geography. You accept one of the dozen or more detailed geographies that have been proposed for that area. They all pretty well agree that the “real” Cumorah (Mormon 6:6) is in southern Mexico.
Then you read Letter VII. (If you don’t know what that is, read the blog here:
http://www.lettervii.com/.)
Basically, in that letter, Oliver Cowdery declared in no uncertain terms that it is a fact that the Hill Cumorah of Mormon 6:6, the scene of the final battles of the Nephites and Jaredites, is in New York; i.e., that Moroni’s Cumorah and Mormon’s Cumorah are one and the same.
What response does this fact trigger in your mind?
1. Denial.
Denial has been the prevailing response. No one is denying the existence of Letter VII, and no on is denying that Oliver wrote these letters with Joseph’s assistance. Nor is anyone denying that Joseph endorsed these letters. Letter VII was ubiquitous during Joseph’s lifetime.
In this case, denial takes the form of suppression.
Once the two-Cumorahs theory took hold (it was started by RLDS scholars and then adopted by LDS scholars despite the objection of Church Historian and Apostle Joseph Fielding Smith), Letter VII essentially vanished. It has never been published in the Ensign, for example. Very few Church history books mention it. So far as I’ve been able to determine, none of the major LDS scholarly books and publications that promote the Mesoamerican setting have reprinted it. Letter VII has never been translated outside of English. In my experience, very, very few LDS people have ever heard of it, let alone read it. And yet, many LDS scholars and educators are aware of it. They just haven’t told people about it. They’ve pretended it didn’t exist.
Denial is a losing strategy, obviously. Not only because I’ve been writing and speaking about Letter VII, but because critics of the LDS Church have been promoting it on their web pages and publications. Any investigator or LDS member who uses the Internet will find it.
If you still believe in a version of the two-Cumorahs theory and you haven’t read Letter VII, then you’re in denial. Time to fix that.
2. Filter it through confirmation bias.
Once you realize denial is not a viable option, your brain may try to filter Letter VII to fit your two-Cumorahs theory somehow. It’s a difficult thing to filter, though; Oliver wrote as clearly as words can be, and he left no possibility for two Cumorahs:
I haven’t seen any attempts to filter or spin Letter VII through confirmation bias. I can’t imagine how it could be done. Maybe someone has done it; if so, please let me know the rationale and methodology.
Instead, once people realize denial won’t work any longer, they move right into the third option of cognitive dissonance.
3. Cognitive dissonance.
When a fact we can’t deny or filter through confirmation bias contradicts our beliefs, and we won’t change our beliefs, the fact triggers our brain into creating a hallucination that rationalizes the discrepancy into oblivion.
Or at least some dark corner of the mind where we can try to forget it.
We have to examine the significance of Letter VII to see why it triggers such a strong hallucination.
First, Letter VII simply states it is a fact that the one and only Cumorah is in New York, which necessarily refutes the two-Cumorah theory. Of course, this doesn’t, by itself, answer every question about Book of Mormon geography. The New York Cumorah is a single pin in the map. It still allows anything from a localized New York setting to a hemispheric setting.
Second, Letter VII was written by Oliver Cowdery and published in the Messenger and Advocate in 1835. Some may reject it–deny it–on that ground alone. But we also have to realize that when he wrote Letter VII (it was one of eight letters about Church history that Oliver wrote), Oliver was the Assistant President of the Church. He was the only witness besides Joseph Smith to the restoration of the Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthoods, to many of the revelations, and to most of the translation of the Book of Mormon. A few months later, he and Joseph would receive Priesthood keys from Moses, Elijah, Elias, and the Lord Himself in the Kirtland temple. Plus, Oliver was one of the Three Witnesses. Next to Joseph himself, no one had more experience and credibility with regard to the Restoration.
Third, although Oliver wrote Letter VII, we must also recognize that Joseph Smith helped Oliver write the letters, providing details only Joseph could have known, such as what Moroni told him during his first visit. Joseph had his scribes copy Letter VII into his personal history as part of his own story. He endorsed it when he gave Benjamin Winchester express permission to reprint it in the Gospel Reflector. Joseph’s brothers reprinted it as well: Don Carlos published it in the Times and Seasons, and William published it in The Prophet. In February 1844, a special booklet consisting solely of Oliver’s letters was printed in England to satisfy numerous requests for the material. The letters were reprinted in the Millennial Star and the Improvement Era. In each case, only Oliver’s letters were reprinted; the speculative responses from W.W. Phelps were not reprinted or copied into Joseph’s journal.
Fourth, the claim of Letter VII–that there is one Cumorah and it is in New York–has been spelled out by modern prophets and apostles in General Conference as recently as 1978. At least two members of the First Presidency have declared it in General Conference. No modern prophet or apostle has ever rejected the New York Cumorah, at least not officially or in General Conference.
These circumstances make Letter VII a powerful trigger for cognitive dissonance in the minds of those who still believe in a two-Cumorah theory. And it has triggered an equally powerful hallucination.
Some current LDS scholars and educators are trying to persuade Church members to reject Letter VII. Their arguments fall into one of 8 categories that I’ve discussed here:
http://www.lettervii.com/2017/01/why-some-people-reject-letter-vii.html
All of these arguments rely on the premise that Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery were ignorant speculators who misled the Church about the location of Cumorah. We are expected to believe that they were reliable and credible witnesses for everything they wrote and said except for this one detail. And we’re expected to believe that the modern prophets and apostles who accepted what Joseph and Oliver taught perpetuated a false tradition themselves because they were speaking as men, not a prophets and apostles, even when they spoke in General Conference.
(I discussed this in this post: http://www.lettervii.com/2016/08/olver-was-truthful-about-everything.html).
In the terminology of cognitive dissonance, this is a hallucination. It exists solely to allow those who believe in the two-Cumorahs theory to hold onto their beliefs. And it’s no minor hallucination; repudiating Joseph, Oliver and the modern apostles and prophets is a powerful hallucination, which it needs to be to counter the powerful words in Letter VII and the associated circumstances.
The hallucination is also powerful because it is built on thin air. There is no evidence of a Cumorah outside of New York. No one has “found Cumorah” anywhere else on the Earth. Believers have told themselves that the text establishes “criteria” that cannot be satisfied by the New York hill, but in every case, these “criteria” are self-serving impositions on the text, designed to point to whatever non-New York Cumorah the proponents advocate for other reasons. It’s all circular reasoning.
The hallucination that Joseph and Oliver were ignorant speculators who misled the Church is itself unsupported by evidence; it. like the two-Cumorah theory, stands “as it were in the air.” But it is powerful enough to offset the power of the facts and circumstances of Letter VII.
________________
We are in a situation in the Church where two people can read Letter VII and see two different movies playing in their heads, as Scott Adams puts it.
One reader sees a movie in which Oliver and Joseph describe, in detail, exactly where the final battles of the Nephites took place. They claim it is a fact. True, they don’t specify how they know it is a fact. But in these same letters, they describe Moroni’s visits to Joseph. Elsewhere, they describe numerous interactions with other heavenly messengers, the translation of the Book of Mormon, and their experiences in the actual Nephite repository inside the Hill Cumorah. So this reader accepts what Joseph and Oliver say about Cumorah in Letter VII.
The other reader sees a movie in which Oliver and Joseph are–we might as well get real about it– lying. In this movie, Oliver and Joseph have no idea where the Book of Mormon took place, but some unknown person started a false tradition, and they decide to adopt this false tradition and state it as a fact. Then the prophets and apostles who succeed them decide to perpetuate this same false tradition.
Which movie do you see when you read Letter VII?
_______________
A similar analysis applies for the other three triggers. In each case, proponents of “two-Cumorahs” theories must deny the facts, filter them through confirmation bias, or create a hallucination to live with their cognitive dissonance.
As the example of Letter VII shows, the mental effort of retaining a belief in a two-Cumorahs theory is intense just with one trigger. Every additional trigger we add makes that mental effort all the more difficult.
The biggest question, really, is why? Why stick to a two-Cumorahs theory?
That’s a question every proponent of a two-Cumorahs theory ought to be asking.
I’ll be interested if anyone can come up with an answer that justifies the powerful hallucination that Joseph and Oliver were ignorant speculators who misled the Church.
________________
Note: If you click on the diagram above, you’ll go to a web page that gets into a lot more detail than I can address in this blog. I don’t agree with everyone on that page, but overall, the information is very useful. For example, the three shapes at the bottom of the diagram represent Thought, Emotion, and Behavior, like this:
The page includes a section on information control, which is a fascinating topic on its own. One way to control minds is to deliberately hold back information, which has been done in the case of Letter VII, as I’ve mentioned. Another is to compartmentalize information and minimize or discourage access to “non-cult” sources of information. There has been a lot of that in the LDS scholarly community; that’s why you can’t find anything published by the citation cartel written by any proponent of the North American, Heartland, or Moroni’s America models.
Nor will you find a comparison chart anywhere except on my blog here:
http://bookofmormonconsensus.blogspot.com/2016/08/agree-and-agree-to-disagree-lists.html
A great “tell” for intellectual insecurity is when academics don’t want people to even know about alternative views or interpretations, much less be able to easily compare them..
Another sign of intellectual insecurity is when academics refuse to share their data for independent analysis, or refuse to let proponents defend themselves against attacks made by the academics in their own journals.
Of course, everyone is entitled to believe whatever they want. Even academics, scholars, and educators. But if you’re a student or an ordinary member of the Church, you need to recognize what has been going on and seek to avoid the information control mechanisms that prevent you from learning about such basic concepts as the Hill Cumorah in New York.
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/book-of-mormon-symposium-tickets-31245048782
I hope to see you there!
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
Source: Book of Mormon Concensus
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
If you have been following the Scott Adams (Dilbert) blog, you have seen him explain political disagreements in terms of “two movies on one screen.” He means we’re seeing the same thing but interpreting it differently.
His post of Feb 12 gives an excellent example. Read it here:
http://blog.dilbert.com/post/157149611381/good-example-of-our-two-movie-reality
I think his methodology applies to the question of Book of Mormon geography in many respects.
Take Letter VII for example.
We can all read the same words–Oliver Cowdery says it is a fact that the final battles of the Nephites and Jaredites took place in the mile-wide valley west of Cumorah–but members of the Church see two different movies.
We can all see that Joseph had his scribes copy Letter VII into his personal history and had it reprinted multiple times for all his contemporaries to read.
But even though we read the same words, we “see” them differently. Here’s how Adams describes it (modified in part for the Letter VII issue, emphasis added).
_________________
I have been saying since [I published my book about Letter VII that the LDS] world has split into two realities – or as I prefer to say, two movies on one screen – and most of us don’t realize it. We’re all looking at the same events and interpreting them wildly differently. That’s how cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias work. They work together to create a spontaneous hallucination that gets reinforced over time. That hallucination becomes your reality until something changes.
This phenomenon has nothing to do with natural intelligence. We like to think that the people on the other side of the political debate are dumb, under-informed, or just plain evil. That’s not the case. We’re actually experiencing different realities. I mean that literally.
I know, I know. When you read something like that, you probably shake your head and think I’m either being new-agey or speaking metaphorically. I am being neither. This is well-understood cognitive science.
And here comes the fun part.
I’m about to show you some mind-blowing evidence of the two-movie effect. Figuratively speaking, I’ll hold an apple in my hand and show it to the audience. Half of you will see an apple. The other half will see a gun. That’s how dramatic this two-movie illusion is. I can be watching a comedy movie while you’re in the same theater, sitting next to me, watching a drama. On the same screen. At the same time.
[End of quotation/paraphrase of Adams]
________________
Let’s apply this to the question of Cumorah:
I’m holding up Letter VII.
Movie #1. If you believe Cumorah (Mormon 6:6) was in New York, you are seeing the movie that Oliver described; i.e., the final battles taking place in New York, in the mile-wide valley west of Cumorah. In your movie, Oliver and Joseph are reliable, accurate, credible, and trustworthy. (After all, they had visited Mormon’s repository in Cumorah. Plus, Oliver was the Assistant President of the Church at the time, the only witness besides Joseph Smith to the restoration of the Priesthood, most of the translation of the Book of Mormon, etc.). In your movie, every prophet and apostle who has spoken about Cumorah has supported what Oliver and Joseph said.
Movie #2. If you believe Cumorah (Mormon 6:6) was somewhere other than New York (it doesn’t matter where), then you are seeing the movie that Oliver and Joseph were speculating, were wrong, and thereby misled the Church for 100 years (until RLDS scholars corrected the mistake, and then LDS scholars adopted their Mesoamerican theories). In your movie, Joseph’s successors perpetuated a false tradition about Cumorah. Members of the First Presidency, speaking in General Conference, continued to mislead the Church until at least 1975. In your movie, the scholars know better than the prophets and apostles.
________________
Same facts about Letter VII, but an entirely different movie in the minds of those who read it.
Is there an event that provides a way for this two-movie reality to “fold back into one” as Adams describes it? He says it will take a lot of time plus a lot of observations.
I think we already have plenty of observations to fold this two-movie reality into one. I’ve discussed these at length in my books and blogs. Realizing Joseph translated two sets of plates, as I’ve explained in my latest book and my presentations, is just one more reason to accept what Joseph and Oliver said about Cumorah.
It’s possible that for some people, no number of observations over any amount of time will overcome their cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias. However, I think that for most members of the Church, Letter VII alone is sufficient. If not, then the accumulating evidence will lead then to see Oliver and Joseph as credible, reliable witnesses that Cumorah is in New York.
Another way to say this is:
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/search-great-american-bible
In the case of the Book of Mormon, only in 1986 did a prophet, Ezra Taft Benson, order that Mormons study the book closely. “The drama of authorship, of the book’s discovery and its translation,” Steinberg writes, “was for many years the story, the thing that bewitched readers, the thing that made people’s blood boil.” The fact of its existence—an original American scripture—mattered more to its early audience than the narrative it contained. As it happens, that narrative takes place largely in Mesoamerica, and for some current-day Mormons, Mayan ruins have become a place of pilgrimage. Many centuries before Columbus, the Book of Mormon tells us, ocean-faring Hebrews set sail from Jerusalem and landed in Mesoamerica. In “The Lost Book of Mormon,” Steinberg tags along with a tour group to Guatemala and southern Mexico—or, as the Book calls them, the Lands of Nephi and Zarahemla.
A visit to the National Museum of Guatemala offers a fascinating glimpse of Mormon exegesis at work in the field. In one gallery, on a Mayan altar adorned with symbols, a tour guide points out a glyph that could be interpreted as meaning “and it came to pass.” To the pilgrims, this is hugely significant, because “and it came to pass” is the most famous recurring phrase in the Book of Mormon, with a thousand three hundred and eighty-one appearances. Few paragraphs begin without it. To Mormon detractors, Steinberg notes, it’s a telling verbal tic that strongly suggests “a weak ventriloquism of biblical idiom.” For believers, the incessant repetition of the phrase is “like a charming quirk of one’s beloved.” And, more than that, it’s a sign—it must be, given that it appears in scripture. To readers of faith, Steinberg writes, “everything, every mystery, every slightly odd detail, would eventually reveal something.”
Source: About Central America
Godfrey is skeptical of the Zelph account as you can see from the highlighted portion of the abstract:
When the twenty men who formed the vanguard of Zion’s Camp left Kirtland, Ohio, on 1 May 1834, they could not know that one of their most lasting and intriguing contributions to Latter-day Saint history would take place, not on a Missouri battlefield but rather on top of a large mound in Illinois. There, on 3 June 1834, members of Zion’s Camp located a few bones, including a broken femur and an arrowhead, approximately a foot below the earth’s surface, and these remains became the catalyst for revelation to Joseph Smith regarding the skeleton’s identity. Joseph called the land “the plains of the Nephites.” They believed that the mounds had belonged to “that once beloved people,” and they interpreted the mere fact that skulls and bones were readily found as evidence of the divine authenticity of the book.
Godfrey repeats the citation cartel’s insistence that Joseph Smith wrote the 1841 Bernhisel letter, of which there is zero evidence. Joseph didn’t sign it, he never mentioned it, and all the historical evidence points to Wilford Woodruff as the author. But the citation cartel will never tell you that.
Godfrey also repeats the citation cartel’s insistence that Joseph Smith wrote, edited, or approved of the anonymous Times and Seasons articles that claimed the Book of Mormon took place in Central America.
The Godfrey article articulates the basic position of the citation cartel that Joseph Smith didn’t know anything about the Book of Mormon, that he speculated, that he misled the Church about Cumorah, and that he changed his mind over time. “Evidently Joseph Smith’s views on this matter were open to further knowledge. Thus in 1834, when Zelph was found, Joseph believed that the portion of America over which they had just traveled was “the plains of the Nephites” and that their bones were “proof’of the Book of Mormon’s authenticity. By 1842 he evidently believed that the events in most of Nephite history took place in Central America.”
Godfrey’s skepticism fits the narrative of the citation cartel, so of course Book of Mormon Central would add this article to their archive while excluding other views.
And, of course, FairMormon does the same thing here:
________________
If you want a perspective alternative to that of the citation cartel, you can read this article by Donald Q. Cannon, which of course Book of Mormon Central does not add to their archive because it doesn’t fit their narrative: http://emp.byui.edu/marrottr/341folder/zelph%20revisited%20cannon.html
Source: About Central America