karl61 wrote:The one thing that make jews go crazy is to tell them the figure Abraham had a relationship with an apocalyptic savior who's blood would cleanse them after he was crucified and then rose from the dead. If you read about the people in that era the picture just does not add up. The one thing that Christians do with the old testament is take two verses out of a whole paragraph and say that this is about the apocalyptic savior. Jews and Christians can look at the hebrew Bible and discuss the interpertation and translation. With regards to the Book of Abraham, you are in a totally different universe. It is all spin.
I had an exchange once over on MAD with someone who claimed that it was obvious, from a reading of the Old Testament, that Jesus was the Messiah. It must be pointed out that 14 million Jews would beg to differ. I think it's clear that people read these verses and understand them from the point of view they've already chosen. Christians see Jesus the Messiah, Jews don't - no big surprise there.
Does anyone remember the thread here where Gazelam posted a photo of some, I think it was Babylonian carving, and argued point by point that this guy was basically an ancient Mormon, temple clothes and all. He saw what he wanted to see.
In the case of the Book of Abraham, once you decide that the book is true, without the possibility of being wrong in that, then that will automatically color the way evidence and argumentation is viewed. The evidence must support the Book of Abraham, so it's looked at until a way is found to explain it as actually supportive. Hence you get things like Nibley arguing that the Book of Breathings was an Egyptian "endowment" - the assumption being that it may not contain the actual contents of the Book of Abraham, but it's still obviously supportive of Mormonism, right?
And about Gee saying that non-Mormon Egyptologists will accept any interpretation of the facsimiles except the Mormon one. I think that's blatant dishonesty. I challenge Gee to find a single non-Mormon Egyptologist who will accept that, for example, the figure on the lion couch represents Gumby, and the "priest" supposedly sacrificing Gumby is actually Adolf Hitler. Let's not be ridiculous here - non-Mormon Egyptologists will support interpretations that are supported by evidence, and by other elements of Egyptian writing, imagery, religion, etc. that are already understood. They will support interpretations that are consistent within the broader context of Egyptology. Gee and others know this, too, which is why they're constantly looking for any little shred of evidence that they can use to tie in Abraham with Egypt, as if it really helps.
Abraham as a concept is one that we know was a real meme in the ancient Near East, whether Abraham actually existed as a person, or not.
Egypt actually existed in the Ancient Near East.
It's therefor entirely reasonable that the Abraham meme might have been known, or discussed, or shared, to whatever extent, in ancient Egypt. This fact lends absolutely zero evidence that the Book of Abraham is true. Joseph Smith didn't write the Book of Abraham in a vacuum. Since the Old Testament already ties Abraham and Egypt together in some way, Joseph Smith could use that as a sort of jumping-off point for his work. The Book of Abraham becomes a strange sort of historical fiction.
If I wrote a crime novel that was set in Washington, DC in 1800, and which involved Thomas Jefferson, would the fact that historians have verified that Thomas Jefferson actually was in Washington, DC. in 1800 serve as evidence that my novel was actually true?
If there's a reason non-Mormon Egyptologists won't accept the Mormon interpretation of the facsimiles, it's because they recognize that the Mormon interpretation was not arrived at by earnestly seeking to discover the actual meaning of the symbols, but rather by a need to defend and support the notion that Joseph Smith was a true prophet. That's not true scholarship - it's apologetics, and non-Mormon Egyptologists simply aren't interesting in Mormon apologetics as a serious, scholarly discipline.
ps: Not to mention that Muslims, at least in concept, accept the Old Testament scriptures, and likewise aren't convinced that Jesus was the Son of God or the Messiah.