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#REDIRECT [[Criticism of Mormonism/Books/Becoming Gods]]
{{FAIRAnalysisHeader
 
|title=[[../]]
 
|author=Richard Abanes
 
|noauthor=
 
|section=Index of Claims
 
|previous=
 
|next=
 
|notes={{AuthorsDisclaimer}}
 
}}
 
==Index to claims made in ''Becoming Gods: A Closer Look at 21st-Century Mormonism''==
 
This is an index of claims made in this work with links to corresponding responses within the FAIRwiki. An effort has been made to provide the author's original sources where possible.
 
 
 
===Claims made in Preface: "Can't We All Just Get Along?"===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====13====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that "Mormons" exist in "two distinct groups:" Chapel Mormons and Internet Mormons.
 
||
 
*[[Internet Mormons vs. Chapel Mormons]]
 
||
 
*Jason Gallentine (a.k.a. "Dr. Shades"), "Internet Mormonism vs. Chapel Mormonism"
 
|-
 
|<!--
 
====15====
 
||The ''Journal of Discourses'' was viewed on par with the Standard Works by early Church members.
 
||
 
*[[Journal of Discourses]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
| -->
 
====16====
 
||
 
*The book "Gospel Principles" contains a 1978 copyright by the Church, but the author states that it contains a disclaimer that states that it is not an official publication of the Church, and that "the views expressed herein are the responsibility of the author and do not represent the position of the Church."
 
||
 
*The title page of ''Gospel Principles'':
 
<blockquote>
 
GOSPEL PRINCIPLES
 
 
 
Published by <br>
 
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints <br>
 
Salt Lake City, Utah 1979.
 
</blockquote>
 
*The next page:
 
<blockquote>
 
Copyright (c) 1978 Corporation of the President<br>
 
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints <br>
 
All Rights Reserved<br>
 
Printed in the United States of America.<br>
 
</blockquote>
 
*We cannot find the disclaimer mentioned in ''Becoming Gods'' about ''Gospel Principles'' not being an official publication.
 
||
 
*''Gospel Principles'' 1979 edition.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====17, 331 n.35====
 
||
 
*Latter-day Saints are said to "focus on a minor issue while dismissing the broader point that is being made by a critic of the church."
 
||
 
*[["Celestial sex"|"Celestial sex"]]
 
||
 
*The author uses as an example in the endnotes the alleged LDS belief in "Celestial Sex."
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 1: God's Latter-Day Prophet===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====24====
 
||
 
*Joseph's family is said to have survived by "money digging."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and money digging]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Persuitte:Origins|pages=35}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====24====
 
||
 
*Joseph is claimed to have been adept at "occult ritual."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult]]
 
||
 
*No actual reference given by the author: The note simply says "Smith was well-known as a money-digger throughout western New York and northern Pennsylvania."
 
|-
 
|
 
====24====
 
||
 
*Joseph's neighbors thought that he was "an imposter, hypocrite and liar."
 
||
 
*[[The Hurlbut affidavits]]
 
*[http://lightplanet.com/response/js-family.htm Lightplanet Response]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Howe:Mormonism Unvailed|pages=}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====26====
 
||
 
*The book claims that during the First Vision, Joseph was told that "all Christian creeds" were an abomination and that "all Christian teachers" were corrupt.
 
||
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|17|377, n8(PB)}}
 
*[[Individual versus organizational apostasy]] {{nw}}
 
*[[Contradiction_about_knowing_all_churches_were_wrong|All churches were wrong]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====26====
 
||
 
*The book claims that many Latter-day Saints believe that "their salvation, to a limited degree, rests upon [Joseph] Smith."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
||
 
*In a note on page 332, the author says "I do not mean to say the Mormons hold Joseph Smith on an equal par with Jesus Christ. Smith holds a place just below Christ."
 
*{{CriticalWork:Tanner:Case Against|pages=vol. 1, p. 75}}
 
*Joseph Fielding Smith, ''Doctrines of Salvation'', p. 302
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====26====
 
||
 
*Bruce R. McConkie said that "we must turn to Joseph Smith to gain salvation."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
||
 
*Bruce R. McConkie, ''The Millennial Messiah'' (SLC: Deseret Book, 1982), p. 334.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====26====
 
||
 
*Dallin Oaks said that "I have built my life on the testimony and mission of the Prophet Joseph Smith."
 
||
 
The book omits Elder Oaks' very next words:
 
 
 
:In all of my reading and original research, I have never been dissuaded from my testimony of his prophetic calling and of the gospel and priesthood restoration the Lord initiated through him. I solemnly affirm the testimony Joseph Smith expressed in the famous Wentworth letter of 1842:
 
 
 
::“… The standard of truth has been erected; no unhallowed hand can stop the work from progressing, persecutions may rage, mobs may combine, armies may assemble, calumny may defame, but the truth of God will go forth boldly, nobly, and independent, till it has penetrated every continent, visited every clime, swept every country, and sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be accomplished and the great Jehovah shall say the work is done” (''Times and Seasons'', 1 March 1842, 709; quoted in Daniel H. Ludlow, ed., ''Encyclopedia of Mormonism'', 5 vols. [1992], 4:1754).
 
 
 
:In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
 
 
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
||
 
*{{Ensign1|author=Dallin Oaks|article=Joseph, the Man and the Prophet|date=May 1996|start=71}} {{link|url=http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD&locale=0&sourceId=42e47cf34f40c010VgnVCM1000004d82620a____&hideNav=1}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====27====
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith is claimed to have been "harsh and violent."
 
||
 
*[[Personal failings of Joseph Smith]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====27====
 
||
 
*James E. Faust said that Joseph Smith "was the greatest prophet who ever lived upon the earth."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
||
 
*James E. Faust, "The Importance of Bearing Testimony," Liahona, Mar. 1997, p.3.
 
|-
 
|
 
====28====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that Joseph Smith may have been a "pious fraud," who believed that he had been called of God while perpetrating fraud.
 
||
 
*[[Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith]]
 
* This is the [[Logical_fallacies#Appeal_to_probability|fallacy of probability]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel in Waterman, p. 50
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====28====
 
||
 
*The author claims that Joseph Smith and other church leaders "often used deception to conceal their activities."
 
||
 
*[[Personal failings of Joseph Smith]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====28====
 
||
 
*Polygamy was practiced in secret and denied publicly.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and polygamy]]
 
||
 
*''Times and Seasons'', Mar 15, 1843, vol. 4, no. 9, p. 143
 
|-
 
|
 
====28====
 
||
 
*Heber C. Kimball predicted that the world would someday see Joseph Smith as "a god."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
*[[Joseph_Smith's_status_in_LDS_belief/Heber_C._Kimball_on_Joseph_as_"a_god"|Heber C. Kimball on Joseph as "a god"]]
 
||
 
*Heber C. Kimball, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_5/Oneness_of_the_Priesthood,_etc. ''Journal of Discourses'', 5:88].
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====28====
 
||
 
*Brigham Young applied 1 John 4:3 to Joseph Smith.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
*[[Joseph_Smith's_status_in_LDS_belief/Brigham Young applied 1 John 4:3 to Joseph Smith|Brigham Young applied 1 John 4:3 to Joseph Smith]]
 
||
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_8/Light_of_the_Spirit%E2%80%94Course_of_Missionaries ''Journal of Discourses'' 8:176].
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====29====
 
||
 
*LDS claim that Joseph Smith "told but one" First Vision.
 
||
 
*[[First Vision accounts]]
 
* Church publications have long described the multiple accounts of the First Vision:
 
**{{Ensign1|author=Milton V. Backman, Jr.|article=Joseph Smith's Recitals of the First Vision|date=January 1985|start=8}}{{link|url=http://library.lds.org/nxt/gateway.dll/Magazines/Ensign/1985.htm/ensign%20january%201985%20.htm/joseph%20smiths%20recitals%20of%20the%20first%20vision.htm}}
 
**{{BYUS|author=Dean C. Jessee|article=Early Accounts of Joseph Smith (1831&ndash;1839)|date=1969|vol=9|num=3|start=275|end=294}}{{pdflink|url=http://byustudies.byu.edu/Products/MoreInfoPage/MoreInfo.aspx?prodid=662&type=7}}
 
**{{PWJS|start=9|end=20}}<!--Jessee-->
 
 
 
||
 
*Preston Nibley, ''Joseph Smith the Prophet'' (SLC: Deseret News, 1944), p. 30.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====30====
 
||
 
*The 1832 account of the First Vision states that Joseph was in his "sixteenth year," and that he "probably meant when he was 16 years old.
 
||
 
*[[Different age provided in the 1832 text]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', 1:28
 
|-
 
|
 
====30====
 
||
 
*The 1832 First Vision account does not mention two personages.
 
||
 
*[[Only one Personage appears in the 1832 account]]
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|Chapter_1#15}}
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, Early Mormon Documents, 1:28
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====30====
 
||
 
*The 1832 First Vision account does not mention that "all the churches in Joseph's day were false."
 
||
 
*[[1832 account doesn't forbid joining a church]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', 1:28
 
|-
 
|
 
====31====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that Joseph claimed that he learned about the errors in Christendom through personal Bible study several years before the First Vision.
 
||
 
*[[Contradiction_about_knowing_all_churches_were_wrong|Contradiction about knowing all churches were wrong?]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', 1:27
 
|-
 
|
 
====31====
 
||
 
*Orson Pratt said that the two personages in the First Vision "declared themselves to be angels."
 
||
 
*[[Orson Pratt confused about "angel" or Father-Son]]
 
||
 
*Pratt in "Biography and Journal of William I. Appleby, Elder in the Church of Latter Day Saints," 1848 reprinted in Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, pp. 146-147.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====31====
 
||
 
*Church historian Andrew Jenson said that "The angel again forbade Joseph to join any of these churches."
 
||
 
*[[Andrew Jenson called personage an "angel"]]
 
||
 
*Andrew Jenson, "Joseph Smith, The Prophet," Jan. 1888, vol. 3, nos. 1-3, p. 355.
 
|-
 
|
 
====31====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph dictated the 1838 account of the First Vision to counter the leadership crisis in Kirtland.
 
||
 
*[[1838 account modified to offset leadership crisis?]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
====31====
 
||
 
*The author asserts that the visit of Moroni was confused with the First Vision, and "was probably the real first vision."
 
||
 
*[[First Vision fabricated to give "Godly authority"]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that "[n]ot a single piece" of literature published in the 1830's mentions a visit by the Father and the Son.
 
||
 
*[[No reference to First Vision in 1830s publications?]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*Joseph's mother in her history said that the First Vision was of an angel.
 
||
 
*[[Prophet's mother said First Vision was of an "angel"]]
 
||
 
*Lucy Mack Smith, letter to Solomon Mack Jr., Jan. 6, 1831, reprinted in Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, p. 216.
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph privately began reworking the story of seeing an angel into a vision of Christ.
 
||
 
*[[Oliver Cowdery not aware of First Vision in 1834-35]]
 
||
 
*Oliver Cowdery, ''Messenger and Advocate'', Feb. 1835, vol. 1, no. 5, pp. 77-80.
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*Without "Mormonism's so-called" Melchizedek Priesthood, no man can see God and live.
 
||
 
*[[D&C 84 says God not seen without priesthood]]
 
||
 
*{{s||DC|84|21-22}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*Nobody knows "when or how" the Joseph received the Melchizedek Priesthood.
 
||
 
*[[Date of the restoration of the Melchizedek priesthood]]
 
||
 
*Online reference to anti-Mormon site "lds-mormon.com"
 
|-
 
|
 
====34====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph "had to backdate" the First Vision to 1820 in response to a leadership crisis.
 
||
 
*[[1838 account modified to offset leadership crisis?]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Palmer:Insider|pages=251}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====35====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the First Vision originally stated that the personages were angels.
 
||
 
*[[The "Angels" of the 1835 account]]
 
||
 
*William Smith, Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, p. 495.
 
*George A. Smith
 
*Lucy Smith
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Constitution_and_Government_of_the_United_States,_etc. ''Journal of Discourses'' 2:171].
 
*John Taylor, ''Journal of Discourses'' vol. ?, p. 167.
 
*Heber C. Kimball, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_6/Truth,_Life,_and_Light,_etc. ''Journal of Discourses'', 6:29].
 
|-
 
|
 
====35====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that there was no 1820 revival in Palmyra that converted "great multitudes" of people.
 
||
 
*[[Religious revivals in 1820]]
 
||
 
*Oliver Cowdery, ''Messenger and Advocate'', Feb. 1835, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 42.
 
|-
 
|
 
====35====
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith is claimed to have joined other churches after having been told that these churches were wrong.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith joined other churches]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
====35, 342n79-80====
 
||
 
*Newspapers reported in 1829 that Joseph Smith had a dream in 1827 about a spirit visiting him three times in one night.
 
||
 
* [[Joseph reported "a spirit" visiting in him in 1827]]
 
||
 
*From the Palmyra Freeman: Golden Bible, Niagra Courier, Aug. 27, 1829, vol. 2, no. 18.
 
*"The Gold Bible," Rochester Advertiser and Telegraph, Aug. 31, 1829.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====35-36, 343n83====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph Smith's First Vision may have been a dream of a "bloody ghost dressed as a Spaniard.
 
||
 
* These supposed "early" accounts comes from hostile statements made forty to fifty years later!
 
* The 1870 account from Lapham says only that "a man" with "bloody clothes" appeared in a dream. (He also says this is what Joseph Jr. told his father, so this is hearsay.)
 
**{{FR-18-1-5}}
 
**{{FR-17-1-4}}
 
||
 
*Hiel Lewis, letter to James T. Cobb, ''Amboy Journal'', Apr. 30, 1879, reprinted in Wyl, pp. 79-80
 
*Fayette Lapham [May 1870], in {{EarlyMormonDocs1|vol=1|start=459}}
 
*{{CitationError}}: the reference to the dream and bloody clothes is on p. 458.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====36, 343n85====
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith is claimed to have been an "occultist."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult]]
 
||
 
*Lance S. Owens, "Joseph Smith: America's Hermetic Prophet," ''Gnosis'', Spring 1995, no. 35, p. 60
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====36====
 
||
 
*Early Mormons are said to have believed in "witchcraft."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult/Early members believed in "witchcraft"|Early members believed in "witchcraft"]]
 
*{{FR-8-2-12}}<!--Everything is everything-->
 
||
 
*John L. Brooke, ''The Refiner's Fire: The Making of Mormon Cosmology'', 1644-1844, pp. 71-72.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====36====
 
||
 
*Joseph's mother talked about "magic circles" and the "faculty of Abrac."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult/Lucy Mack Smith on "faculty of Abrac" and "magic circles"|Lucy Mack Smith on "faculty of Abrac" and "magic circles"]]
 
*{{FR-12-2-16}}
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, p. 285.
 
|-
 
|
 
====37, 344n93====
 
||
 
*Joseph's family had a "magick dagger" that was owned by Hyrum Smith.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult/Mars dagger|Mars dagger]]
 
*{{FR-12-2-16}}
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
*The endnote describes the dagger and its alleged importance to Joseph without acknowledging the source of the information.
 
|-
 
|
 
====37, 344n94====
 
||
 
*Joseph's family had "three magick parchments." One of these was owned by Hyrum Smith.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult/Magick parchments|Magick parchments]]
 
*{{FR-12-2-16}}
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
*The endnote mentions the ""Holiness to the Lord,"" the ""Saint Peter Bind Them,"" and the ""Jehovah, Jehovah, Jehovah"" parchments without showing how they are related to the Smith family.
 
*An indirect reference is made to the book ''Occult Sciences''."
 
|-
 
|
 
====37, 344n95====
 
||
 
*Joseph is claimed to have had a "Jupiter talisman" with him the day he died.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and Jupiter talisman]]
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
*The endnote simply states the date of Joseph's death.
 
|-
 
|
 
====38====
 
||
 
*"Researchers of Mormonism" now believe that Joseph was influenced by "Jewish kabbalism."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult/Kabbalah influence|Joseph influenced by Kabbalah?]]
 
*{{FR-8-2-12}}<!--Everything is everything-->
 
*{{FR-6-2-3}} <!--Refiner's fire-->
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====38, 345n100====
 
||
 
*Citing Quinn, Joseph is claimed to have considered the date April 6th to have "astrological significance" as the "DAY-FATAL-ITY."
 
||
 
{{nw}}
 
* The author provides no evidence for what Joseph believed about April 6. 
 
* He fails to mention the one bit of evidence that we ''do'' have for what Joseph may have thought: {{s||DC|20|1}} suggests that April 6 was seen as the date of Christ's birth.{{ref|eom.1}}
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=76-79, 278-280}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====38-39, 346 n. 104-109====
 
||
 
*Joseph was arrested in 1826 for being a "disorderly person and an imposter."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's 1826 glasslooking trial]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, "Rethinking the 1826 Judicial Decision," Mormon Scripture Studies: An E-Journal of Critical Thought.
 
|-
 
|
 
====39====
 
||
 
*The author states that no "statements of repentance by Smith" for money digging have ever been found.
 
||
 
||
 
*Sam Katich, "Joseph Smith," www.fairlds.org/apol/morm201/m20117b.html
 
|-
 
|
 
====40, 348n123====
 
||
 
*Gordon B. Hinckley is accused of having cited false documentation to support the story of an 1820 revival.
 
||
 
*[[Religious revivals in 1820/Gordon B. Hinckley cited false information]]
 
*[[Religious revivals in 1820]]
 
||
 
*Gordon B. Hinckley, ''Truth Restored'', pp. 1-2.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====42, 349n126====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that there is no evidence that Joseph Smith was "persecuted" for telling the story of his vision between 1820 and 1824.
 
||
 
*[[1832 account doesn't mention persecution]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, p. 29, 46-47.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====42, 43 (sidebar)====
 
||
 
*The author claims that contradictions in the Biblical stories of Paul's vision were "long ago resolved by scholars analyzing the Greek texts. The discrepancies in Paul's account involve modern ignorance of the Greek wording used."
 
||
 
* Modern scholars disagree with the author's resolution, and the rule which he appeals to is broken by the NT text more than it is observed.  Even Acts violates the author's claimed 'solution' three times!
 
** [[First_Vision_accounts/Do Greek scholars solve the discrepancies in Paul's vision accounts|Do Greek scholars solve the discrepancies in Paul's vision accounts?]]
 
||
 
*W.E. Vine, ''Vine's Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words'', p. 544.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====42====
 
||
 
*The book states that Fawn Brodie's idea that the First Vision may have been "the elaboration of some half-remembered dream stimulated by the early revival excitement" is a satisfactory way to "explain things."
 
||
 
*[[Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=25}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====44====
 
||
 
*Fawn Brodie's idea that the First Vision may have been "created some time after 1830 when the need arose for a magnificent tradition to cancel out the stories of his fortune-telling and money-digging" "further weakens" Mormon claims.
 
||
 
*[[Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=25}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====45, 351n144====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph "continued practicing magick, divination, astrology, and soothsaying long after the LDS Church was founded in 1830."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and seer stones]]
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult]]
 
||
 
*No specific reference is provided.
 
*The note simply mentions that seer stones continued to be used after the Church was organized in 1830 - a fact that could be easily deduced from reading the Doctrine and Covenants.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====46====
 
||
 
*The book claims that Brigham Young used Oliver Cowdery's divining rod to point out the location where the temple would be built in Salt Lake City.
 
||
 
||
 
*''Anthon H. Lund Journal'', under July 5, 1901.
 
*"The Psychological Needs of Mormon Women," ''Sunstone'', volume 6, number 2, page 67.
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=206}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====46====
 
||
 
*The book claims that Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball were given divining rods by Joseph Smith.
 
||
 
*[[One Nation Under Gods/Use of sources/Divining rods to Kimball and Young|Divining rods to Kimball and Young]]
 
||
 
*''Anthon H. Lund Journal'', under July 5, 1901.
 
*"The Psychological Needs of Mormon Women," ''Sunstone'', volume 6, number 2, page 67.
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=206}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====46====
 
||
 
*Joseph received a revelation praising Oliver's gift of using his divining talents.
 
||
 
*[[Oliver Cowdery and the "rod of nature"]]
 
||
 
|-
 
|
 
====47, 352n155====
 
||
 
*Citing Quinn, the book asserts that David B. Haight "reinvoked the astrological principle that people should 'do nothing without the assistance of the moon'."
 
*The book further claims that the phrase "do nothing without the assistance of the moon" was deleted when Elder Haight's talk was placed online (i.e. the online Ensign article).
 
||
 
*{{FalseStatement}}: The phrase does not appear in the recorded version of Elder Haight's talk either.
 
*[[Haight: assistance of the moon|Haight: Do nothing without the assistance of the moon?]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=291}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====48====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph continued to discover and use new seer stones.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and seer stones]] {{nw}}
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=200}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====48====
 
||
 
*Joseph is said to have "never stopped being" an occultist.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult]]
 
||
 
*Author's conclusion.
 
|-
 
|
 
====49====
 
||
 
*The author conclude that the activities of Joseph's family may have been "satanic."
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and the occult]]
 
||
 
*Author's conclusion.
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 2: And it Came to Pass===
 
{| valign="top" border="1" style="width:100%; font-size:85%"
 
!width="5%"|Page
 
!width="40%"|Claim
 
!width="30%"|Response
 
!width="25%"|[[Use of sources]]
 
|-
 
|
 
====51, 353 n. 2, 354 n. 3====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that some Book of Mormon stories are simply reworked from the Bible or the Apocrypha.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon plagiarized from the Bible]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=62-63}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====55====
 
||
 
*The 1839 history of the Church identified the angel who delivered the plates to Joseph as Nephi rather than Moroni.
 
||
 
*[[Nephi or Moroni]]
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith 1839 History
 
*''Messenger and Advocate'', vol. 3, no 12, pp. 53, 71.
 
*1851 Pearl of Great Price, "Joseph Smith History," p. 41
 
*Lucy Mack Smith, ''Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet, and His Progenitors for many Generations'', p. 79.
 
*John C. Whitmer, "The Eight Witnesses," published in Andrew Jenson, HR, Oct. 1888, vol. 7, p. 621."
 
|-
 
|
 
====56====
 
||
 
*The name "Nephi" is said to be related to "generic terms used by nineteenth-century occultists for spirit messengers."
 
||
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=198-199}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====56, 357 n. 34====
 
||
 
*Martin Harris said that Joseph used his seer stone to locate the plates.
 
||
 
* [[Joseph Smith and seer stones]]
 
||
 
*Martin Harris, ''Tiffany's Monthly'' interview, 1859.
 
*Hosea Stout, ''On the Mormon Frontier: The Diary of Hosea Stout'', Juanita Brooks, ed., vol. 2. p. 593.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====56, 357 n. 33====
 
||
 
*It is speculated that Joseph Smith's vision of Moroni may have taken place through his seer stone.
 
||
 
* [[Joseph Smith and seer stones]]
 
||
 
*Steven C. Walker, "Joseph Smith: 'The Gift of Seeing,'" in Bryan Waterman ed., ''The Prophet Puzzle'', p. 97.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====56, 357 n. 35, 36====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the "golden book" was originally supposed to be about "hidden treasure" &mdash; the "religious twist" was added later.
 
||
 
*{{FalseStatement}}
 
* These supposed "early" accounts comes from hostile statements made forty to fifty years later!
 
**{{FR-18-1-5}}
 
**{{FR-17-1-4}}
 
||
 
*Parley Chase, letter to James T. Cobb, Apr. 3, 1879, in {{CriticalWork:Wyl:Mormon Portraits Volume First|pages=276}} , reprinted in {{EarlyMormonDocs1|vol=3|start=135}}
 
*Hiel Lewis, ''The Amboy Journal'', Apr. 30, 1879, quoted in Wesley P. Walters, "The Mormon Prophet Attempts to Join the Methodists"
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====56====
 
||
 
*Joseph translated the plates by looking at his seer stone in his hat. The plates were not nearby.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith and seer stones]]
 
||
 
*Isaac Hale, "Mormonism," ''Susquehanna Register'', and Northern Pennsylvanian, May 1, 1834, p. 1.
 
|-
 
|
 
====57, 358-9 n. 47====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that each sentence and word in the 1830 Book of Mormon "had supposedly come directly from God."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon translation method]]
 
||
 
*Joseph F. Smith, quoted by Oliver B. Huntington, ''Journal of Oliver Huntington'', p. 168.
 
|-
 
|
 
====57-58, 359 n. 49====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that since a voice from heaven proclaimed that the translation was correct, no further editing should have been required.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon textual changes]]
 
||
 
*''History of the Church'', vol. 1, pp. 54-55.
 
|-
 
|
 
====58, 359 n. 50, 51====
 
||
 
*The use of the word "synagogue" in the Book of Mormon is an anachronism.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon anachronisms/Synagogues]]
 
||
 
*Book of Mormon, 1830 edition, p. 268
 
*{{s||Alma|16|13}}
 
*The ''New International Dictionary of the Bible'', p. 972
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====58, 359n52-53====
 
||
 
*There are references to cows, oxen, horses, and goats in the New World hundreds of years before Christ.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon anachronisms/Animals]]
 
||
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|18|25}}
 
*Thomas D.S. Key, ""A Biologist Looks at the Book of Mormon,"" Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation, June 1985, XXX-VIII, p. 3."
 
|-
 
|
 
====58, 359n53====
 
||
 
*The author states that "LDS apologist John Sorenson has suggested that Smith mistranslated numerous words" from the gold plates and that "cattle and oxen should have been rendered deer and bison," and that "horses should also have been translated deer."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon anachronisms/Animals]]
 
||
 
*John L. Sorenson, ''An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon'', pp. 191-276, 299.
 
|-
 
|
 
====58, 359n54====
 
||
 
*The Book of Mormon "is simply a rehashing" of the speculation in the 19th century regarding Indian origins due to the presence of burial mounds "dotting the land."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon and the Mound Builders]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=34}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====60, 360n58====
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith is claimed to have incorporated text from Josiah Priest's ''The Wonders of Nature'' into the Book of Mormon.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon plagiarism accusations/The Wonders of Nature]]
 
||
 
*Josiah Priest, ''The Wonders of Nature'', 1825
 
*Abanes, p. 69
 
*The Tanners are the source of this comparison, although it is not explicitly stated by the author. The author does mention that the Tanners demonstrate that a copy of the book was available in the Manchester library."
 
|-
 
|
 
====60-61, 360n59-63====
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith is said to have plagiarized Ethan Smith's ''View of the Hebrews''.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon and View of the Hebrews]]
 
||
 
*Ethan Smith, ''View of the Hebrews'', 1825
 
*David Persuitte, p. 107, 122
 
*Sandra Tanner, "Where Did Joseph Smith Get His Ideas for the Book of Mormon?"
 
|-
 
|
 
====61====
 
||
 
*It was claimed that anyone who looked on the gold plates would die.
 
||
 
*[[Viewing gold plates would result in death|Viewing the gold plates would result in death?]]
 
||
 
*Martin Harris, ''Tiffany's Monthly'' interview, 1859.
 
|-
 
|
 
====62, 361n69-72====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the witnesses never actually physically saw the plates - they only saw them in visions.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Palmer:Insider|pages=175-176}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====64====
 
||
 
*Martin Harris said that he never saw the plates with his "natural eyes."
 
||
 
*[["Eye of Faith"/"Spiritual Eye" statements by Martin Harris]]
 
||
 
*LDS apostle Stephen Burnett, letter to Lyman E. Johnson, April 15, 1838 reprinted in Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'' 2:291
 
|-
 
|
 
====64, 362n81-82====
 
||
 
*Cowdery, Whitmer and Harris's statements that they actually saw the plates are said to only refer to times that the plates were either covered with a cloth or in a wooden box.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Palmer:Insider|pages=198-199}}
 
*Harris, Tiffany's Monthly interview, 1859."
 
|-
 
|
 
====64, 362n83-84====
 
||
 
*Martin Harris said that none of the eight witnesses had seen or handled the plates.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal]]
 
*[[Book_of_Mormon_witnesses/Eight_witnesses|Eight witnesses]]
 
*[[Book_of_Mormon_witnesses/Eight_witnesses/shown_to_me_by_a_supernatural_power|John Whitmer: shown_to_me_by_a_supernatural_power]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Palmer:Insider|pages=204-206}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====65====
 
||
 
*The Book of Mormon "can hardly be considered unique" since James Strang produced a set of plates that were seen by witnesses.
 
||
 
*The book fails to tell us that the Strangite witnesses only testified about how the plates were found, and some of these witnesses (unlike the Book of Mormon witnesses) [[Book_of_Mormon_witnesses/Recant|recanted]] later.
 
**[[Book of Mormon witnesses/Strangite parallels|Strangite parallels for witnesses?]]
 
**[[Book_of_Mormon_witnesses]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Palmer:Insider|pages=208-212}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====65, 362n87====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that LDS apologists have redefined many of the terms that Joseph Smith used in the Book of Mormon text: steel means iron, horses are deer, tents are huts, etc.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon anachronisms]]
 
||
 
*Dan Vogel, Brent Metcalfe, ''American Apocrypha'', p. xiii.
 
|-
 
|
 
====66, 362n88====
 
||
 
*LDS scholars such as Dee F. Green have stated that Book of Mormon archaeology is a "myth."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon archeology]]
 
||
 
*Dee F. Green, "Book of Mormon Archeology: The Myths and the Alternatives," ''Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought'' (Summer 1969), vol. 4, pp. 72-80
 
|-
 
|
 
====66, 362n89====
 
||
 
*Dr. Michael Coe stated that there was no Book of Mormon archaeology.
 
||
 
*[[Amerindians as Lamanites/Maya and Olmec]]
 
||
 
*Michael Coe, "Mormons and Archaeology: An Outside View," ''Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought'' (Winter 1973), vol. 8, p. 44.
 
|-
 
|
 
====66, 363n92====
 
||
 
*LDS scholar Terryl L. Givens is claimed to have "admitted" that no connection has been made between the Book of Mormon and cultures or civilizations in the Western hemisphere.
 
||
 
*The author acknowledges in his endnote that Givens "however, also quoted BYU professor Daniel Peterson, who made a statement in support of the BOM's unique character." 
 
*See {{FR-2-1-1}}
 
*[[Amerindians as Lamanites/Maya and Olmec]]
 
||
 
*Terryl L. Givens, ''By the Hand of Mormon'', p. 155.
 
|-
 
|
 
====67,  363n95-96====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the limited geography theory "cannot bear rigorous scrutiny" and "does violence" to the text of the Book of Mormon.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon geography/New World/Limited Geography Theory]]
 
||
 
*Vogel and Metcalfe, ''American Apocrypha'', pp. viii-ix.
 
*Deanne G. Matheny, "Does the Shoe Fit? A critique of the Limited tehuantepec Geography," in ''New Approaches to the Book of Mormon: Explorations in Critical Methodology.''
 
|-
 
|
 
====67, 363n99====
 
||
 
*Apologists have suggested that "not a single early Mormon, including Joseph Smith, ever bothered reading the Book of Mormon 'closely enough to grasp the fact' " that the plates were not buried in the hill where the final Nephite battle occurred.
 
||
 
*The book omits the line preceding the quoted phrase, where Sorenson and Roper indicate that "there is no evidence that in the early years any detailed thought was given to geography.  Actually, the Book of Mormon was little referred to or used among church members in the first decades except as a confirming witness of the Bible. The writings or preaching of some of the best-informed church leaders of that day show that they did not read the text carefully on matters other than doctrine."
 
* Early members' preoccupations and interests were almost entirely doctrinal and theological.  Since geography is incidental to the Book of Mormon's message, this is to be expected.
 
* If Joseph Smith was the author of the Book of Mormon, his ignorance on such points would be astonishing.  Since he was only a translator, however, the fact that he was unaware of some of the book's nuances is unsurprising.
 
||
 
*{{JBMS-12-1-2}}, p. 10. <!-- Sorenson and Roper-->
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====70, 365 n.115====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Joseph Smith said that the angel told him that ''all'' American Indians were "literal descendants of Abraham," but DNA has disproved this.
 
||
 
*[[Amerindians as Lamanites]]
 
*[[Amerindians_as_Lamanites#All_From_Lehi|All Amerindians ''are'' descended from Lehi]]
 
*[[Book_of_Mormon_and_DNA_evidence]]
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith's 1835 account of the First Vision found in the ''Ohio Journal&mdash;1835-1836, Nov. 9, 1835, reprinted in Vogel, ''Early Mormon Documents'', vol. 1, p. 44.
 
*Joseph Smith, Mar. 1, 1842, letter to John Wentworth, ''History of the Church'', Vol. 4, p. 537.
 
*Meldrum, "Children of Lehi"
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====71, 365 n.120====
 
||
 
*The book claims that Joseph Smith founded the "Restored Church" on the belief that all Native Americans were descendants of the Israelites.
 
||
 
*[[Amerindians as Lamanites]]
 
*[[Amerindians_as_Lamanites#All_From_Lehi|All Amerindians ''are'' descended from Lehi]]
 
||
 
*Oliver Cowdery's Speech to the Delawares. Parley P. Pratt, Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt.
 
|-
 
|
 
====72, 366 n.127====
 
||
 
*All modern Mormons are said to have believed that all inhabitants of the New World were descendants of the Lamanites until "science showed it to be erroneous."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon geography/Borders of the Lamanites]]
 
||
 
*{{s||DC|54|8}}&mdash;"And thus you shall take your journey into the regions westward, unto the land of Missouri, unto the borders of the Lamanites"
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====72, 366 n.128====
 
||
 
*The "updated LDS paradigm" claims that Nephites intermarried with non-Israelite natives, thus diluting their DNA.
 
||
 
*[[Amerindians as Lamanites]]
 
||
 
*Cooper Johnson, [http://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/DNA_and_the_Book_of_Mormon.html DNA and the Book of Mormon], FAIR web site
 
|-
 
|
 
====72, 366 n.130====
 
||
 
*The LDS view has ''always'' been that Israelites were the first people to populate the Americas, since the land was "kept from the knowledge of other nations."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon anachronisms/Demographics]]
 
||
 
*{{s|2|Nephi|1|6}}
 
*J. Reuben Clark, "Prophecies, Penalties, and Blessings," ''Improvement Era'', July 1940, vol. xliii., no. 7 quoted in Bill McKeever, "DNA and the Book of Mormon Record," Mormonism Research Ministry.
 
|-
 
|
 
====73, 367n131-135====
 
||
 
*The author claims that not many Christians actually believe that the world was created around 4000 B.C., or that the flood occurred around 2000 B.C. In fact, "[T]he majority of traditional Christians understand that the world is older than 6000 years," therefore the claim that the DNA argument is fundamentalist "suicide bombing" is false.
 
||
 
*The book ignores that many critics who ''use'' DNA evidence against the Book of Mormon ''do'' belong to denominations that advocate a Young Earth and/or a universal Noachian flood.  The criticism is therefore valid as it applies to them.
 
*[[Book of Mormon and DNA evidence#Fundamentalist "suicide bombing"|Fundamentalist "suicide bombing"]]
 
||
 
*No source is provided by the author for his claim that the "majority of Christians" understand that the world is older than 6000 years.
 
*Daniel C. Peterson, FAIR Conference, untitled lecture, Aug. 8, 2003, author's private notes.
 
*David Stewart, [http://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/DNA_and_the_Book_of_Mormon_2.html "DNA and the Book of Mormon"]
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====73, 367n136====
 
||
 
*The Lamanites were supposed to become "white" once they converted ''en masse'' to Mormonism. This was to be accomplished by having LDS men take Indian wives.
 
||
 
*[[Native Americans to become "white and delightsome" through polygamous marriage?]]
 
||
 
*W.W. Phelps, "Revelation Received West of Jackson County, Missouri, July 17, 1831," reprinted in H. Michael Marquardt, ''The Joseph Smith Revelations: Text & Commentary'', p. 375.
 
|-
 
|
 
====73, 367n137====
 
||
 
*The phrase "white and delightsome" was changed to "pure and delightsome" in the Book of Mormon.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon textual changes/"white" changed to "pure"]]
 
||
 
*{{s|2|Nephi|30|6}} (pre-1981 edition)
 
|-
 
|
 
====73, 367n138====
 
||
 
*LDS leaders claimed that the alteration to the Book of Mormon had nothing to do with the Indians physically turning white. LDS leaders taught that the curse would one day be removed.
 
||
 
*[[Lamanite curse]]
 
*{{s|2|Nephi|5|21}}
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====74====
 
||
 
*LDS apologists are claimed to dismiss Church teachings in order to make Mormonism compatible with scientific findings.
 
||
 
*[[Mormonism and science]]
 
||
 
*Author's opinion
 
|-
 
|
 
====75, 368n142====
 
|
 
*The author asserts that LDS apologist B.H. Roberts "reached a shocking conclusion" that that Book of Mormon wasn't authentic.
 
||
 
*[[B.H. Roberts and "Studies of the Book of Mormon"]]
 
||
 
*B.H. Roberts, ''Studies of the Book of Mormon'', p. 271, 243.
 
|-
 
|
 
====76, 368n143====
 
||
 
*The author claims that B.H. Roberts "had come to realize that the Book of Mormon was a nonhistorical document."
 
||
 
*[[B.H. Roberts' testimony of the Book of Mormon]]
 
||
 
*Wesley P. Lloyd statement at www.lds-mormon.com/bhrlettr.shtml
 
|-
 
|
 
====76====
 
||
 
*Did FARMS claim that B.H. Roberts was playing "devils advocate" when he wrote ''Studies of the Book of Mormon'' without providing any documentation to support this assertion?
 
*Did FARMS only focus on what Roberts said before he reached what the author calls his "final conclusion?"
 
||
 
*[[B.H. Roberts' testimony of the Book of Mormon]]
 
*[[../Use of sources/Madsen-B.H. Roberts and the Book of Mormon]]
 
||
 
*Truman G. Madsen, "B.H. Roberts and the Book of Mormon," ''BYU Studies'' (Summer 1979), volume 19, pp. 427-445.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====77 368n145-147====
 
||
 
*Thomas Stuart Ferguson lost his testimony of the Book of Mormon after failing to find archaeological evidence.
 
||
 
*{{FR-10-2-12}}
 
*{{FR-16-1-12}}
 
*{{FR-16-1-11}}
 
||
 
*Thomas Stuart Ferguson, ''One fold and One Shepherd''.
 
*Jerald and Sandra Tanner, "Ferguson's Two Faces," ''Salt Lake City Messenger'' #69, Sept. 1988, p. 3
 
*Ferguson letter dated Feb. 9, 1976.
 
*Ferguson letter dated Feb. 9, 1976.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====77 369n150-153====
 
||
 
*Do LDS scholars believe that Quetzalcoatl was Jesus Christ?
 
*The book asserts that Quetzalcoatl's association with a "feathered serpent" constitutes "snake worship," and is therefore inconsistent with worship of Jesus Christ.
 
||
 
*[[Quetzalcoatl and Jesus Christ]]
 
||
 
*John L. Sorenson, "The Decline of the God Quetzalcoatl, " in ''Pressing Forward with the Book of Mormon'', p. 234.
 
*Joseph Allen, ''Exploring the Lands of the Book of Mormon''.
 
*Joseph Allen, [http://www.meridianmagazine.com/articles/030926white.html "The White god Quetzalcoatl,"] ''Meridian Magazine'', 2003.
 
*Adela Fernandez, ''Pre-Hispanic Gods of Mexico'', p. 68
 
*Quetzalcoatl the Myth, www.weber.ucsd.edu.
 
|}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 3: Thus Saith Joseph===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====84, 370n9-11====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that the revelations in the ''Book of Commandments'' were modified because they were "showing their age," "contained outdated information," "included erroneous statements" and "abandoned doctrines." Some of the revelations "revealed too much information about LDS beliefs."
 
||
 
*The revelations were "showing their age" between 1833 and 1835???
 
*[[Doctrine and Covenants textual changes]]
 
||
 
*Karl F. Best, "Changes in the Revelations, 1833-1835," ''Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought'' (Spring 1992), vol. 25, no. 1, p. 90.
 
*H. Michael Marquardt, ''The Joseph Smith Revelations: Text & Commentary'', p. 17.
 
|-
 
|
 
====85, 371n14====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that Latter-day Saints view divine truth as "not absolute or fixed" but rather as "changeable, flexible."
 
||
 
*[[Changing doctrine]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Ostling:Mormon America|pages=249}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====87, 370n23====
 
||
 
*Did Joseph receive a "false revelation" through his seer stone to go to Toronto, Canada to sell the Book of Mormon copyright?
 
||
 
*[[Did Joseph Smith attempt to sell the Book of Mormon copyright?]]
 
||
 
*David Whitmer, ''An Address to All Believers in Christ''.
 
|-
 
|
 
====87, 371n25====
 
||
 
*The book claims that some of the modified revelations had their meanings "reversed."
 
||
 
*[[Doctrine and Covenants textual changes]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Mormon Hierarchy|pages=5}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====89, 372n28====
 
||
 
*Joseph modified the revelation now found in D&C 5:4 to add additional gifts. This is claimed to imply that after translating the Book of Mormon he was not supposed to become a prophet or organize a Church.
 
||
 
*[[Doctrine and Covenants textual changes]]
 
||
 
*Karl F. Best, "Changes in the Revelations, 1833-1835," ''Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought (Spring 1992), vol. 25, no.1, p. 98.
 
|-
 
|
 
====89, 372n29-30====
 
||
 
*Did Joseph modify what is now D&C 8:6-9 to hide Oliver Cowdery's use of a divining rod?
 
||
 
*[[Oliver Cowdery and the "rod of nature"]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Quinn:Magic World View|pages=206}}
 
*H. Michael Marquardt, ''The Joseph Smith Revelations: Text & Commentary'', pp. 14-15.
 
|-
 
|
 
====90, 372n34, 375n35====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Apostle William E. McLellin left the Church because he was "shaken by the changes made in the revelations."
 
||
 
* This explanation (as shown by the dates of the material cited) came long after the fact.  The book does not tell us that McLellin said at his excommunication hearing that:
 
<blockquote>
 
...he said he had no confidence in the presidency of the Church; consequently, he had quit praying and keeping the commandments of the Lord, and indulged himself in his sinful lusts. It was from what he had heard that he believed the presidency had got out of the way, and not from anything that he had seen himself.{{ref|mclellin.1}}
 
</blockquote>
 
* McLellin had previously been excommunicated for spending time with "a certain harlot" while on a mission.{{ref|mclellin.2}}  He had also been out of fellowship for "writing a letter which "cast…censure upon the [first] presidency."{{ref|mclellin.3}}
 
* [[Joseph Smith and polygamy/Fanny_Alger_and_William_McLellin#McLellin:_Examining_the_Witness|McLellin: Examining the Witness]]
 
*[[Doctrine and Covenants textual changes]]
 
||
 
*"The Early History of the Saints and Their Enemies," Sept. 28, 1875, ''Salt Lake Daily Tribune'', Dec. 5, 1878 <!-- www.lavazone2.com/dbroadhu/UT/tribune1.htm -->
 
*William McLellin, ''Saint's Herald'', vol. 17, pp. 556-557.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====90====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that Latter-day Saints claim that Biblical writers also modified their revelations, but cannot provide data to support this.
 
*It is stated that this is an "argument from silence."
 
||
 
*[[Becoming Gods#Argument from silence?|Argument from silence?]]
 
||
 
*Stephen W. Gibson, ''One-Minute Answers to Anti-Mormon Question'', p. 82
 
|-
 
|
 
====94====
 
||
 
*The book claims that when Joseph Smith turned the "Book of Breathings" into the "Book of Abraham," that Joseph claimed that the "Book of the Dead" had been written by Joseph of Egypt.
 
||
 
*[[Book of Abraham/Book of the Dead|Hiding ''Book of the Dead'' connection?]]
 
*[[Book of Abraham/Papyri]]
 
||
 
*No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====94-98====
 
||
 
*The restoration of the missing portions of Facsimile 1 were said to be "terribly wrong."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Abraham/Papyri]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Larson:By His Own Hand|pages=}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====99====
 
||
 
*LDS apologists' main purpose is claimed to be to explain away "any and all criticisms that might damage the validity of Smith's writings."
 
||
 
*[[Apologetics]]
 
||
 
*Author's opinion.
 
|-
 
|
 
====100====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that documents show how the hieroglyphs from the papyri were matched to the Book of Abraham text, and that one or two words in Egyptian were expanded to entire paragraphs in English.
 
||
 
*[[Kirtland Egyptian Papers]]
 
||
 
*Richard L. Bushman, "Joseph Smith as Translator'', in Waterman, p. 81.
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 4: One God Versus Many Gods===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====109====
 
||
 
*Do Latter-day Saints practice polytheism&mdash;the belief in a plurality of gods?
 
||
 
*[[Polytheism]]
 
||
 
*Definition of "polytheism" taken from Vergilius Ferm, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Religion'', p. 774.
 
|-
 
|
 
====112 n25-26====
 
||
 
*Do Latter-day Saints "redefine" monotheism to be the worship of one "primary or supreme god above all other gods."
 
||
 
*[[Polytheism]]
 
||
 
*The author adds the endnote: "LDS theology recognized that other supreme gods exist for other universes and world. But Mormons contend that we have nothing to do with these gods."
 
*John Widtsoe, ''A Rational Theology'', p. 67.
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_11/Ordinance_of_Bread_and_Wine,_etc. Journal of Discourses 11:41].
 
*Joseph Smith, ''Lecture on Faith'', Lecture 2, paragraph 2.
 
|-
 
|
 
====114====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that early Biblical quotes used by Latter-day Saints to support "tritheism" only "superficially" support their position, and that upon closer examination do not provide this support.
 
||
 
*[[Godhead and the Trinity]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====114====
 
||
 
*Do Latter-day Saints worship the Godhead as "one god."
 
||
 
*[[Godhead and the Trinity]]
 
||
 
* No source provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====115, 379n47-48====
 
||
 
*The book asserts that the concep of the Trinity is "one of the most important doctrines of the Christian faith" and is at the "heart of the Christian conception of God."
 
||
 
* The Saints are trinitarians, just not ''Nicene'' trinitarians:
 
*[[Godhead and the Trinity]]
 
**[[Godhead_and_the_Trinity#Was_Nicean_Trinitarianism_always_a_key_part_of_Christian_belief.3F|Nicene trinitarianism not part of early Christian beliefs]]
 
**[[Godhead_and_the_Trinity#Was_Nicean_Trinitarianism_always_a_key_part_of_Christian_belief.3F|Non-LDS scholars on Nicea and the Bible]]
 
||
 
*Wayne Grudem, ''Systematic Theology'', p. 226.
 
*Stanley Grenz, ''Theology for the Community of God'', p. 99.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====130====
 
||
 
*Is the Latter-day Saint belief in the "eternality of matter" actually a "pagan" belief?
 
||
 
*[[Creatio ex nihilo]]
 
||
 
*Source not provided.
 
|-
 
|
 
====130====
 
||
 
*Is the Latter-day Saint belief in the "pre-existence of spirits" actually a "pagan" belief?
 
||
 
* Terryl Givens, "When Souls Had Wings: What the Western Tradition Has to teach Us About Pre-Existence," FAIR Conference 2007 {{link|url=http://www.fairlds.org/FAIR_Conferences/2007_When_Souls_Had_Wings.html}}
 
||
 
*The author claims that this is derived from "pure Greek philosophy."
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====130====
 
||
 
*Is the Latter-day Saint concept of "human deification" actually a "pagan" belief?
 
||
 
*[[Deification of man]]
 
||
 
*Source not provided.
 
|}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 5: Heavenly Father is a Man===
 
{| valign="top" border="1" style="width:100%; font-size:85%"
 
!width="5%"|Page
 
!width="40%"|Claim
 
!width="30%"|Response
 
!width="25%"|[[Use of sources]]
 
|-
 
|
 
====136====
 
||
 
*Biblical verses that describe God as having body parts are claimed by the author to be "difficult to interpret and require careful study."
 
||
 
*[[Corporeality of God]]
 
||
 
*Author's opinion.
 
|-
 
|
 
====136====
 
||
 
*The book claims that Latter-day Saints do not believe that "God is not a man" in spite of Biblical verses that state such.
 
||
 
*[[Do Mormons believe that "God is a man"|God is a man?]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Numbers|23|19}}
 
*{{s|1|Samuel|15|29}}
 
*{{s||Hosea|11|9}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====137====
 
||
 
*God is a Spirit.
 
||
 
*[[God is a Spirit]]
 
||
 
*{{s||John|4|24}}
 
*{{s||Luke|24|39}}
 
*Gordon B. Hinckley, "The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," ''Ensign'', Oct. 5, 1986.
 
|-
 
|
 
====149====
 
||
 
*The author claims that the title "Son of Man," does not mean "son of ''a'' man," contrary to what "Mormons" may assert.
 
||
 
*[[Becoming Gods#"Son of Man" or "son of a man?"|"Son of Man" or "son of a man?"]]
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
|}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 6: Siblings from Eternity Past===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====154, 392n14====
 
||
 
*The book claims that Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother "through some kind of sexual union" clothed each of us with a spirit body.
 
||
 
*[["Celestial sex"|"Celestial sex"]]
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|13|285, 575n21 (HB) 573n21 (PB)}}
 
||
 
*Bruce R. McConkie, ''Mormon Doctrine'', 750.
 
*John A. Widtsoe, ''A Rational Theology'', p. 69
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====156, 394 n. 28-31====
 
||
 
*The belief in a "Heavenly Mother" is not supported by scripture and was simply added by Joseph Smith so that his views about God "would make sense."
 
||
 
*[[Heavenly Mother]]
 
||
 
*Milton R. Hunter, ''The Gospel Through the Ages'', p. 98.
 
*Cannon, in Daniel H. Ludlow, vol. 2, p. 961.
 
*Bruce R. McConkie, ''Mormon Doctrine'', p. 516.
 
*Gordon B. Hinckley, "Daughters of God," ''Ensign'', Nov. 1991, p. 100.
 
|-
 
|
 
====157====
 
||
 
*The book claims that according to Brigham Young, our spirit body was created via a sexual union of Heavenly Father and Mother.
 
||
 
*[["Celestial sex"|"Celestial sex"]]
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|13|285, 573n21}}
 
||
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Brigham Young|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_11/Personality_of_God,_etc.|vol=11|pages=123}}.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====162====
 
||
 
*The Latter-day Saint belief in a "queen of heaven" is claimed to be a "pagan" belief.
 
||
 
*[[Heavenly Mother]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Jeremiah|7|17-19}}
 
*{{s||Jeremiah|44|17-19}}
 
*{{s||Jeremiah|44|25-27}}
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 7: After All We Can Do===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====183====
 
||
 
*Latter-day Saints are said to reject the "Evangelical belief" that "Christ was born of the virgin Mary, who, when the Holy Ghost came upon her, miraculously conceived the promised messiah."
 
||
 
*This claim is false.
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|18-21}}
 
*[[Jesus Christ's conception]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Isaiah|7|14}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====184====
 
||
 
*{{AuthorQuote|"Until recently, the common belief clearly implied throughout the history of Mormonism...was that Jesus' conception occurred via sexual intercourse between Heavenly Father (Elohim) and Mary."}}
 
||
 
*[[../Use of sources/The Book of Mormon and Jesus Christ's conception|The Book of Mormon and Jesus Christ's conception]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Luke|1|35}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|14}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|16-18}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|20}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|24}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|26-28}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|11|32-33}}
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====185, 405n41====
 
||
 
*The book claims that early LDS leaders redefined "virgin" to mean a woman who has never known a ''mortal'' man, since Heavenly Father is immortal.
 
||
 
*This is the author's conclusion. The author wants to talk about a "sexual union" again, but the statement he uses in his citation in the endnotes says nothing about redefining "virgin" to mean a woman who has never known a mortal man. It is certainly true that Latter-day Saints believe Jesus Christ to be the literal son of our Heavenly Father, but the author takes liberties in drawing his conclusions about the event.
 
*[[Jesus Christ's conception]]
 
||
 
*Joseph F. Smith, Charles Penrose, "Message of the First Presidency," vol. 5, p. 34. "...his unique status in the flesh as the offspring of a mortal mother and of an immortal, or resurrected and glorified, Father"
 
|-
 
|
 
====187, 406n54-55====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that Latter-day Saints reject the idea that the death of Jesus on the cross was a significant part of the atonement.
 
||
 
*This statement is false.
 
*[[Atonement not carried out on the cross|Atonement not carried out on the cross?]]
 
||
 
*Cky Carrigan, "Did Jesus Christ Die on the Cross to Pay for Our Sins?: A Survey of Mormon Teachings on the Atonement of Christ," Annual Meeting of the Evangelical Ministries to New Religions, Biola University, Jan. 25, 2003.
 
|-
 
|
 
====201====
 
||
 
*The third and highest kingdom of glory has three levels, and only those who reach the highest level become gods.
 
||
 
* [[Three degrees of glory not biblical|Three degrees of glory]]
 
*[[Deification of man|Human deification/''theosis'']]
 
||
 
*Bruce R. McConkie, ''Mormon Doctrine'', "Those who obtain exaltation will gain all power and thus themselves be omnipotent...Godhood is to have the character, possess the attributes, and enjoy the perfections which the Father has. It is to do what he does, have the powers resident in him, and live as he lives."
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====201====
 
||
 
*The book claims that the "three heaven" doctrine has no basis in the Bible, but is only based upon a vision of Joseph Smith.
 
||
 
*{{b|2|Corinthians|12|2}}
 
*{{b|1|Corinthians|15|40-41}}
 
*[[Three degrees of glory not biblical]]
 
||
 
*{{s||DC|76||}}
 
|}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 8: Ye Are Gods===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====205====
 
||
 
*The author claims that many Bible verses refute the notion of deification, contrary to LDS beliefs.
 
||
 
*[[Deification of man]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Isaiah|43||10}}
 
*{{s|1|Timothy|2|5}}
 
*{{s||James|2|19}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====213====
 
||
 
*The concept of "deification" is claimed to have actually been derived from Greek philosophy.
 
||
 
*[[Deification of man#The concept of deification derived from Greek philosophy?|The concept of deification derived from Greek philosophy?]]
 
||
 
*
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 9: More Than One Wife===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====225====
 
||
 
*The author claims that in "Mormon" theology, "creating" includes not only making a world, but peopling it through procreating, through sexual union with one's spouse.
 
||
 
*[["Celestial sex"|"Celestial sex"]]
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|13|285, 573n21}}
 
||
 
*Melodie Moench Charles, "The Need for a New Mormon Heaven," ''Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought'', Fall 1988, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 77-78. The reference to "sexual union" comes from Melodie Moench Charles.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====226====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the statement in the 1835 D&C condemning polygamy was "perhaps in an attempt to conceal Smith's affair."
 
||
 
*[[1835 Doctrine and Covenants denies polygamy]]
 
||
 
*D&C CI:4 (1835 edition), p. 251.
 
|-
 
|
 
====233, 422n47====
 
||
 
*Latter-day Saints believed that plural marriage was necessary for deification in the Celestial Kingdom.
 
||
 
*[[Polygamy a requirement for exaltation]]
 
||
 
*J.W. Musser, "The New And Everlasting Covenant Of Marriage: An Interpretation Of Celestial Marriage, Plural Marriage, Polygamy."
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====233, 422n48-49====
 
||
 
*Brigham Young said, "The only men who become Gods, even the Sons of God, are those who enter into polygamy."
 
||
 
*[[The only men who become gods are those that practice polygamy?]]
 
||
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Brigham Young|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_11/Delegate_Hooper%E2%80%94Beneficial_Effects_of_Polygamy,_etc.|vol=11|pages=269}}.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====237====
 
||
 
*{{AuthorQuote|"Although wives continued to live with their husbands, they would receive conjugal visits from Smith whenever the need arose."}}
 
||
 
*This statement is false. The sources quoted in the endnotes do not say anything about "conjugal visits" to women to whom Joseph was sealed who already had husbands for time.
 
*[[Joseph Smith and polygamy]]
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Van Wagoner:Mormon Polygamy|pages=62}}
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Jedediah Grant|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Power_of_God_and_the_Power_of_Satan|vol=2|pages=14}}.
 
|-
 
|
 
====237, 424n71====
 
||
 
*Zina Huntington married Brigham Young while still married to Henry Jacobs, and Henry stood as a witness.
 
||
 
*{{Wyatt-Zina}}
 
||
 
*{{CriticalWork:Compton:Sacred Loneliness|pages=20, 48-49}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====237, 425n73-75====
 
||
 
*The author claims that "wife swapping" was "wholly acceptable."
 
||
 
*{{FalseStatement}}
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|Chapter_13#295.2C_580n81-62_.28PB.29}}
 
* Grant's quote (see right) is about consecrating everything to God's service: money, wives, etc.  It does not sanction "wife swapping."
 
||
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Jedediah M. Grant|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Power_of_God_and_the_Power_of_Satan|vol=2|pages=14}}.
 
*Lee, ''Confessions of John D. Lee'', p. 165
 
*C.F. Keil and F. Delitzsch, ''Commentary on the Old Testament'', vol. 1, p. 73.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====237====
 
||
 
*The book claims that the Bible does not sanction or command polygamy. "Most Israelites were monogamous." Abraham's polygamy "portrays his acceptance of plural marriage as a mark of disobedience to, and a lack of faith in, God."
 
||
 
* [[#288|See p. 244]]
 
*[[Polygamy not Biblical]]
 
||
 
*Author's interpretation.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====239, n. 80-83====
 
||
 
*"Early Mormon leaders" believed that Jesus and his apostles were polygamists.
 
||
 
 
 
* [[Was_Jesus_Christ_married/Was_Jesus_a_polygamist|Was Jesus a polygamist]]
 
||
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Jedediah M. Grant|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_1/Uniformity|vol=1|pages=346}}.
 
*{{JDwiki|author=Orson Hyde|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Judgements_of_God_on_the_United_States|vol=2|pages=210}}.
 
*Orson Pratt, "Celestial Marriage," ''The Seer'', vol. 1, no. 11, p. 172.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====240====
 
||
 
*The Book of Mormon "seems to condemn polygamy," but Latter-day Saints "deny that this is the case."
 
||
 
*[[Book of Mormon condemns polygamy]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Jacob|1|15}}
 
*{{s||Jacob|2|24-27}}
 
*{{s||Jacob|3|5}}
 
*The author does not mention {{s||Jacob|2|30}}, which states "For if I will, saith the Lord of Hosts, raise up seed unto me, I will command my people; otherwise they shall hearken unto these things" as the reason that Latter-day Saints "deny that this is the case."
 
|-
 
|
 
====241====
 
||
 
*How could Jesus have been a god before he was born, before he had a physical body?
 
||
 
*[[Jesus Christ/Deification before mortality]]
 
||
 
|-
 
|
 
====241====
 
||
 
*How could the Holy Ghost be a god, since he does not have a physical body?
 
||
 
*[[Holy Ghost/Divinity without a body]]
 
||
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====244====
 
||
 
*{{AuthorQuote|"...nowhere in the Old Testament is polygamy linked with any mandates to practice it."}}
 
||
 
*{{FalseStatement}}
 
* This claim is false; [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yibbum levirate marriage] was mandated by the law of Moses ({{b||Deuteronomy|25|5-6}}).
 
* Even if true, this claim is immaterial.  God did not condemn the practice of plural marriage in the Bible.  If it was everywhere and always forbidden, God could and would have done so.  [[Early_Christians_on_plural_marriage|Early Christian]] authors understood this.
 
* [[Polygamy_not_Biblical]]
 
*[[Polygamy_not_Biblical/No_biblical_mandate_for_plural_marriage|No biblical mandate for plural marriage?]]
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====245, n97====
 
||
 
*Plural marriages were performed after the 1890 Manifesto.
 
||
 
*[[Polygamy after the Manifesto]]
 
||
 
*1911 telegram to Reed Smoot from Joseph F. Smith, Apr. 1, 1911.
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
===Claims made in Chapter 10: The "Christian" Question===
 
{{BeginClaimsTable}}
 
|
 
====255, 434n15====
 
||
 
*The book claims that LDS leaders spent decades denouncing mainstream Christianity.
 
||
 
*[[Did early LDS leaders denounce Christianity|Did early LDS leaders denounce Christianity?]]
 
*{{AbanesUnderGodsOther|5|86, n22-23 (HB)}}
 
||
 
*Joseph Smith, ''EJ", vol. 1, no. 4, p. 60 <nowiki>www.solomonspalding.com/docs/eldjur04.htm </nowiki>
 
*Joseph Smith, ''History of the Church'' 5:218.
 
*Orson Pratt, "Baptism for the Remission of Sins," ''The Seer'', p. 255.
 
*Wilford Woodruff, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/The_Church_and_Kingdom_of_God,_and_the_Churches_and_Kingdoms_of_Men ''Journal of Discourses'', 2:196].
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_5/Nebuchadnezzar%E2%80%99s_Dream,_etc. ''Journal of Discourses'' 5:73].
 
*Heber C. Kimball, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_5/Oneness_of_the_Priesthood,_etc. ''Journal of Discourses'' 5:89-90].
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_5/The_United_States_Administration_and_Utah_Army ''Journal of Discourses'' 5:229].
 
*John Taylor, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_2/Persecutions,_Duties,_and_Privileges_of_the_Saints ''Journal of Discourses'' 2:25].
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_8/Civilization%E2%80%94Missionary_Labours ''Journal of Discourses'' 8:171].
 
*Brigham Young, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_8/Persecution%E2%80%94The_Kingdom_of_God ''Journal of Discourses'' 8:199].
 
*John Taylor, [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Journal_of_Discourses/Volume_13/How_to_Know_the_Things_of_God ''Journal of Discourses'' 13:225].
 
*Andrew Jenson, ''Collected Discourses'' 2:150.
 
*B.H. Roberts, ''The Mormon Doctrine of Diety'', p. 116.
 
*Bruce R. McConkie, ''Mormon Doctrine'', pp. 132, 246, 269, 314-315.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====256====
 
||
 
*The Book of Mormon teaches that there are only two churches: 1) the false church of the devil and 2) the true church of the Lamb.
 
||
 
*[[Great and abominable church]]
 
||
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|13|4-9}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|13|24-29}}
 
*{{s|1|Nephi|14|10-13}}
 
*D&C 19-21
 
|-
 
|
 
====257====
 
||
 
*It is claimed that the "ongoing condemnation of Christianity" is "built into the very core of Mormonism as a central tenet."
 
||
 
*[[Did early LDS leaders denounce Christianity|Did early LDS leaders denounce Christianity?]]
 
||
 
*Author's opinion
 
|-
 
|
 
====262, 440n46====
 
||
 
*The author claims that the "Mormon Jesus" is one of three gods overseeing this planet.
 
||
 
*[[Polytheism]]
 
*[[Becoming Gods#The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"|The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"]]
 
||
 
*Source not specified.
 
|-
 
|
 
====262, 440n46====
 
||
 
*The "Mormon Jesus" is claimed to be the literal brother of Lucifer.
 
||
 
*[[Jesus Christ is the brother of Satan]]
 
*[[Becoming Gods#The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"|The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"]]
 
||
 
*No source specified.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====262, 440n46====
 
||
 
*The "Mormon Jesus" is said to have "atoned only for Adam's transgression," thereby providing us with the opportunity to "obtain 'eternal life' by our own efforts."
 
||
 
*[[Becoming Gods#The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"|The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"]]
 
||
 
*Source not specified.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====262, 440n46====
 
||
 
*The "Mormon Jesus" provides no salvation without accepting Joseph Smith as a prophet of God.
 
||
 
*[[Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief]]
 
*[[Becoming Gods#The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"|The "Mormon Jesus" versus the "Traditional Jesus"]]
 
||
 
*Source not specified.
 
|-
 
|
 
====268====
 
||
 
*The bible does not mention a ''total'' apostasy.
 
||
 
*[[No complete apostasy?]]
 
||
 
*{{s|2|Peter|2|1-2}}
 
*{{s||Acts|20|29-30}}
 
*{{s|2|Timothy|4|3-5}}
 
*{{s|2|Timothy|1|15}}
 
*{{s|2|Thessalonians|2|3}}
 
*{{s|2|Thessalonians|2|7}}
 
|-
 
|
 
====273====
 
||
 
*Baptism for the dead is said to be unbiblical.
 
||
 
*[[Baptism for the dead]]
 
||
 
*No source given.
 
|-
 
|
 
====273, 441n96====
 
||
 
*{{AuthorQuote|"Interestingly, when BYU professor Robert L. Millet attempted to justify baptism for the dead using the Corinthians verse, '''he actually changed the second sentence of biblical text, replacing the word 'they' with 'we.' ''' The substitution, of course, makes it seem as if Paul was saying that he and all the Corinthians were baptizing the dead."}} {{ea}}
 
||
 
*{{FalseStatement}}: The book accuses professor Millet of deceptively changing a word to misrepresent a Biblical verse. In reality, Millet clearly prefaces this change with the heading "Interpretations of Paul’s Words."
 
*For more detail on this claim, see [[../Use of sources/Changing Biblical text|Changing Biblical text]]
 
||
 
**Robert L. Millet, [http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD&locale=0&sourceId=cd2971ec9b17b010VgnVCM1000004d82620a____&hideNav=1 "I Have a Question,"] ''Ensign'', Aug. 1987, p. 19.
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====274-276====
 
||
 
*The need for the Aaronic priesthood ceased and was replaced by a new one that is held by all believers.
 
||
 
*[[Hebrews 7 and the Aaronic Priesthood]]
 
*[[Christians don't need a mediating priesthood|Christians don't need a mediating priesthood?]]
 
*[[Is There a "Priesthood of All Believers"?]]
 
||
 
*Hebrews 7-10
 
|-
 
|
 
 
 
====276-279====
 
||
 
*The Melchizedek priesthood was never a literal order of priests. It belonged only to Melchizedek and Christ.
 
||
 
*[[Priesthood non-transferable|Priesthood non-transferable?]]
 
*[[Jesus is the only Melchizedek priesthood holder]]
 
*[[What does the Bible teach about priesthood|Bible teachings about priesthood]]
 
||
 
*{{s||Hebrews|7|24}}
 
*D. Guthrie and J.A. Motyer, eds., ''The Eerdman's Bible Commentary'', p. 1241.
 
{{EndClaimsTable}}
 
 
 
==Endnotes==
 
#{{note|eom.1}} {{EoM1|vol=1|article=April 6|start=61|end=62|author=John Franklin Hall}}
 
#{{note|mclellin.1}} {{MS1|article=History of William E. McLellin|vol=26|date=1864|start=808}}; see also {{HoC1|vol=3|start=31}}
 
#{{note|mclellin.2}} Quinn, ''Origins of Power'', 44.
 
#{{note|mclellin.3}} {{MS1|article=History of William E. McLellin|vol=26|date=1864|start=808}}; see also {{HoC1|vol=3|start=31}}
 
 
 
=Further reading=
 
{{FAIRAnalysisWiki}}
 
 
 
{{Suggestions}}
 

Latest revision as of 17:52, 30 November 2016