the narrator wrote:I don't have time to go through all of the comments, but I just wanted to point out that a quick google books search shows that the language used in the Book of Mormon is far more common than those pushing the Late War thesis seem to realize.
I don't doubt that, but I think the "smoking gun" rhetoric is that Late War appears to be among the influences (as opposed to the primary influnence) on the Book or Mormon.
It's more than just occasional shared common phrases. Consider what I've posted elsewhere in this thread (that no one seems to have noticed so maybe I'm making something out of nothing) comparing a portion of Alma 49 to Late War Chapter XXIX.
In both cases, in the space of a few verses, the commonalities are (1) a host of bad guys comes to war against the (2) good guys in a fort. The good guys are (3) prepared, the good guys (4) slaughter the bad guys, whose bodies (5) fill up the ditch around the fort, and the surviving bad guys (6) flee into the forest/wilderness.
See Alma 49:20-25 and Late War Chapter XXIX verses 20-23.
If Joseph Smith didn't pull from Late War, would you expect to see similarities such as this? This is more than just common phrases. This is a common story.