"
Thought"? Really? Not a single word of your copy-paste response provides a single molecule of evidence to support the LDS proposition that the canopic idols appearing throughout Egyptian lore were named "Elkenah", "Libnah", "Mahmackrah" and "Korash". Quibbling about how Mormons spelled those names using English letters is hardly "food for thought". Searching for Hebrew syllables among supposedly
Egyptian deities is not "food for thought". What it is, is the usual LDS tactic known among rhetoriticians as "a snow job" - lots of minute but irrelevant detail thrown up in a cloud of words and speculations that never actually makes a point
or provides any actual evidence. While this kind of lame rhetorical parlor trick can fool Mormons and the victims of corrupt politicians, used car salesmen and con artists all over the world, it will not pass as proper scholarship anywhere ...which is why the work of the "scholars" at FAIR/FARMS, etc is never published on presses other than those of the LDS church.
A "Snow Job" is not "
thought"; its pure
deception.
YOU did not "think" when you resonded; you did what Mormons are mentally conditioned to do: run to some LDS source and just copy and paste the smoke screen boilerplate prepared for the gullible and "faithful",
without thinking. Perhaps you did not understand the challenge I posed. I did not ask you to show us Mormons speculating on Hebrew syllables. Not even close. Let me condense the original challenge for you in four very simple steps.
1.) The indisputable
FACT is, the canopic jar/idols depicted in the Lion Couch scene are
UNIVERSALLY recognized by 100% of all informed Egyptologists, historians, archaeologists and antequarians as “Qebehseneuf”, “Duamutef”, “Hapy” and “Imsety” (also known with Egyptian variants and different spellings when rendered in English, for example "Imsety" is also known as "Amset").
2.) These idol/deities were not only very common but very
important figures throughout Egyptian mythology - the very sons of the God known as Horus and each was recognized by the Egyptians to rule over various important functions of Egyptian life.
3.) Your so-called "prophet" appears in 1830 and pronounced a supposed divine revelation by means of his claimed prophetic gifts in which he declares and publishes the assertion that these deities are rightly known as "Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash". But there are two problems.
4.) There is no record of any deity in Egypt, nor even any words in any known ancient Egyptian lexicon which render as "Elkenah", "Libnah", "Mahmackrah" and "Korash". Nor is there any etymological roots or meanings in any Egyptian dialect that can be derived from these names (as there most certainly IS for the established names of these idols).
So ...either the universal consensus of all informed scholarship pertaining to the identity and names of these deities is correct and your "prophet" was full of crap, OR your prophet was right, and all of the annals of Egytpology and relevant archaeology must be re-written and reduced to linguistic nonsense to accommodate the claims of some guy who claimed to have a magic rock in his hat.
The challenge I have posed for you here is to simply
SHOW US some reasons to conclude what is necessarily the case if your "prophet" was right: that the canopic jars depicting the "Sons of Horus" are rightly known (including by the Egyptians themselves) as "Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash".
We are still waiting for you, or someone, to meet that challenge.
Posting vague, rambling speculations based on mixing and matching syllables from different ancient languages or quibbling about how Mormons spelled the names rendered by Smith using English letters does not even begin to approach this rather minimal threshold of proof for the claims of the LDS organization.
What you must do to meet this very reasonable challenge is...
1.) Provide us (and the archaeological world) with some
evidence (NOT empty speculations and LDS wishful "thinking") that the Egyptians
really did include deities known as Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash in their pantheon and...
2.) Show us that these names were each associated with the
VERY common and easily recognized idol/deities depicted in the routine "Breathing Permits" - one of which was the source for your so-called "Book of Abraham".
(...And you will get bonus points for explaining
WHY 1st. century AD Egyptians would bother to routinely bury their dead with copies of "the Book of Abraham"
INSTEAD of the "Breathing Permits" required by their own pagan religion).
-BH
.