MCB wrote:So the Book of Mormon is still scripture, despite the fact that it was written to prove that Natives of the Americas are human (literal descendants of Adam and Eve within the 6000 year creation timeline)? If an ancient Earth is true, why is the story necessary? If the Natives of the Americas are human, yet proven to not be of Jewish ancestry, how are they fully human? (I have Native ancestry, so don't go pulling an ad hominem on me.)
MCB, I find it odd that you equate being human with being a literal descendant "of Adam and Eve within the 6000 year creation timeline." I consider
every single woman and man in this world human, whether s/he descended from Adam and Eve or not.
Earth being ancient has
nothing to do with the necessity of the Book of Mormon story. God spoke to prophets in the Americas, and the things God told them are as relevant to our lives as many of the things God told the prophets in
Judea and Israel back in the two millenia B.C.E.
Have you concluded that the "Natives of the Americas"
are "proven to not be of Jewish ancestry"? If so, how have you concluded that?
The LDS Church recently changed a statement in its introduction to the Book of Mormon, from calling the descendants of Laman the
principal ancestors of the Native Americans, to calling them
among the ancestors of the Native Americans.
My father has, in fact, always believed that the Native Americans had other ancestors besides just the Lamanites. I personally have expanded on that to come to the conclusion that
most of the ancestors of the Native Americans crossed the Bering land bridge into America from Asia a very long time ago, but that doesn't mean that Lehi's party didn't cross the oceans to America too, and that they didn't intermarry.