What? No one even took note of my assuming the role of Superman in my previous reply?
Oh, well ... on to my real response:
KG:
Will, I was looking over the MAD thread tonight and I have to ask... do you have a split personality disorder?
Yes.
Well, no.
I mean, it hasn’t been diagnosed yet … so … maybe.
Because sometimes it sounds like you’re coming to your senses when you make reasonably well thought posts, but then today…. Jesus.
Why are you offering prayer in mid-sentence?
You’re more of a jackass to him than you ever were when you and I used to go at it over a year ago.
Yeah, well I did it all with a smile on my face and a prayer in my heart. So get over it. When my condescending put downs reach the frequency and level of expertise to which you have attained, then I’ll start to be worried about it. Until then, I’m not going to wallow in any faux self-condemnation.
All he is doing is what you said you would also do if it were not for your testimony premise.
You’ve trotted out my alleged “confession” several times recently, almost as though it were a trophy, but in doing so absent its full context, you’re attempting to attribute to me an attitude I do not hold. But more on that below …
I got a kick out of DCP running to your defense when the Dude tried to calm you down.
I’m always thoroughly entertained by how you can color things with your own peculiar spin of interpretation. LOL. “Calm me down”? Yeah, I was pretty worked up as I was heaping sarcastic invective on poor LittleRicky. Believe me, I’m never so calm as when I’m serving up sarcasm. That it’s a character flaw – well, that much I recognize. But my recognition of the bad habit doesn’t seem to make it any less gratifying. I’m hoping to lose my appetite for it some day, or at least to reduce my consumption to a more respectable level. In the meantime I’m resigned to my apparent incorrigibility.
I’m tempted to start some threads here but I don’t know if you’ll stick around.
Well, I can tell you right now that I’m absolutely certain that I don’t have your level of stamina for the discussion. I’m quite certain you could stay up night and day for a solid week if I chose to accommodate you. And for every 100 words I produced, you would produce 1000. Whether that’s a credit to your scholarly preparation or your lack of literary economy remains for others to decide.
In any event, I have decided to answer this once to the best of my ability – then I will no doubt revert to my previous policy of permitting you to pursue your polemical pasttime unimpeded by my pestering impudence. (Say
that ten times fast!)
So, you produce the following two quotes from me:
”As to the so-called "controversy" surrounding the circumstances of its production, I would venture to say that I've looked into the details at least as fully and carefully as anyone ever has. I have come to regard the Book of Abraham as essentially divorced from the Kirtland Egyptian Papers, rather than a derivative from them. I think the Book of Abraham derives from an entirely different process than the one at work with the production of the KEP.”
And:
“…if I were an outsider looking in at all of this, I find it difficult to believe that I could be persuaded that the production of the Book of Abraham was anything other than a clumsy imposture perpetrated by Joseph Smith upon his followers. But, of course, I’m not. I came into the discussion already possessing a conviction that the Book of Abraham was divinely-inspired scripture.”
You insinuate that these are incompatible statements. They aren’t. The key phrase in the second quote is “.. if I were an outsider looking in …” I’m not. (Neither are you for that matter.) Nevertheless, I can easily see how someone like a Robert Ritner (or even Chris Smith) would come to the conclusions they do.
But this is not a simple set of questions we are dealing with. There are complexities galore. Metcalfe, Ashment, Marquardt, et al have worked very hard to make it all seem like a set of very simple equations. And people like you have bought into that paradigm for the discussion.
But I couldn’t disagree more.
There is so much more than meets the eye when it comes to the artifacts and circumstances surrounding the production of the Book of Abraham. There is such a complicated dynamic associated with this particular time in LDS Church history, and particularly with the whole Egyptian project and how it was so inextricably related to Joseph Smith’s attempts to incorporate his many talented lieutenants into the revelatory process. Failing to take into consideration all of these peripheral elements of the story is to fail to see all the possibilities for what the Kirtland Egyptian Papers represent. I don’t know if you’ve bothered to listen to Sam Brown’s address from the most recent Sunstone symposium. I think I emailed it to you. Sam touches upon just one small aspect of the dynamic to which I refer.
Make no mistake, I
do recognize the reasons why people lose faith over this issue. That said, (and I’ll use you as the prime example here, although I am speaking also of many others)
I think you have misinterpreted key pieces of evidence and closed your mind to the other possibilities that are suggested by that evidence.Still, I do not currently possess what I have frequently termed a “unified theory” of the KEP. I’m not certain such a thing can
ever be formulated absent further documentary data, or a return from the dead of the principals involved. What I have come to a firm conclusion about, however, is that the primary premise of the theory propounded by the principal critics is fatally flawed. Simply put, KEPA Mss. #2 and #3 (Metcalfe’s 1a and 1b) are
NOT the transcripts of the original oral dictation of Joseph Smith’s “translation” of the Book of Abraham. Of that I would say I am 99% certain.
Now, it
could still be that there was no Abraham text present on the scrolls Joseph Smith possessed, and it
could still be that Joseph Smith (and/or Williams, Cowdery, Parrish, et al) believed that the text adjacent to the lion couch vignette (the so-called
Book of Breathings) was the Egyptian source of the Book of Abraham “translation.” But it’s
not because Mss. #2 and #3 are the so-called “translation documents.” I am convinced that the text appearing on the two manuscripts was originally “translated” several months prior to the time Williams and Parrish sat down to create those documents. I have prepared a paper for ultimate submission to FROB on this topic, but I have promised Brian Hauglid that I will not submit it until after his critical edition of the KEP is published. Indeed, my obligations require me to delay any submission of the paper until the images of the KEP are formally released to the public. But I will state that the primary premise will be that KEPA Mss. #2 and #3 are
copies of one or more predecessor documents.
Now, please don’t launch into an elaborate explication of why it is “obvious” that they are documents that were created simultaneously from oral dictation, etc., etc., etc. Believe me, I’m fully aware of every item of “evidence” you would cite to that end. I’ve been looking at those two manuscripts for over a year now. I have 4 megapixel high-res scans that I can blow up and see all the various details. Brian and the guys at BYU are working with .tif files that are 10x more detailed, in addition to their frequent examination, under microscope and otherwise, of the originals.
I am also quite aware of the “evidence” that
seems to suggest a simultaneous dictation effort. I will simply say that,
when weighed against the evidence of visual copying, the dictation theory fails. (And I might add that the evidence of copying is certainly not exclusively text-critical. Indeed, a significant component in disproving the simultaneous dictation theory is the
historical evidence. We know what Joseph Smith and these various scribes were doing, and when.
But let me continue, or I’ll never get through this – and it’s already entailed my expending more time than I ever intended …
Of course, this next paragraph comprises your stock answer:
What you did here was admit, however unwittingly, that your perspective is biased to the bone and is determined through the lens of a preexisting theological conviction. But when you post at MAD you make it seem like you are an objective researcher whose analysis is supposed to carry some weight. Your analysis and conclusion are both theologically driven.
Well, in the first place, there is no such thing as an “objective researcher” when it comes to this particular topic.
Everyone has an agenda. Everyone’s conclusions are colored by one bias or another. And that’s the way it is with everything. Furthermore, I assure you that I suffer from no delusions about my analysis and conclusions carrying any great weight in the arena of LDS apologetics. I am acutely conscious of the fact that what I say – my meager contributions to the debate – are given little more respect in apologetic circles than they are among you happy revelers here in Shadyburg. I am not a “player” in the same sense that someone like Kevin Barney or Matt Roper (and many others) are “players” in field of LDS apologetics – nor do I aspire to be, contrary to your occasional suggestions otherwise. I’m just an average Joe with an opinion and an irresistible urge to express it on occasion.
Nevertheless, when it comes to the question of “objectivity,” there is a great book you should someday take the time to read:
http://www.amazon.com/That-Noble-Dream- ... 0521357454So, throwing out condemnations of subjectivity will get you nowhere. Subjectivity on this issue (and most others) is a given. Objectivity is a myth. Next question …
I often see you referring to your personal “examination” and “estimation” as if you’re in a position to give a meaningful analysis.
Indeed, I am. According to the terms to which I have referred above. And within the context of my rather unique access to superb images of the KEP, and within the context of my being good friends with Brian Hauglid, John Gee, and some others who are and have been involved in the study of these questions.
I know you have been privy to some nice photos of the KEP, but you still can’t get around the bias factor. You’re far more biased than any critic could ever hope to become.
Yes. I get it. You consider me a biased source. (Yawn …) See above.
Apologists need the KEP to be divorced from the Book of Abraham more than the critics need it to be related.
Patently untrue.
Indeed,
the current critical argument is absolutely dependent on the assertion that KEPA #2 and #3 are the “translation working papers” – transcripts of the original oral dictation. And, even in the face of the evidence to the contrary, they will probably continue to adhere to their theory for a good long while. After all, it’s the best thing to come along in the field of anti-Mormon studies since Joseph Smith’s money-digging trial. Alas, all good things must come to an end …
The fact that you can see the texts up close and personal, doesn’t change the fact that you have an established record of claiming to see things that simply aren’t there.
Yawn … again.
Apparently Royal Skousen, one of the most widely-respected textual analysts currently practicing, is also yielding to his “theologically-driven” bias since he has categorically, and for the record, stated that he can also see the things I have seen – those things “that simply aren’t there.”
Joseph Smith screwed the pooch on facsimile 3 …
Your vocabulary is really expanding these days! Kinda makes “circle jerk” seem PG-13 by comparison.
Joseph Smith claimed he could translate Egyptian.
I don’t recall ever actually reading where Joseph Smith claimed he could translate Egyptian. I may be mistaken, but I don’t recall ever seeing such a thing. Perhaps you could dig it up for our mutual benefit.
Even so, I entirely concur with the consensus opinion in the matter:
Joseph Smith could not translate Egyptian. At least not as I understand the term “translation.”
On the other hand, I believe Joseph Smith was one hell of a medium for revelation.
I already demonstrated that Dan Peterson’s Ensign article called upon a couple of such “evidences” that he felt were impressive, but were easily accessible facts in Joseph Smith’s day. How many of these “parallels” must we knock down before you give up this gambit?
I guess I missed the part where the parallels with ancient Abrahamic lore have been “knocked down.” Oh, I’ve seen several far-fetched suggestions that Joseph Smith had “easy access” to this information, and I can allow for the possibility that he had read Dick and Josephus, but I have yet to be persuaded in the least that any possibly extant sources (of which there were scant few!) could explain the way in which Joseph Smith crafted the Book of Abraham.
I’m not sure where you think I declared “victory” about anything. In any case, I don’t consider Chris’ assertion of his own conjectures to constitute a rebuttal of the conjectural possibilities I offered as explanations for the problems in the KEPA manuscripts at Abr. 1:12. I am content to simply note that there was obviously some confusion as to how to phrase the reference tying the text to the illustration. I don’t think anyone can authoritatively say why. I will state that Chris’ assertion suggested here:
As for my own explanation of this particular emendation, I find myself strongly sympathizing with Metcalfe here. As I'm sure you recall, Metcalfe believes that the confusion was caused because Joseph Smith-- who was dictating to his two scribes-- changed his mind in mid-sentence. He had originally dictated "that is lying before you" and then changed to "at the commencement of this record." This seems plausible to me. It also is not clear to me that Williams' "at the commencement of this record" was strictly an afterthought. The line begins to stray upward as early as "I will refer you to the illustration," without which the sentence would be incomplete. "That is at the" continues to stray upwards, and "commencement of this record" is written in the interlinear space created thereby.
is completely without merit in my opinion. The interlinear insertion commenced with a parenthesis, which overlaid the first line of the following paragraph. Then Williams, recognizing that he could not insert the full phrase intended in the space following the parenthesis, commenced writing “I will refer you …” even further above – the word “will” rising to avoid the top of the parenthesis. He then proceeds to write the remainder of the line to “that is at the …” and then finishes the line by starting with “commencement …” immediately after the parenthesis. There is no closing parenthesis.
Anyway, the Metcalfe explanation endorsed by Chris is not supported by the text-critical evidence. Why exactly both Williams and Parrish show confusion at that phrase is difficult to surmise. I suggest that it is consequent to some confusion being present in the parent document from which they were copying. Certainly other explanations are possible. I look forward to some being offered after the KEP are available to a much wider audience.
Now, in conclusion, I want to emphasize a point that, although you view it as a negative in my personal attempts to understand the KEP and the origins of the Book of Abraham, I rather view it as my “Ace in the Hole” when it comes to these questions.
I regard the Book of Abraham as probably the single most doctrinally-important text in the LDS canon. While it is true that the Book of Mormon serves as the primary witness of the mission of Joseph Smith, and as the vanguard of the restoration scriptures, I would argue that it is the Book of Abraham that provides LDS theology with its most philosophically potent concepts; the basis for the distinct theological ontologiy that we possess.
Because of the Book of Abraham, we possess an understanding of the concepts undergirding the divine council; its reality and import; the desire of that council that all have the opportunity to join them in course of time. We also understand the reality of premortal existence, with its corollary of our co-eternal status with God himself. We also come to understand the purposes for which we have been placed in this mortal environment and the stakes of our current existence – all expressed with a clarity and eloquence that no other text communicates.
Perhaps most of all, we come to understand that God is interested in entering into a covenant and a personal relationship with us that mirrors the relationship he sought with Abraham, a relationship that entails Him inviting us to learn of Him and to one day, with His assistance, to
become like Him –
One with Him, as it were.
Before I ever read the Book of Abraham, these concepts were known to me. They are engraven on my heart and imprinted on my very soul. I know they are true because they are literally a part of me. Notwithstanding the veil of the flesh that obscures my mind and memory, I am still cognizant of the fact that
I have always known these things. Reading the Book of Abraham for the first time simply presented an opportunity for the principles and concepts contained therein to strike a resonant chord with those strings of memory already embedded within my very being.
So, I agree with you that there is
nothing that could persuade me that the Book of Abraham is not an expression of God’s truth. I
know that it is. That is not a conviction that is subject to revision or rejection at this stage of the game. I could no more reject the concepts and principles embodied by the Book of Abraham than I could reach into my chest and rip out my own heart.
Indeed, in a way, I’m not entirely surprised to see the controversy surrounding this most unique book. I suspect that God wants to see who will believe in it on the basis of reasons similar to the ones I have just expressed: because of its
resonance with the inward sensibilities of those who come in contact with it. Those who are inclined by their very nature to see themselves within the context of the ontological realties that the Book of Abraham embodies will then naturally gravitate towards Him and partake of His fulness. Those who, for whatever reason, do not feel that they are adapted to that realm, will no doubt feel a profound revulsion to the concepts that would inevitably lead them there. In this fashion, the Book of Abraham is serving as a great sifter – ironically acting simultaneously as both the primary justification for some to draw near to Him and for others to be repelled, as though it possessed some mystical intrinsic gravity; the philosophical and spiritual energy of its
logos alone producing the centrifugal and centripetal forces necessary to effect this final division.
So, while I may continue to explore with great zeal the questions surrounding the production of the Book of Abraham, I do so from a stance of firm conviction regarding its divine origin. And though I admit to a recognition of the difficulties the artifacts of its production present for those whose faith in its words is weak, I nonetheless am not persuaded by the case the critics make for fraud. Indeed, I detect serious inadequacies in many of their arguments.
Still, don’t misunderstand: although I will ultimately submit the paper to which I referred above, I do not flatter myself to be, nor do I even aspire to be a
bona fide apologist. I have always been more interested in the human aspects of this whole issue, hence my desire to produce this unique “documentary” of the effects on
people of this raging controversy. I really
do empathize with someone like you whose faith has been shaken, if not destroyed, by how you have interpreted the various artifacts of the question. I would only try to persuade you to withhold judgment for a while longer; to wait another five years or so to see how things shake down after there are high-quality images of the KEP available to a wide variety of people for a significant period of time. Wait a while longer and see if you can’t be persuaded that there
are reasons to question the conclusions that the critics have propounded for the past forty years. Most of all, change the parameters of your internal debate for a while; revisit the text of the Book of Abraham and see if you don’t recognize therein an articulation of eternal principles that you instinctively know to be true. When presented with the prospects found in this promise:
… they who keep their second estate shall have glory added upon their heads for ever and ever.
I would only hope that you might give the Book of Abraham one more chance to convince you before you cast if off forever. Just one more time, forget everything you think you know about how it came to
be, and try to allow yourself to be moved once again by what it has to
say.
Despite all of our conflicts and jousting and frequent harshness towards each other on this contentious topic, I want you to know that I do greatly respect your evident intellect, your obvious talents, and what I perceive to be your essential goodness of soul. (Notwithstanding your self-identification with General Zod … ;-) I have been deeply saddened by what I have perceived to be your gradually-accelerating alienation from the restored gospel. With so much at stake, I sincerely hope that you will not rashly and prematurely throw it all away on account of things that have never and probably
never will lend themselves to unequivocal conclusions.