People have asked about some of my earlier posts about Book of Mormon Geography. We’re going to repost some of the classics in upcoming weeks.
Here is the very first post I made.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
John L. Sorenson’s 37 objections to North America
In subsequent posts, I’ll address Mormon’s Codex, but recently someone cited Sorenson’s list of 37 reasons why the Book of Mormon could not have included North America, and I wanted to comment on them.
Sorenson’s list is a nice summary of the orthodox interpretation of North American archaeology and anthropology that was driven by the Manifest Destiny approach to the North American Indians in the 1800s. I can’t tell if Sorenson was writing from ignorance or malice, but since I know him, I’ll go with ignorance. After all, even Dr. Roger Kennedy, the former director of the Smithsonian’s American History Museum, wrote a book titled Hidden Cities–The Discovery and Loss of Ancient North American Civilizations. He wrote this: “Few realize that some of the oldest, largest, and most complex structures of ancient archaeology were built of earth, clay, and stone right here in America, in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. From 6,000 years ago until quite recently, North America was home to some of the most highly advanced and well organized civilizations in the world–complete with cities, roads and commerce.”
So I’ll assume Sorenson was just ignorant, or that he wrote his list before Dr. Kennedy wrote his book in 1991. But the list was cited by Gregory Smith as recently as January 2014, so apparently some BYU people still think it is relevant. I’ll address Gregory Smith in a separate post.
So here are my comments on Sorenson.
Could Not Have Included North America
In the Book of Mormon period, as far as is known, only limited grain crops of corn/maize were cultivated in North America. “As far as is known” is a rhetorical technique that implies “no one knows” about multiple grain crops in North America, when it really means “as far as is known by the author of these objections.” In fact, every food required by the law of Moses was grown in Hopewell areas (which is not true of Mesoamerica) and multiple “kinds of grains” were grown in North America.
So what do you think?
Source: Book of Mormon Wars
One thought on “John L. Sorenson’s 37 objections to North America”
Regarding the snow question, I like Rod Meldrum’s four answers:
1) If the Book of Mormon took place in the jungles of Central America, why does the text NEVER mention rain? Not once!
2) The Book of Mormon is not a weather almanac, so why would it mention either rain or snow? It discusses spiritual topics relevant to our salvation and only mentions vague weather descriptions in passing.
3) We are still coming out of the “Little Ice Age” that changed the climate of all of North America and Europe (and other areas). Before this time, during the time of the Nephites, the climate of the Hopewell lands was similar to that of the American south (e.g., Texas, Louisiana, etc.), which does not get frequent snow.
4) Actually, snow IS mentioned. When Lehi describes the fruit of the Tree of Life, he says it is whiter than anything else he can imagine. However, 30 years later, after at least 20 years in the Promised Land and probably nearly as much time in the Land of Nephi (mountains of Tennessee?), Nephi describes the fruit as being as white as “driven snow”. While Jerusalem might at the time have seen some scattered snow showers, it certainly did not get the “driven snow” that the American Midwest and mountains receive. Furthermore, Nephi was writing for his own posterity in the Small Plates of Nephi, so it would not have made any sense to compare the fruit’s whiteness to driven snow if Nephi’s descendants were never going to see driven snow.
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