Kishkumen wrote:beastie wrote:I'm talking specifically about the practice of the early LDS church, not other religions. They used code to protect leaders' identities, not to hide theology.
Trevor made this observation a while back, and I thought it was a sound one. I still do.
beastie wrote:Do you appreciate how little sense it makes to suggest that the portions of the Book of Abraham in the KEP were sensitive and had to be encrypted, when Joseph Smith immediately tried to publish the Book of Abraham? Now perhaps you, or Will, will be able to put something together that explains this, but currently, it should be recognized as a serious flaw.
This, as much as anything, has been one of the reasons I have a difficult time accepting this "cipher" hypothesis. Maybe this is where the pure language part kicks in. When you think it is all pointless, just add a dash of pure language hypothesis, and the motive is clear again.
As Kevin has also pointed out, the A&G include 'sounds' for the characters. That is something a language has, but a cipher does not. If the KEP were not used as translation tools and 'work papers', then the next best theory is 'reverse engineering' attempt to create a Rosetta Stone. Both are extremely problematic for Mormon defenders given Joseph Smith's own descriptions and claims of what he was doing, and the Church's official introductory claims to the BoAbr. Obviously, the Church has taken Joseph Smith's words literally in this regard, and asks anyone reading the BoAbr to do likewise.
Either as translation tools or a reverse engineering attempt to create a 'Rosetta Stone' to unlock ancient Egyptian characters, it ties the characters on the Sensen papyri to the BoAbr text. Problem is, the Egyptian characters do not translate into the English text of the BoAbr.
I think Kishkumen is suggesting that BoAbr defenders step back from the literal attestations by Joseph Smith as to what he was doing. Having clung to the literalness and stretching beyond all reason to try to make the square peg fit in the round hole of logic, they've driven many once-TBMs away.
Kishumen, I understand, thinks that the BoAbr might be a 'sacred text' even if Joseph Smith was not doing what he claimed he was with the Egyptian characters on the papyri. For me, a text would not be 'sacred' in a religious sense unless I truly believed it was directed by God, through revelation, in its original composition (God inspiring Abraham to write the substance of it in the Egyptian characters) and its translation (God inspiring Joseph Smith to write that same substance in English, or God just implanting the story of Abraham in Joseph Smith's mind, the papyri and its characters being nothing more than a 'catalyst'). If I believed that, and I could cull out of it any directives to live by to get to heaven, then I would do so, or commit other information to memory if needed as a 'key' to get passed St. Peter at the pearly gates.
For me, text would not be 'sacred' in a human experience/historical sense unless its antiquity could withstand scrutiny. Even then, it might have wisdom of the ages to live by as a general guideline, but I would not follow it implicitly thinking my eternal salvation depended upon it.
If I thought Joseph Smith, a 19th Century figure in American religion, merely studied long and hard and was concentrating on this and he mentally pieced together from his readings of Genesis and expanded on that to assemble what is the BoAbr, but did not believe God exists and put the story into Joseph Smith's head, I would dismiss it as the musings of a self-delusional (or a deliberate fraud). It might make for interesting study, historically, psychologically and sociologically--but to live by, no thank you.