Nelson Chung wrote:As stated in the Kevin Barney article I cited before, virtually everything about the nature of God revealed through Joseph Smith has now become the dominant consensus among Bible scholars: (1) God created the cosmos from pre-existing chaos, not ex nihilo. (2) There is a plurality of gods. (3) The Gods met in a council. (4) Jehovah was the son of Elohim. A (4) God is embodied is still a minority position, but is gaining steam.
One of the objections here is that polytheism was nothing new. But imputing it to the Bible was.
I am not certain what you think the dominate position among Bible scholars is. That early groups in the middle-east believed in multiple Gods is nothing new. Joseph was a great borrower of other ideas, and we see this here as well. Joseph was studying Hebrew among other things, and we can actually find some of these ideas in the Bible. Interesting that the nature of God in the Book of Mormon and early church was in line with trinitarian ideas. It wasn't tell later that Joseph came out with different ideas. Given the changing aspect of Joseph's first vision and changing doctrine in line with it, one has to wonder about the reality of the first vision.
This is what the father of Biblical archaeology said:
http://www.mormondialogue.org/topic/195 ... +%2Bletter
I cannot see the site due to immature rules of the site on how many page views. I know you can get around it, but not that interested to try.
http://maxwellinstitute.BYU.edu/publica ... =11&id=301
http://maxwellinstitute.BYU.edu/publica ... m=6&id=369
There are a whole bunch more.
Lets hope there are better. He brings up the name Nephi, but it really is a stretch. I would be embarrassed to have my name on that article. They are again guilty of trying to see similarities or parallels. It's a dangerous game, and should not even be attempted here. It is a stretch to fit Nephi to nfr, and then fit the use of such a common word good to Nephi. It could help a little if the Book of Mormon defined the name Nephi as good, but then only a little since nfr doesn't seem much of a match for Nephi. Could we not play this game easily with other names or words to other languages? I thought this was funny from a link some gave in another site. I think it states what I see wrong here.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/undeniable-proof-that-the-walking-dead-and-toy-story-have-th
I agree that if you make up a bunch of Semitic-sounding names, some of them will turn out right by chance. And this is the same game critics play with place names in the Great Lakes area. But many Egyptian and Hebrew names in the Book of Mormon were used in a way in which it's clear the author knew their definitions in Hebrew. For example:
I would think if we are going to be skeptical of the great lakes we should be skeptical of this as well. Some on both sides play this game to often without really being able to show in objective ways how it is significant to what they are claiming.
You seem open to new evidence, but most ex-Mormons are not. They dismiss whatever the MI says. The bulk of (though by no means all) of MI's material is not peer-reviewed [though then I don't know of any critics material that is either]. But that ex-Mormons refuse to evaluate their arguments on their own merits is very telling.
I am not ex-Mormon. Maybe due to my education I gleaned that if one wants to get to best picture of an issue they will need to study all sides. Many will not read what they deem anti material, but they will always be left with a less accurate picture of the issue if they do, just the same if some EV will not read material other then what is provided for them from EV friendly sources.