No Middle Ground: The Debate over the Authenticity of the Book of Mormon

Title

No Middle Ground: The Debate over the Authenticity of the Book of Mormon

Book Title

Historicity and the Latter-day Saints

Publication Type

Book Chapter

Chapter

7

Year of Publication

2001

Authors

Editors

Hoskisson, Paul Y. (Secondary)

Pagination

149-170

Publisher

Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University

City

Provo, UT

Abstract

The authenticity of the Book of Mormon has been under attack since before the book was published. While the Book of Mormon has been called everything from fiction and fraud to the product of demonic possession, the current argument against its authenticity seeks to find a “middle ground” between these claims and what the Book of Mormon itself claims to be—inspired writings of ancient prophets. The “middle-ground” genre of attack professes that the Book of Mormon can still be scripture, in that it inspires and motivates, even though the people and events detailed therein, and Joseph Smith’ s account of angelic visitors and gold plates, are not historically true. This type of argument is invalid because we cannot accept as simply motivational that which claims to be historical reality.

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Subject Keywords

Theology
Translation
Revelation
Historicity
Authorship
Book of Mormon
Smith, Joseph, Jr.

Bibliographic Citation

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