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MormonTimes.com: DNA may help family research, but it won't prove or disprove Book of Mormon
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But I'll concede that the NHM stone might constitute one piece of evidence for the Book of Mormon. Add in chiasmus, wordprints, etc., and what you have -- in my honest opinion -- is a fairly weak circumstantial case. To be honest, you then have to balance that case -- fairly and rigorously -- with all the evidence on the other side: DnA, paleobotany, archaology, linguistics, parallels between the Book of Mormon and influences in Joseph Smith's own culture, and more. As someone who has a vested interest in the Book of Mormon being true -- as I've invested a great deal of my life, time, and resources in it -- I'm afraid the balance of the evidence doesn't look good.
An unmistakable spiritual witness might tip the balance back in the other direction, but for me and many others, it hasn't made an appearance.
"Simon in Oz" is my good friend, Dr. Simon Southerton, whose book "Losing a Lost Tribe" was among the first to raise the Native American DNA questions.
I bear witness in my heart of hearts that this is true, and his DNA is pure Aussie . . .
BTW, the MA&D board routinely bars people who bring the sort of irrefutable information and facts he possesses to their midsts . . .
The answer and possibilities ar eobvious.
Regarding the animals mention in the Book of Mormon:
There may not have benn very many of them,
How many could they have possibly brought with them?
Did they think to bring both male and female?
Perhaps only the king would have had any,
They could have died off from diseases or predators,
they have been killed off during a famine,
they could have been killed off during the many wars mention in the Book of Mormon
Do you know how rapidly a dead animal can disappear in nature, especially a jungle? very rapidly.
They may nothing left than trace calcium.
What ever evidence may be left,
Do you know where to look for it?
The answer are numerous and the possibilies many, and science can not eliminate any of them.
Regarding mining and smelting of ore in the Book of Mormon:
What was the extent the mining smelting mention in the Book of Mormon?
NO one Knows for sure. Or where to look.
How many were taught how to do this? How many actually practiced it?
Teaching mining and smelting or ore and doing it are two different things.
All knowledge could have been lost during the many wars mentioned in the Book of Mormon.
How much was actually made out iron or other metals?
chariots can be made out of wood,
weapons can be made out wood and stone,
Iron things may be nothing more that rust, other metals nothing more than some oxidation somewhere.
Where do you look for this trace rust and oxidation?
If any evidence does exist, where do you look?
Again many answers and possiblites, and science can not elimante any of them.
The problem is not with the DNA, it is with the closed minds of Mormons.
The evidence is always interesting. To you, it "doesn't look good". To my father, it converted him to Mormonism (from him I learned this all), and countless others who on other discussion boards have had different conclusions than you. And yes, countless others who have not been convinced like you have. It is interesting how the same evidence leads to such different conclusions.
I do accept that people are not always convinced by BOM evidences. Faith is needed, and that spiritual witness does more than "tip the balance", it changes a person's life. Hopefully one day you will discover that faith and spiritual witness.
God bless.
Take the opposing position for a moment: Assume Joseph Smith set out to write the Book of Mormon himself, drawing on the book most familiar to him -- the King James Bible -- for background information on Middle Eastern culture. He used plenty of Semitic or Semitic-sounding names. ("Lehi," for example, is a placename in the Book of Judges.)
Now, Joseph Smith was familiar with the Old Testament book of Nahum. If he could use the Biblical placename "Lehi" for a proper name in the Book of Mormon, he could well use the Biblical name "Nahum" (or a slight variant) for a Book of Mormon placename. So it's not a matter of Joseph Smith simply guessing randomly.
What are the odds that a place in a Semitic-speaking country might have the same name as a Semitic proper name from the Bible. Probably pretty good, I'd bet.
I was inprecise in what I said, and I guess thus wrong. I should have said that no chariots have been found in Philistia. It is true that there have been chariots found in Egypt that are connected with Philistines but that is a different story.
Also, the fact is that there is evidence of both wheels and horses in pre-Columbian America, while there are also many ways that horses may be used for other animals and chariots do not need to have wheels.
You can not approach the Book of Mormon as a modern book, interpret it through modern eyes and then expect to find evidence that supports your theories.
Anyway, you do not want evidence to support the Book of Mormon. You strain evidence to attack it, and ignore anything that might support it as long as you can.
I'm reminded of the OJ jury fixating on the ill-fitting glove, and rejecting the DNA, the blood, the witnesses....
What makes you think that the Nephites dies around Camorah in New York. First off, it is possible there is more than one Hill Cumorah.
Secondly, what is the acceptaed distance of being close by to qualify as "the Land of Cumorah". Thidly, what evidence would we have 1600 years latter of massive amounts of deaths. And fourthly, has anyone ever conducted archeological surveys that would produce evidence of such deaths?
I know the Book of Mormon is true because I have had the Holy Ghost witness to me that it is true.
There are three or more explanations I can think of about Cumorah. One is that Cumorah was a different place. Another is that the battle happen in an area that has not been discovered. A third is that if a mass burning of the remains was done and thus their decomposure was expedited, we would not find any evidence. That might be far fetched, but the first two, especially the second is not. Unless archeological excavations have been done everywhere in New York to levels of at least the AD 400 mark what evidence do you have?
As I tried to explain in previous posts, the ancestry of the "Lamanites" is much more complexed than you are willing to admit.
That the Lamanites as they existed in 400 are the primary ancestors of the Native Americans I do not dispute. That the Lamanites as they existed in 400 were genetically in the main Middle Eastern people is hard to suppose. The best study of the Book of Mormon points to the in mixing of other peoples, who in general became culturally subsumed by the Lamanites, but who represented other genetic origins.
And you have never heard false ideas about DNA from a non-Mormon ever? How old was the alleged child, and why did he have any particular insite on the subject?
I have never heard someone propound such an idea.
However many of you ignore things. Spencer W. Kimball's description of the Book of Mormon as quoted above totally ignores the people of Mulek. He also leaves out Zoram, and those are just the most obvious. He was giving a talk about symbolic ancestry, not a dissertation on the literal process of population growth.
If the horses in the Book of Mormon meant Tapir than why did not God reveal Tapir? God speaks to every man in their own language, and that would have just been too wierd to Joseph.
However, anyone who really wants to study this, go read the FAIR stuff on the subject. There is a place where they explain all about the low number of words. We learn in the Doctrine and COvenants that Joseph had to work it out in his mind. He translated the text, and to a large extent was limited by the small vocabulary of Reformed Egyptian.
As far as the evidence regarding animals, the evidence may be more complex than it appears; e.g.:
-- There are small groups of "Bison" that still exist in Eastern Europe (they used to be all over Europe). American Bison have been used to reinforce their dwindling numbers and genetic capacity.
-- Bison and cattle have been/are successfully crossed; it makes a very mean (but tasty) critter called a "Catalow."
-- All kinds of cat species have crossed both naturally and otherwise.
In addition:
-- Japanese words have been found in the Zuni language; some speculation about shipwrecked Japanese fishermen, etc.
In short -- from a "scientific" perspective, there's just too much we don't know to postulate for sure one way or the other -- scientifically speaking.
For example, 2 Nephi 12:16 shows the following texts:
"And upon all the ships of the sea, and upon all the ships of Tarshish".
Isaiah 2:16 (King James) only has: "And upon all the ships of Tarshish". The greek Septuagint only has "ships of the sea". The Book of Mormon has both.
There are many, many more examples of this where the greek may have a word like "him" may have appeared as "his" in the KJV. The BoM uses the greek replacement.
How did Joseph Smith do this, down to the most suttle of changes? One or two of these could be argued as coincodence, but dozens and dozens of coincodences? Not likely.
The strongest evidence the Book of Mormon has is inside the text itself. The LDS church also removed the words "and" from "If then" statements because it sounded better in english. In reality, this was considered proper form in Hebrew. Again, how could Joseph Smith know this?
However, I KNOW FOR A TRUE FACT THAT DNA IS REAL AND THAT IT CAN PROVE MANY MANY THINGS THE HUMAN EYE CANNOT SEE.
I do have to admit that the mounds of dirt seems somewhat weak.
Why,
A. because any specific location for the Book of Mormon is tenous.
B. How amazing is it that people made mounds of dirt.
C. Can we date these mounds of dirt. If so, does their dating match Book of Mormon times.
All told, I do not think that the mounds of dirt will convince anyone one way or the other.
On the other hand, it is clear that they can not say no one in the Ancient Americas put mounds of dirt around their cities. Well, no that is not clear, since people deny the existence of wheels when there are pre-Columbian wheels in existence.
There is the factor of religious adversion to using wheels on a large scale that needs to be considered.
You can not use DNA for people you do not have DNA of.
And even then you must compare it to something.
DNA only shows to a degree how much 2 dna samples match. NO name magicallly pops up in test.
Testing individual DNa can tell what it is dna of ( human feline etc), and only in a general sense who its mother line is and its father line. And this assumes you can get "good" sample dna.
The older your source the harder it get a good sample even with good preservation, and even harder to get the fathers line dna.
So while it's good for criminal cases or paternity or maternity cases where has two perfect sample to test,
that's much different that the usefulness for archealogical or anthropolical study where you don't have that, and even when can get some dna it usaully only the mothers part.
And everything must inferred or intrapolated from what you CAN get, just a tiny-very-limited-narrow picture if the-past.
They have found ancient Chilean mummies that are of Semitic origin, with NO Asian DNA markers in them.
They have found elephant bones in Califoria. They have found evidence of mastadons in both North and South America.
People have criticized the idea that people came from the Middle East, but they've found proof that it did happen.
They cricitized the idea that ancient people used metallic plates to record ideas, but they've found multiple examples of this.
They've found evidence of many of the weapons, tools, and ores that were used in the BoM, even though they were all heavily criticized at one point or another.
Time will prove the validity of the BoM, whether it's due to continuing future archaelogical advances or after Christ comes again. The BoM is literal, not figurative, and time will prove that. But proof isn't what's important right now. Right now, faith is. We're never going to get anywhere spiritually if we don't have faith.
Do we know what DNA markers the people in the Middle East would have had in 600BC? We seem to forget that there have been all sorts of intermixings of various peoples since then, with influzes from Europe, Central Asia and Arabia.
How different are different DNA samples. How much does the relevant DNA mutate over 2500 plus years? Are the studies of Native American DNA related to Mitochondrian or Y DNA?
Even the case for DNA in the court room is over simplified at times.
Here we are trying to decide if DNA is more like group X or group Y, yet with things like the Jaredite issue, and how did Sharem not know Jacob? we end up with a lot of "not stated x or y" DNA.
Or are you just blowing smoke to cover your actual lack knowledge of DNA?
If you are not willing to share then what is the point of you comment?
As you said don't be afraid, it won't hurt you, unless of course you have something to hide.
And why do you Anti-mormons and others ignore the evidence that does exist?
Because it challenges your world view of things?
You look at the evidence then draw conclusions, you don't make conclusions then conveniently ignore the facts that don't fit.
Those in the know have made it very clear DNA does not disprove the BoM claims.
And other science and studies have not proven the BoM wrong either.
And in fact seems give it more creedence.
When the anti's and other won't even listen to the experts and scientists, what can you do?
Don't reject the truth just because you don't like the source.
If you base your belief on faith, then why not just say so? Its far better than making yourself look foolish by saying that DNA evidence can be used to trace your ancestors as long as they aren't American Indians.
Have a great day.
PS- Before calling someone brainwashed, please look in the mirror (that goes for everyone on here)
"To Freddie,
I do have to admit that the mounds of dirt seems somewhat weak. Why,
A. because any specific location for the Book of Mormon is tenous."
The location 'ud be where the mounts of dirt are.... seems.
"B. How amazing is it that people made mounds of dirt."
Very rare. That's why mounds are interesting. Europe for example, used castles and moats for city defense.
"C. Can we date these mounds of dirt?"
Yes. They're as old as... dirt.
"If so, does their dating match Book of Mormon times."
To my knowledge, no one can date dirt.
"All told, I do not think that the mounds of dirt will convince anyone one way or the other."
Just one small but interesting tidbit.
Sounds like you want nag at others rather than talk about DNA. You seem to think you know it all, and have the right to make judgments of others. I am happy that you have such an uplifting testimony of the church and rich life, that you can spend time, and set around, and find fault and belittle others.
Although, I am not professing to be a great or perfect Mormon, or a holier than thou guy, I still wonder about the connections of any DNA , if there is any, to the the Lamanites.
Hebrew doesn't have vowels, so the Hebrew name NHM is (nun-chet-men). But since we don't know what vowels were supposed to be used, any other vowel permutation is equally likely: Nahum, Niham, Noham, Nuhim, Nuham and so on (25 different combinations are possible in fact, 30 if the second vowel is left out completely). So to appeal to the inscripton "NHM" as proving the location "Nahom" is really unfounded.
In any case, this is not the first time LDS explorers have tried to match a location with the place Nahom. If it is so easy to locate, why the continued list of contenders? After all, in Biblical geography, we know there is one Jericho (located), one Babylon (located), one Nazareth (located), and so on. Mormons can't even positively locate one supposed town from the Book of Mormon.
To make matters worse for the LDS apologists, the only evidence we have for the correct vowel-substitution/pronunciation of NHM is the extant pronunciation: "Nihm".
The 522 page BOM reports to be a history of Ancient American civilizations, covering a period of about 2000 years. My question is, how can scientists make any specific claim, either for or against the BOM, with such a small record?
Not only that, let's break it down from there.
-The Book of Ether, which is the Jaredite record, is only 15 chapters in length. Could anyone possibly write a specific, detailed history of a civilization which existed for 1000 years, and do so in only 15 short chapters?
-The Book of Jacob to the Book of Omni, which included the Allegory of the Olive Tree, covers a period of about 240 years, in only 10 chapters,
-4th Nephi, which is only one brief chapter, covers a period of about 250 years.
The fact is, we don't really have much to go on with the BOM. Therefore, speculation can be as big as the Grand Canyon and all ideas can be examined.
Where was the Garden of Eden? Has research shown what Adam and Eve's race was?
Where is Noah's Ark? Can science explain how Noah got two of every animal onto the Ark? After which, the animals dispersed to various locations throughout the world, making certain species unique to certain locations?
Has research shown that Abraham even existed? Some Christian scholars state Abraham did not exist but was just a metaphor.
How exactly did Moses part the Red Sea? Has any scientist been able to dupicate this? Where's the evidence that the Children of Israel wondered in the wilderness for 40 years?
If the four gospels of the New Testament give a detailed, accurate account of the life of Jesus, why were they written some 40 to 70 years after the fact? And why does the Gospel of Matthew sound like it was copied from the Gospel of Mark?
If Bible evidence boils down to, "There's an actual Babylon, Jericho and Nazareth, and they're each mentioned in the Bible, so that proves the Bible is true," that's HARDLY solid proof.
Mark Twain read it and said it was "chloroform in print." I concur.
I never said the Bible was true. I said that there is ample archeological and geographical support for certain locations and certain events mentioned in the Bible. The Book of Mormon cannot make the same claim.
You wanted to know where the Garden of Eden is located. Joseph Smith said it was located in Jackson County, Missouri.
I think DNA is a wonderful thing for connecting people. I often watch forensic science tv, and it always delights me to no end when they catch the bad guy using DNA to match a person to a crime.
The same logic -- "Ignore the evidence and just have faith" -- could support belief in any religion.
As a believer, I have read all the contradicting "theories" by critics as to how the Book of Mormon came to be. If it is so obviously a fraud without a shred of evidence as critics say, then why do critics disagree on its origins (Joseph Smith, Spaulding manual, View of the Hebrews, etc.). If the book is a fraud, the difficulty is explaining its origin within the historical context.
Does anyone know which particular printing of the King James Bible was used as the Smith family Bible? Was it an annotated version, cross-referencing the verses with commentaries? Did Joseph Smith have access to Bible commentaries, or could he have heard the "ships of the sea" alternative translation from, say, a Methodist preacher who would have been familiar with Wesley's commentary?
If so, the "ships of Tarshish/ships of the sea" reference looks a lot less remarkable.
That has been my experience too. There was a time when I so desperately wanted to believe it was all true, that I was actually able to convince myself it was. Once I let go of the need to believe, life became much easier and made a whole lot more sense.
Believe whatever you want, but life really is a lot less complicated once you stop trying to put round pegs into square holes.
I read a wonderful National Geographic special addition of the Mayan culture the other day. I'm no FARMs expert but nothing in there seemed to even hint of Hebrew, Jewish, Middle Eastern, or Old Testiment influence. NHM, Chiasmus and other "evidence" has to be stretched a great deal to fit and all of it has a more plausible alternate explanation. I'm embarrassed that the Church actually pays some people to try to explain that horses were really deer and chariots possibly sleds. And why the two most prominent words/images in Mayan culture - maize and leopards - are not even hinted at in the BofM is a whole different question.
The bottom line for me is that our search for evidence is a losing (if not lost) battle. Instead, it enlightens and strengthens our understanding of the Savior and atonement. And that's the only evidence I need!
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