Please make a video for each anachronism from the last 50 years. You’d have content for years and I’d watch ever one of them.
@TheAlMaid4 жыл бұрын
I don't like Roper's website; it merely shows what anachronisms there are and a status. I would like to see the argument for and against it rather than essentially taking Roper's word for it that it is now no longer an anachronism. I would like to get into the details a little more.
@davidsnell26054 жыл бұрын
From the beginning of Roper's original presentation: "Today I’d like to share some of the results of that work, which I expect to publish and make generally available along with all the relevant documentation. So hopefully by the end of the year we’ll be able to do that for you." That research still has yet to be published, but it seems he has every intention of doing so. Stay tuned.
@davidsnell26054 жыл бұрын
@@davidjanbaz7728 haha I could do a video, but there wouldn't be much to say. As this video mentions, those 34 are still outstanding.
@corneliusmakin-bird75402 жыл бұрын
@@davidsnell2605 Ok, did he publish it?
@masterbulgokovАй бұрын
I agree. I looked at the list of anachronisms, and he goes to GREAT effort to multiply silly seemingly-made-up anachronisms so that they can be "confirmed". The idea, I think, is to make the remaining anachronisms seem inconsequential and the BoM prescient. He has "earthquake" in the list. Who in the world listed "earthquake" as an anachronism? What about "spears", "javelins", and "daggers"? Jeez - Neanderthals had those. In his defense, it looks like the actually meaningful anachronisms are left untampered . . . mostly. He leaves horses out of his list, then identifies the "horse" issue as "trending". Tapir, anyone?
@JoshSteimle Жыл бұрын
I went on a BofM lands trip 30 years ago as a teen. We visited areas where huge temples were buried and hadn't been excavated. "Why not?" we asked. "They're right here! You don't even need to figure out where to dig!" They told us they didn't have enough archeologists, even for the well-known sites. Then we drove across the Yucatan. For hours and hours we drove, and almost the entire way we could see ruins on both sides of the road, all over the place. No fences, nothing to keep people away from them. And nobody exploring them in the name of science. There were thousands of sites visible from the road. This was before LIDAR revealed all the other stuff nobody even knew about. It was clear 30 years ago that it would take hundreds of years to go through all the easy-to-find ruins. Now, we know about so many more ruins than we knew about back then. Who knows what remains to be found that will result in headlines like, "Everything we thought we knew about Mesoamerican history just got rewritten..." It's just a matter of time until we find some 1,500 year old stone tablet from some rancher talking about his herd of elephants :)
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
Thats great but why then isn't there a very large MesoAmerica school at BYU. You would think that with all the money that the Mormon church has that they could produce some really good archeologists to begin those digs.
@JoshSteimle Жыл бұрын
@@blusheep2 Why would the Church care about archeology more than any other academic discipline?
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
@@JoshSteimle I'm not saying that it shouldn't care about other academic disciplines but if the church could demonstrate that the Nephites or Lamenites actually existed, then the number of people that turned to the LDS teachings would be astronomical. Since there are evidently all these unexcavated sites throughout the New World then you would think the Mormons would be all in to show the world that they aren't gullible cultists. I understand how hard it can be to find good archeologists. Even in Israel there are well known cities that are hardly touched because they don't have an archeologist to do the work, or the money to do it. But an honest question.... Is there any archeological sites being dug by the Mormons right now?
@JoshSteimle Жыл бұрын
@@blusheep2 How many people have been converted into sincere followers of Christ based on Bible-area archeology? My guess is the number is quite small. Conversion based on physical evidence will always be weak. True conversion, powerful conversion, must start with desire and faith in the absence of proof. Someone who is merely convinced isn't converted, and being convinced first can actually impede conversion. Otherwise, God would just send angels flying around to convince everyone. So the answer to why the Church doesn't invest in Book of Mormon archeology is that it wouldn't support the primary purpose of the Church.
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
@@JoshSteimle Its a good question. I don't know how many people have been converted into Christianity based on Bible archeology. The difference is that there is no evidence of anything within the BoM is true. One could look at the Levant and know that there were civilizations there that match the Bible but that isn't the same for the BoM. So one could clearly say that Joseph Smith would have absolutely no clue about them at the time of his writing. Its wouldn't be just a historical validation but a validation of the means of the revelation. And, I'm not talking about proof for every detail of the story. Just the two nations being discovered would be enough. You see, you are right in that trust in God is not going to come through ruins in the ground but right now, all of us on the outside of Mormonism feel its quite clear that there never was any of these groups in the Americas. If tomorrow these nations were discovered there might be a lot more desire to consider the religion. If I could prove God tomorrow to the world I would definitely do so. If the LDS church isn't even trying its because they fear or know they won't find anything.
@simon_carrick81982 жыл бұрын
I would’ve liked to see the actual anachronisms that have been disproved and yet to be :/
@darrencollinwood142 Жыл бұрын
I think you speak for everyone when you say that. I don't think this video would continue to be faith promoting if the specific anachronisms were discussed.
@simon_carrick8198 Жыл бұрын
@@darrencollinwood142 Well, I mean it’s lame they didn’t mention them by name in the video, but I just went onto quora (which, of course, is not exactly the most friendly to pro-lds discussion 😅) and just saw some lists there, so it didn’t really effect me further than just having to put in extra effort to find out for myself
@Elmorr562 Жыл бұрын
The link shows all the information….
@simon_carrick8198 Жыл бұрын
@@Elmorr562 That is very true
@philandrews2860 Жыл бұрын
If you want to see them listed specifically, one handy place to see them is in Mr. Roundy's excellent youtube presentation on his "Latter-day Saints' Q&A" website. Please see the episode entitled "Book of Mormon Evidences". He shows the chart at the 21 minute timestamp. He doesn't discuss each anachronism specifically, but at least you can see the entire list there. Matt Roper, who put the chart together, also likely has this chart available but I have not looked for it yet.. looking further down on the comments list, I see that Matt has an hour long presentation on fairmormon, so you can likely see his list there as well. I haven't yet seen that presentation.
@peytonkeene50394 жыл бұрын
Nice to see this video. As a long time subscriber and convert of the Church it is something that I have wondered but didnt make me doubt. Now I can assist investigators in this truth. Thanks!
@macarc93189 ай бұрын
could you send me a link to the anachronisms that have been de-bunked
@DavidSilva-sx7vs Жыл бұрын
The way I see it is the word sword in the Book of Mormon is mostly used in generic terms to describe a weapon. For example, Joseph Smith did not know the name of the MesoAmerican weapon Macuahuitl, which is a sword like weapon that uses obsidian. Obsidian is brittle but is sharp like a surgical knife.
@davidrr8724 Жыл бұрын
Dude! That's pretty interesting, you may have right.
@DavidSilva-sx7vs Жыл бұрын
👍
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
One major problem David. The swords in the BoM rusted. How did wooden bats with Obsidian teeth rust? The swords in the BoM were iron, if they rusted.
@Man-jf6lzАй бұрын
Problem is Joseph didn't have to know the word. Curiloms and cumons (spelling?) aren't real words and Joseph received them regardless. So the Mayan word for sword has no reason to accurately be included, but it isnt. Also, the swords are made of "fine steel", and cankered with rust, etc... no wood or bronze or anything else there.
@richgras3 жыл бұрын
How can you just assert that these things were debunked without even going into how or why they were debunked?! That is very disingenuous.
@lukerose85533 жыл бұрын
Sooo he should do a video about 140+ debunked things?? There are researchers like he referenced at the beginning doing that
@rockartalan2 жыл бұрын
Check out the link provided in the description of this video. Here it is again so you can read the entire presentation it refers to. bit.ly/2TKL6kT
@wendyfoster5579 Жыл бұрын
The research is out there, check Fairmormon they have a lot of details but warning it is long. You might have to put some effort in.
@josephcowan6779 Жыл бұрын
@@rockartalan I just read through it and he doesn't go into a single claim. He just shows the same charts and says "see all that red? Well turns out it's green!". We need substance.
@rockartalan Жыл бұрын
@@josephcowan6779 Also provided in the description under this video are other links. Sorry the one I shared wasn't what you wanted. This link, also available to you in the description, is to the presentation Roper gave 2 years earlier where he goes into the specific details of examples of several of the criticisms that turned out to support the Book of Mormon. Let me know what you think. kzbin.info/www/bejne/oXi2dnWtj7KjqaM
@Post-MoMitch2 жыл бұрын
"Just because you haven't found something yet, doesn't mean there's nothing there to find" This is a bad argument. With that logic, we can reasonably claim that mermaids, the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, unicorns and dragons COULD exist in real life... We just haven't found any evidence to the contrary... C'mon guys
@Whatiftheresmore1314 Жыл бұрын
Ummmm, might want yo take a minute and watch the video. You’ll probs want yo delete your comment. 😉
@Val-jrc2m4 жыл бұрын
Just listened to Matt Roper’s podcast on FairMormon on this topic yesterday! Good stuff! Love that you guys cover this quick for someone who doesn’t want to listen to an hour long podcast.
@hannahisraelsen68163 жыл бұрын
You shouldn't watch "the Gladiator", it's rated R
@kevinteela2 жыл бұрын
I’ve never laughed so hard at a comment on KZbin 😆😆😆
@MultiMooseProduction2 жыл бұрын
Mormons lol
@wendyfoster5579 Жыл бұрын
It is literally in TBS edited every weekend
@bobbilderson85563 жыл бұрын
There are significant problems with Roper's study. Why doesn't Roper make a list of all of the things people at Joseph's time thought about Native Americans, and not count those as anachronisms? His list is so silly. "Warfare" is one of his listed anachronisms? Like somehow critics didn't believe warfare happened? Haha. He's over inflating his list with obvious things, and is being too generous with the definitions of words. For example, Swords. Matt Roper says that macuahuitl are swords. ??? They're not even close to old world swords. They're clubs with stones in them. So magically all the Lehites forgot one of the most useful technologies from the middle east? Didn't they make swords after the manor of Laban's? Was Laban's sword a macuahuitl? No! That's an anachronism in the middle east. So counting macuahuitl as swords is another problem. Spears are not anachronisms! Axes aren't anachronisms! Joseph knew about tomahawks! The spears, axes, and swords aren't middle eastern, they don't have iron or steel. "Large Armies" is one Roper lists as being confirmed, but then he doubles dips with "Large Army Casualties". What qualifies as a large army, or large casualties? Was I the hundreds of thousands that die in the Book of Mormon? They haven't found that. I'll list all the times Roper double-dips just with warfare: "fortifications" (anyone in war would have one. Even a hill is a fortification. A rock is a fortification.) "No warfare" (What is Roper saying? Critics would say there was no warfare or that there was? This is just sloppy. He has it confirmed that there was no warfare. Well explain the rest of the warfare stuff buddy.) "No wars of conquests" "Military costumes" (By this Roper means war paint that happened to get on clothes. Roper should just list the critics claims specifically and then show the research that confirms it. Also, he should search for evidence of these things being common knowledge during Joseph's time.) "Armor" (he has this as confirmed, but breastplates as unconfirmed. So either the armor isn't the armor in the BoM, or he's stretching to say it's confirmed) "Swords" "Swords early" "steel swords old world" (oh my gosh! Joseph knew there were swords in Europe and the middle east! WOWOWOW!) "Salt" wow guys. Joseph was right that there was salt in America. You know. That thing that you die if you don't eat, they apparently had that in pre colonial America. Haha. This is absurd. They had "corn" in America. Wow critics have been going on and on about the lack of evidence for CORN in America. You know the crop they cultivated over in America, but didn't have in Europe. It turns out that Joseph was right about the fact that they had corn!!!! Wow!!! They had 🌽 🌽🌽🌽 IN AMERICA?!?! WOW SURE SHOWED THOSE CRITICS!!
@rockartalan2 жыл бұрын
He listed actual criticisms critics have made against the Book of Mormon. Obviously, some will appear silly to us today, but these were actual criticisms of anachronisms people then believed showed the Book of Mormon to be a fake.
@bobbilderson85562 жыл бұрын
@@rockartalan That's not the major problem I had with him listing criticisms. The major problem is that the effectiveness of his claims all hinge on the number of negative claims to positive ones. So I'll try and write this clearly: Is every critical or postive claim about the Book of Mormon equal? That is to say: 1 Positive Claim (The Book of Mormon mentions corn- and we know native americans had corn) is equal to a negative claim (no evidence of non-coper metallurgy)? If you think they are, then I could say something like- Scientology is true. Positive Claim: other galaxies exist which is an important basis of Scientology. VS. Negative Claim: Elron Hubbard was recorded saying that the fastest way to become rich was to start your own religion. Now we have 1 claim for Scientology, and 1 claim against Scientology. Therefore, if that's all the evidence that we consider, then we should be neutral about whether scientology is true. However, I think that the negative claim is much more strong than the positive one. I think him admitting that he could get rich starting a religion is more significant a criticism than the fact that space exists. So, if claims are unequal in how strong they are-- then it is silly for the author to treat all of the many different weak criticisms that were eventually proven correct as an equal point against Mormonism as the strong claims (no refined metal or Eurasian animal evidence). That's why the whole thing is silly, becuase if all that matters is the final tally, and the one determining what is actually a valid criticism or not is the actually author himself-- then it's obvious that because his reasoning is motivated in a way that is unconstrained by his methodology (nothing double blind here- not even really a study) then of course it's going to be bogus. Honestly, it's just so members can look at and pat themselves on the back.
@rockartalan2 жыл бұрын
@@bobbilderson8556 I think you are missing the point of Roper's research. You say, "the effectiveness of his claims all hinge on the number of negative claims to positive ones." I would say no, that is not the point of his presentation. You need to go to the link and read the whole presentation if you haven't yet. Roper's paper is not just making a tally of how many details are supportive to the Book of Mormon compared to against it. The importance of identifying criticisms at certain times in history is that this shows the general knowledge of of the culture at that time. Joseph Smith's knowledge of such things was probably equal to the more naive of his day. As time went on, the critics had access to more information than Joseph did. So any apparent anachronism criticism that was later found to be supported by science, makes it less likely that Joseph could have made it up. This is not silly at all, but serious scholarship and strong evidence. Here's a link to Matthew Roper’s original research: bit.ly/2TKL6kT
@beefmaster4 Жыл бұрын
They were thought to be a relatively peaceful people, not always using warfare all of the time like in the BoM. It was later discovered that warfare was a common occurrence. They made a temple in the manor of Solomon's- much less grand but serves the same purpose. A sword in the manor of Laban's- what would much less grand but serving the same purpose look like? A long sharp weapon with a handle?
@bigtobacco10982 ай бұрын
@@beefmaster4swords that rust ???
@johnkusske7535 Жыл бұрын
Debunked by whom?
@jacobrees44 Жыл бұрын
With so many anachronisms trending towards believability and so many more now accepted it is my conclusion that either A.) The Book is what it claims to be or B.) Joseph Smith was the luckiest guesser of all time, the chances of correctly guessing 143 to 170 historical ideas, before the broader scientific community accepted them, correctly are astronomical. I may join that guys religion because I am now convinced he might be a time traveler. Anachronisms exist in all historical realms... until further research proves otherwise; The Antikythera mechanism, domesticated camels in the Bible, attributes of the Mayan civilization (size, nature, isolation.) It is a bad archeologist or a bad historian, or a bad scientist who are not looking to find new information and boy, does the trend of this new information really seem to demonstrate that there is much more plausibility to the claim of authenticity.
@bigtobacco10982 ай бұрын
There's not "so many"
@atheistapostate70193 жыл бұрын
Umm “debunked” according to LDS apologists NOT according to mainstream scholars and historians, sadly for the church. “We don’t know if chariots meant chariots. I use FAIR a lot in debunking the churches claims of “debunked”
@rockartalan2 жыл бұрын
No. You need to check out the link. When they say debunked it means by non-LDS sources. You need to do research with the intent to understand before using it to disprove or you will remain in your own echo chamber. Here's the link: bit.ly/2TKL6kT Check it out and you will understand that the question of anachronisms in the Book of Mormon overwhelmingly supports its claims.
@adoramay9410 Жыл бұрын
@@rockartalan So let me get this straight, you claim it is from non-LDS sources, but you cite a LDS source, that doesn’t cite non-LDS sources. Where are these supposed non-LDS sources?
@rockartalan Жыл бұрын
@@adoramay9410 Sorry for not being more clear. The source I provided is the presentation of the study referred to in this video. It presents in more detail the methodology and where the data came from. In a nutshell, the anachronisms were claims made by critics against the Book of Mormon, and debunked means that the general scientific consensus in and out of the church now agrees that a particular assumed anachronism can no longer be considered an anachronism. The purpose of this study was not to document the specific debunking of individual anachronisms. Most of the people at this conference had already seen the individual evidence for many of the items listed, so there was no need in this context to show evidence of things being debunked. Many items listed are commonly known to an average educated person. In many cases, what is more surprising to most than these things being discovered is that they were ever assumed to be anachronisms in the first place. For example many critics early on argued that it was ridiculous to think that the savage native people of the Western Hemisphere could ever have had advanced civilizations with large cities and organized cultures as the Book of Mormon claims. Now everyone knows that the assumptions of these critics were naive because common knowledge now makes them sound silly. Another example is the claim in the Book of Mormon that there could be steel swords in the 6th century BC Old World. But a few years ago a long bladed weapon made of steel was discovered in the Near East that predates that time. Anyone can observe it in a modern museum. workingtheflame.com/ancient-swords/#:~:text=(7th%20Century%20BC%2C%20Israel)&text=The%20Vered%20Jericho%20Sword%20is,the%20center%20of%20the%20blade. Another example is how critics scoffed at the idea that any ancient people anywhere in the world ever recorded things on metal plates. But many decades later we have several discoveries in the Old World of important documents being recorded in ancient times written on metal and even golden plates. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apadana_hoard These discoveries are not just claims of Mormons, but of secular scholars. You can research any of Roper's claims if you want, but they can all be confirmed by non-LDS scholars. Do you understand now? What other evidence do you need?
@darrencollinwood142 Жыл бұрын
Thomas Ferguson was an archiologist that devoted his life to finding evidence of the BOM all over the Americas. He concluded "Mormonism is probably the best conceived myth." "Thousands of archaeological holes in the area proposed have given us not a fragment of evidence of the presence of the plants mentioned in the Book of Mormon…” " The real implication of the paper is that you can’t set Book of Mormon geography down anywhere-because it is fictional and will never meet the requirements of the dirt-archeology. I should say -what is in the ground will never conform to what is in the book.”
@brettmajeske3525 Жыл бұрын
Thomas Ferguson was a lawyer with a BS in Political Science, not even a minor in either Archeology or even History. He spent his free time raising money for digs in Mexico, but rarely participated in the actual work. He spent far more time becoming a partner in his law firm than digging for evidence. You are misrepresenting his area of expertise.
@iridiumion3 ай бұрын
The problem with a lot of these debunkings is that there is evidence that something was present in the pre-colonial Americas but not with the usage indicated by the Book of Mormon text. A few examples: Children toys with wheels have been found, but not chariots, wagons, or carts with wheels. Alcoholic drinks were made, but in Mexico / South America it was mostly from agave, pineapple, cacao, etc. The wild grapes may have been used for beverages in a very specific location, but the drink wouldn't resemble Old World wine and it wouldn't be harvested from vineyards. Horses did live in precolonial America but they all migrated / died out around 10,000 years ago at the end of the Ice Age.
@af1469834 жыл бұрын
I also think alot of anachronisms can be attributed to the nature of translation. Take "horse" for example, what's the Reformed Egyptian word for horse? I don't know. But a better question is what is the reformed Egyptian word for llama or female elk or pronghorn antelope. Maybe there wasn't one. Maybe Joseph Smith came across the word that literally translated to, fast running four legged hooved mammal, and he thought well that's a horse. Translation is not cut and dry. 2000 years from now somebody will be translating an English book about Australian Wildlife and will come across the section about koala bears, And then will say all this book's wrong because there's no bears in Australia. That's why language is tricky.
@purestyle88574 жыл бұрын
But wouldn’t god know what they were called? And if it was translated by the power of god why use the actual names of those animals? Edit: Not an anti trying to rile you up btw. Just curious for people’s thoughts on that.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
You bring up a good point. It's good and important to remember tho when Brigham young said that Joseph Smith could translate the book of Mormon it could be different and things more brought to by the spirit. So I can see why or how the spirit might guide the readers of 19th century with things they might understand verses better with, with their times understanding. It's interesting to note the book of Mormon was not just for our generation but the 19th century generations as well in a way they could read the book and understand it, and have the spirit confirm it's truth to their world and time.
@FFM1154 жыл бұрын
How about there was never such thing as reformed Egyptian? If JS could not translate actual Egyptian as been proved with the Book of Abraham, what makes you think that he translated a reformed Egyptian which never existed? Wake up
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
@@purestyle8857 Better example, when Europeans came to the americas they already had words for lions and buffaloes. Cougars and Bison are different animals that look similar, and so the Europeans used the names they knew. The french word for potatoe is earth apple. If the nephites called lamas horses, or what ever that is the word they would choose.
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
@@purestyle8857 I am really trying to understand the point you are making. If I understand you correctly, then when JS translated the BoM, God should have changed reformed egyptian/hebrew words from the cognates used by ancient writers into terminology more common in the 21st century than the 19th? Because that sounds like a strawman argument to be, attributing intent to the BoM that it does not claim for itself.
@mikez11142 жыл бұрын
The fact is: There ARE anachronisms in the BOM.
@alanbylund26592 жыл бұрын
There are only perceived or alleged anachronisms. You are missing the point of the video. Listen again and notice the fact that the nonLDS scholar pointed out -- absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
@mikez11142 жыл бұрын
@@alanbylund2659 There are ACTUAL anachronisms. Sometimes, a lack of evidence IS evidence. Have a great day.
@alanbylund26592 жыл бұрын
@@mikez1114 Examples please.
@mikez11142 жыл бұрын
@@alanbylund2659 Google them. There are a lot of them. Confirmation bias will make it difficult for you to accept them.
@alanbylund26592 жыл бұрын
@@mikez1114 I'm well aware of the alleged anachronisms in the Book of Mormon. That is not the issue. What you seem to be claiming is that there are anachronisms that are proven beyond doubt. All anachronisms I'm aware have initially been identified by critics. This video points out very clearly that such anachronisms are only alleged at this point. In other words they are all things that could possibly be discovered in the future and therefore no longer be considered as anachronistic. The evidence in the video shows that the overwhelming trend is for this to happen. Indeed it has happened to over 70% of the items initially perceived, alleged or claimed by critics. So can you identify any of these claimed anachronisms that are absolute and impossible to disappear from the list of anachronisms?
@MerkieAE2 жыл бұрын
okay but all it takes is one anachronism to make the book lose its authenticity. and when it comes to things like steel swords and horses, we will never ever find ancient Americans with those technologies because that would change the course of history as we understand it. It’s kind of like if ancient Rome had steam engines, we know for sure they didn’t- even though we cannot systematically prove they didn’t because if they did that would’ve changed the way history would’ve played out. I also find it rather dismissive to say “just have faith” when people in the LDS church have used this book to justify horrible actions like the Indian Placement Program as well as many LDS people use the Book of Mormon to shape their understanding of history. Whenever you bring scripture into your literal worldview it’s important to test it and see if it holds itself up against other tested pieces of data.
@alanbylund26592 жыл бұрын
What do you think the purpose of science is? Whenever a scientific discovery is made it changes the course of history as we understand it. This is happening all the time, especially in archaeology. That is the point of this video. Did you even watch and listen to this video? Of the 204 anachronisms pointed out by critics since the Book of Mormon was published, over 70% of them have been discovered to not be anachronisms. So our understanding of history has already been changed quite a bit as it applies to the Book of Mormon. You mentioned horses. At the time of the publishing of the Book of Mormon it was believed that horses never lived in the Western Hemisphere. Many decades ago fossils were found proving that they actually were here up to 10,000 years ago, therefore changing our understanding of history. More recently remains of horses have been found even later, changing our understanding of history again. This trend is favorable to the Book of Mormon. Nowhere in this video does it suggest that we should “just have faith”. Why would you say this? The whole point of this video is to provide academic evidence that shows that anachronistic claims against the Book of Mormon are actually working out to be strong evidence for its authenticity. The church has always taught that the faith required for authentic belief must include rational thinking.
@mister_i92452 жыл бұрын
Romans having steam engines is a bad example, look into the Aeolipile. Greek not Roman but still.
@blusheep22 жыл бұрын
@@alanbylund2659 It did feel to me that his end message was "don't worry about the other 34 anachronisms because you prayed and god told you that the Book of Mormon is true." It was an odd addition, in my opinion. It was an appeal to emotion when he could have left it with, "out of the 200 anachronisms, all but 34 have been shown to be debunked. I am willing to wait in expectation that the other 34 will be demonstrated as well." I could actually accept that kind of statement... maybe. I think the appeal to emotion is used to subconsciously push people away from investigating any further. I think the video would have been more credible to the skeptic if some of the debunked anachronisms were mentioned and how they were debunked as well as some of the 34 that still exist.
@alanbylund26592 жыл бұрын
@@blusheep2 I agree that it would have been worth the extra minute on this video if he would have given a couple examples of how anachronisms have been debunked. However, in the description below the video there are some good links that do just that. I especially recommend the first one of Matt Roper. The details are specific and very relevant. Your first comment is understandable coming from a person not well acquainted with the full Gospel of Jesus Christ and how it works. Actually this talk about anachronisms is more about dispelling a red herring brought up by critics to distract from the real issue of whether the Book of Mormon is of God or not. As is pointed out in the video, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. Therefore, such arguments are not legitimate arguments against the Book of Mormon's authenticity. They are actually only real evidence for it's authenticity rather, because they show the potential knowledge available to Joseph Smith at the time of its publication, thus showing how extremely unlikely Joseph Smith could have just made all this stuff up. But it was important for this video to point out that no matter how compelling the academic evidence is for the Book of Mormon, the only sure way to know of its truth is by a divine witness directly from God. The word emotion is not ever used in this video, probably because appealing to God through prayer is not about emotions. This is a false assumption. When one receives a witness from the spirit, such can trigger emotions, but the emotion is not the witness. What pushes people away is lack of understanding and the lack of desire to gain understanding.
@blusheep22 жыл бұрын
@@alanbylund2659 Well written response but that being said, it is all about emotion. When people pray about their particular religion and seek God's confirmation, in nearly every instance the "communication" is through one's emotions. You feel at peace... or confident... or secure... or a sense of knowing. All these come through the medium of emotion. What nobody talks about is discernment. So you take someone without faith yet. They are already poised to believe, otherwise they wouldn't be at the point of prayer or of reading the text. They are asked to pray for confirmation, yet they have never heard the voice of God before. They have no discernment for what that voice should sound like. So they pray, and after doing so, they feel very strong emotions towards it and say it must be God confirming the message when it may just be a self fulfilling prophecy. They have no experience to judge the voice of God from their own imagination. BUT... once they accept that what they felt is of God then they no longer need to ask God that question again. Every person I have asked why they believe their particular faith is true responds the same way. "I prayed about it and I feel that God has confirmed it to me." The Christians, the Muslims, the Jehovah Witnesses, and the Mormons. ______________ I agree that this is low hanging fruit. I wouldn't agree that this is a distraction of any sort. There must be a way to verify or falsify Joseph's claim and if he speaks of things in the past using things that only came about in more recent times, then that is a very good way to know of Joseph's false credibility. The issue of anachronisms are at the heart of the question about the Book of Mormon's accuracy. The "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" can be abused. The problem the book of Mormon has is that there is absolutely no evidence of any of its people groups or cities ever existing. So as a comparison lets look at Ur. For decades, the ancient Biblical city was doubted to ever have existed. It was used in opposition to the Bible by secular scholars, BUT, the people groups surrounding the story are known to exist. The cultural context was known to exist. The other cities mentioned in the stories surrounding it are known to exist. The customs are known to exist. There is a plethora of evidence for the broad story. Ur becomes a detail that is absent and so the "absence of evidence" concept is aptly applied. There comes a time when an "absence of evidence..." is no longer a valid response. What if in a 1000 years there is still no evidence of these peoples and these cities? Are you guys still going to be using "absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence?" At some point you have to call a spade a spade. Now one last thought. When we look at the credibility of a book, we aren't just looking at the evidences for it but also weighing those evidences against it. So anachronisms play a roll in this. What does the comparison look like when we do this?
@For-Goodness-Sake Жыл бұрын
But what about the KJV anachronisms!? No amount of time or additional evidence will change the fact that KJV mistakes (things scholars later removed from the Bible) are in the BoM!
@thekolobsociety4 жыл бұрын
This is gold. Thanks for sharing.
@3dpprofessor4 жыл бұрын
Okay, couple of things. Why are we still searching Mesoamerica for archaeological evidence of the Book of Mormon? Joseph Smith identified Easter Native Americans as the Lamanites. We're looking in the wrong place. Second... "Lee-dar"? I've always heard it pronounced "Ly-dar".
@phadrus4 жыл бұрын
3D Printing Professor reminds me of the scene in Indiana Jones where they exclaim about the Nazi’s “They’re digging in the wrong spot!” The old guard is on it’s way out with this one. It’s only the scholars that have kept to Meso myth alive.
@phadrus4 жыл бұрын
3D Printing Professor yes, it’s lie-dar.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
You bring up a good point, but even jospeh beleives in further Revelation and understanding line upon line. I'm sure some of it could have taken place where your speaking. But we also have yet to know the full story. And revelation.
@tysonsmith234 жыл бұрын
Joseph Smith didn't author the Book of Mormon, why would he know better where it was located? Did an angel tell him? Or was he simply assuming?
@tysonsmith234 жыл бұрын
@@systematicrisk Good point. However, the way populations mix, most likely you only need a few thousand years to go back for most groups indigenous to the Americas to share a common ancestor. I can’t remember the exact math, but if a single foreigner is introduced into a large population and begins to reproduce with members of that population, it doesn't take long before every person in that population is descended from them. Assuming that the Book of Mormon is about a small group of people that settled somewhere in central America, in a thousand or so years, most likely almost every inhabitant in the America's would probably include that small group as being part of their ancestry. This article explains this idea nautil.us/issue/56/perspective/youre-descended-from-royalty-and-so-is-everybody-else Also, I don't think the Lord is interested in biological relatedness when he talks about belonging to tribes or being descendants of people. For example, the scriptures emphasize Jesus's line going through Joseph despite Joseph not being his biological father. In fact, all that region where Jesus lived and taught most likely descended from David, probably the whole middle east did. One perspective is that the Lehites sacralized the land of North and South America thereby causing all peoples of the continent to be adopted into the covenant God made with the Lamanites, regardless of ancestry. We already see that Nephite and Lamanite quickly stopped being groups based on actual genetic ancestral lineage. People all over Latin America are designated by the tribe of Manasseh in their patriarchal blessing, adding credence to this idea. And if you don't like this idea, regardless all peoples of the America's most likely could count Lehi as an ancestor by the time Joseph Smith came on the scene, including Native Americans.
@thelatterdayarbiter4 жыл бұрын
I see you used Reign of judges as a video reference. I too am a man of culture 🧐
@Jeremy.Beutler8 ай бұрын
Thank you for your videos! There is such a difference in watching them with faith than with doubt. I find much more clarity from the perspective of faith.
@rsstnnr762 жыл бұрын
I'm just here to see how many disgruntled ex-Mormons show up to get their daily fill of Mormon-bashing. It's amazing to see how many people leave the church but can't leave it alone. They spend their lives trying to justify their decision to leave.
@blusheep22 жыл бұрын
Or they realize that Mormonism is a form of brainwashing that they were able to escape from and want others to follow their example?
@KevlarX24 жыл бұрын
I still believe archaeologists are looking in the wrong place. They should be looking in North America not central or South America. Obviously there were some great civilizations that once existed in Central and South America, but I'm not feeling those were the Book of Mormon peoples. Just my opinion.
@thelatterdayarbiter4 жыл бұрын
KevlarX2 I feel ya. Sadly the mounds are government property and won’t let archeologists dig them for the natives sake
@ltekrah4 жыл бұрын
yes thats a possibilty. I think they were throughout all americas yet concentrated in the south
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
Who knows it's hard to tell! It could be in alot od places people have discussed over the church's history. But alot of research and archeology is needed to be done, to know weather some of these events happened their or elce where.
@phadrus4 жыл бұрын
It’s okay to state this as more than an opinion at this point. There is plenty of proof for the American setting including the words of the prophet.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
Words of prophets still learn by line upon line. And understanding. Places could have occured in multiple places. We don't have the full story yet on where things took place in their exacta, more research is needed.
@jobie105able4 жыл бұрын
The categorizing qualitative data into debunked is significantly aided by the widening of the Nephite-Lamanite landscape. If the stories encompass the entire western hemisphere of the globe, it becomes much easier to check the scavenger hunt boxes.
@Hamann96314 жыл бұрын
Supposed anachronisms don't cause me problems. It is because of the incompleteness of archeology. Things rot. They might have buried their old steel a mile away from the dig site. Honest archeologist could miss things because they are digging in the wrong place or have deteriorated. Archeologists are humans with opinions and hopes. It is possible for an archeologist to not report on something unwanted or unexpected. It is possible for an archeologist to put something back in the dirt. It is possible for an archeologist to accuse something of being buried by recent people.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
This is exactly true.
@Tomjohnson1884 жыл бұрын
My dad works in the archeology field and trust me it’s a lot harder to just to hide evidence than you think.
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
@@Tomjohnson188 Ask him about the Jericho sword and how it up ended contemporary beliefs about steel.
@lucasyates58044 жыл бұрын
Which anachronisms have had no evidence presented to debunk them?
@narleymarley6664 жыл бұрын
I’m pretty sure steel is one of the big ones that still hasn’t had evidence come up for it in that place and time
@narleymarley6664 жыл бұрын
Oh! Also the deutero-Isaiah or however you spell it
@lucasyates58044 жыл бұрын
So if there's no steel, that means the Book of Mormon is false, right?
@narleymarley6664 жыл бұрын
Lucas Yates I’m pretty sure? The way you’re asking that is scaring me 😂. However people could still argue that “the Book of Mormon shouldn’t be taken literally” or that “steel doesn’t really mean steel.” It really depends. Why do you ask?
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
@@lucasyates5804 Well steel is really hard to find. It not only decays into rust, rust itself is still chemically active and continues to decay. For over 200 years it was assumed by archeologists that no one had the technological infrastructure to manufacture steel on a consistent basis before about 1 CE. When traces of steel were found the common consensus that it was an accident not reflective of intentional industry. History books used to say the earliest Damascus steel dated to about 100-200 CE. In the last 20 years the old model is being thrown out. The earliest Damascus now extent dates to 300 BCE, over 400 years earlier. The Jericho sword dates to 600 bce and shows signs of advanced techniques, obviously not the result of accident but true steel forging. High carbon rust that was dismissed fifty years ago is being reevaluated. New theories suggest that steel was more common in ancient greece than previously thought, and perhaps China and even the British isles. These theories state that previous assumptions were flawed because they didn't take into account how fragile steel is geologically speaking. So how about Steel in the BoM, it is mentioned as pocessed by the Jaredites, at over 2000 BCE. Steel just does not last that long. Even if it was used, finding traces that old would require a miracle in and of itself. So how about Nephite usage? Most Nephite mentions of steel date to the Old World period, the journey in the wilderness of Lehi's group. Fifty years ago that was considered an anachronism because items like Laban's Sword and Nephi's bow did not belong in Bronze Age Jerusalem. The discovery of the Jericho sword, which is not only steel, but of a length matching the BoM description clearly shatters that criticism. How about after the arrival to the New World? Nephi makes swords after the manner of the Sword of Laban. But after that first settlement period, no more mention of steel. Other mineral wealth like gold, silver, iron, and copper continue to be mentioned, but no more steel. It seems the Nephites lost the skill after about a hundred years or so. Critics like to claim that according to the BoM steel should be widespread, and thus its lack counts as an anachronism. But if it was only used in a limited geographic area for about 100 years, then it becomes a needle in a hay stack. Because of its fragile nature, steel artifacts more than 1000 years old are incredibly difficult to find. Basically it requires hermetically sealed low moisture low oxygen environment. Scientifically lack of steel in this context is inconclusive. Thus citing lack of steel is not as dispositive as many critics make it out to be.
@LdsTiktokPreservation10 ай бұрын
If it didn’t have anachronisms, it would seem more made up. The greatest anachronism of all, is how Joseph Smith got so MANY things right that so many people thought were wrong. Luckiest guesser in the world right?
@bigtobacco10982 ай бұрын
He copied the Bible
@LdsTiktokPreservationАй бұрын
@@bigtobacco1098 Oh, you you mean when the prophets who had early books from the Bible were like, "I'm now going to quote from Isaiah, because we too are of the house of Israel and these scriptures are important because they apply to our situation." When someone tells you flat out that they are quoting something?
@bigtobacco1098Ай бұрын
@@LdsTiktokPreservation except the BoM kept the kjv anachronisms
@LdsTiktokPreservationАй бұрын
@@bigtobacco1098 Double points for authenticity :)
@bigtobacco1098Ай бұрын
@@LdsTiktokPreservation I'm not sure you understand how that points to the opposite
@convergefreak9643 Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t actually address any particular anachronisms. I’m curious, at what percentage of sites explored will it be proven there’s no evidence? What’s the threshold or is it it some never ending quest?
@CobbleCreekLane Жыл бұрын
Will you be researching for that evidence?
@shuaster4 жыл бұрын
As the anachronisms start getting debunked critics have to start nitpicking. __ Before: there was no Steel at that time period After: There was no Steel at that location __ Before: there weren't Kings and big cities in the Americas After: Those big cities and kingdoms aren't the ones you were talking about.
@BrendonKing4 жыл бұрын
Joshua Webster maybe in the realm of apologetics, sure. Regardless, a Christian is warned not to follow any gospel or any Christ not presented by either Himself or His Apostles, and the doctrine of the BoM does not mesh well with the teachings of Christ and the Apostles. I’m not sure even a limna would change the core issues of Mormon theology when presented alongside mainstream Christianity
@shuaster4 жыл бұрын
@@BrendonKing what is the Gospel of Jesus Christ?
@ronaldoalvarado52424 жыл бұрын
@@BrendonKing come on! that claim has the same level of credibility as the long list of anacronisms. You are awaiting people show you whats already out there on the subject. And then i guess you will point out the anacronisms once more, you are lacking ram memory, and a good use of the internet.
@katog4 жыл бұрын
The LDS Church claim through the bom that the descendants of the Nephites and Lamanites are the native Americans , which group of native Americans exactly? Where did they live? No evidence of their language to compare with Hebrew or even Egyptian so we can see a relation? In contrast examples of older languages like Sanskrit and Latin can be compared and it can be concluded that one came from the other . You LDS people will never admit, that besides claims, you have zero evidence to prove the Book Of Mormon true.
@shuaster4 жыл бұрын
@@katog watch the video again. Correction: watch their video on DNA
@CobbleCreekLane Жыл бұрын
Good video! Truth is revealed through the confirmation of the Holy Ghost. Should further evidences come would people use their faith to believe the Book of Mormon is true or still find fault until further evidence is shown and then the cycle con tinues once evidence is shown non believers find something else to say is false? I would say then by that standard faith then is irrelevant and thats the nonbelievers modus operandi; eliminate faith. There wouldnt be any need for faith. Faith in Christ is needed to overcome the world not belief in human evidence, secular science only.
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
That will be what happens to some but what most people that reject the BoM want is evidence of the broad story. Show us the Nephites. Show us Zarahemla. If you provided proof for the existence of these large people groups then that would change the way the BoM was viewed over night, AND I'd bet that you would find a whole new interest among the archeological community in these ancient ruins.
@jayt10774 жыл бұрын
What non mormon sources are saying these anachronisms are being debunked? He doesn't list a source. And it does seem like scoffers are having a field day when one takes in the sheer breadth of what's out there.
@robertgibbons74013 сағат бұрын
Some needs to make the list WITH. references resolving them
@bobtiger35584 жыл бұрын
Turn it off
@maxerickson124 жыл бұрын
Light a lightbulb
@jamesbaldwin76766 ай бұрын
The fact is: There ARE anachronisms in the Bible.
@Man-jf6lzАй бұрын
This was a bunch of nothing. Saying things are disproven, then providing no scholarly evidence of how it is disproven is called being dishonest. The ruper chart is abysmal.
@madmanmanx4 жыл бұрын
This content is the best. Grant is like the PragerU of mormonism!
@0GieLongshank2 жыл бұрын
Nice burn!🔥🔥🔥
@josephnebeker79762 жыл бұрын
You were doing so well until you brought up mesoamerica. Joseph smith, Brigham Young, and others, on multiple occasions, pointed out that the Book of Mormon happened in the land that is now the United States of America. Look at the Adena and the Hopewell. Some of those anachronisms aren't going to ever be disproven in mesoamerica because the Book of Mormon didn't happen in mesoamerica. As for only one of these questions, steel: to my knowledge it was never written that steel was produced here in America during the Book of Mormon time period. Only that it was brought here, specifically by Nephi. We are told they had the steel sword of laban. We're also told they had a steel bow which lost its spring while in the old world, before they made the crossing to America. Whether they brought the steel of that bow to America or not, we are never told. We are told the swords made after arriving here we're fashioned off of the sword of Laban, but I don't remember reading anywhere that they were made out of steel. We now know steel was made in certain areas in the old world for at least hundreds of years before Nephi was born. In America they worked other metals such as copper and silver and gold, etc. Not iron. And we know the sword of Laban has been taken by the Angels to keep it safe, so we're not going to find that until God is ready to show it to us. If they brought the steel from the sprung bow to America, and if it was not protected, it would have turned to rust by now. However, I believe it more likely they left the bow in the old world. Since it lost its spring, and if they did not have the knowledge to work it, it would be useless to them. Deadweight.
@FountofArcane4 ай бұрын
The bulk of these are “horse” “donkey” “metallurgy” but the ones still remaining are “hebrew” among other damning ones
@saldomino16395 ай бұрын
Very interesting Bro !
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
So basically, there ARE anachronisms but we should ignore them.
@lyletaylor3728 Жыл бұрын
No, there are things that some people currently believe are anachronisms. You can lean extremely heavily into that belief and disregard everything else, or you can keep an open mind, knowing that things that people had previously thought were anachronisms have been debunked, and it's entirely possible that others will be debunked as well, because we simply don't know everything right now.
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
@@lyletaylor3728 That is a position to take. I think it depends on the anachronism. Some things sure. Maybe one day we will find a furnace for smelting iron. Something that is missing entirely in the Americas. The statement is still true. There are anachronisms and we should ignore them. I have a better way. If these anachronisms exist then what else exists that would suggest that not all these anachronisms will be answered? Is there anything else that would suggest the book was a fraud or its author a fraud? The anachronisms should at least, inspire us to take a closer look at the BoM and Joseph Smith. For me, the anachronisms are just icing on the cake. The two main reasons I know the Book to be a fraud is 1)There is absolutely no suggestion in the historical record that these people or places existed. 2)Mormonism and its prophet teach the ambition of Lucifer as spelled out in Isaiah.
@lyletaylor3728 Жыл бұрын
@@blusheep2 Yes, that approach on how to approach anachronisms is fair. But then you also need to be open to looking at things that seem to promote the authenticity of the record at the same time. It generally feels like those that hang onto anachronisms are opposed to that. While I suppose it may also feel to you that those ignoring anachronisms are doing the same thing but the other way around. Concerning point 1, the historical record is extremely empty in general, and what does exist is always subject to interpretation. So, that doesn't mean much to me - meaning, point 1 is not currently a sore spot for me. For point 2, I'm not sure what you mean, but that is a topic for a separate discussion.
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
@@lyletaylor3728 I agree. I often tell Mormons, when they are willing to talk which is rare nowadays, that they can't just look at what they think supports the BoM but what doesn't. So what do you think supports it? My guess is that if we create a list side by side my list is going to be astronomically longer then yours. For point 1) I agree that there is a lot of unexcavated areas. These areas though are generally understood in the sense that they are identified as belonging to one group or another. The Book of Mormon doesn't just tell of two undiscovered groups of people or more but it tells of a culture that is completely absent from the historical record. Not just the people but the cities, and the culture and even language. You would think that BYU would have a large archeological school so that it could produce quality archeologists to dig these ruins in hopes of finding some quantity of evidence. As rich as the Mormon church is, you would think they would be itching to give out grants for these digs, especially if they are in areas that fit the description of land in the BoM. You would expect the tribes to pour tons of money into such excavations so they could learn more about their own ancestors. One has to wonder why that isn't the case. Could it be that they are afraid of what they won't find? For 2) This is easy enough to explain. In Isaiah 14 we are told of Lucifer's exile from heaven. In 14:14 it sums up what his sin was. It says that Lucifer said in his heart, "I will rise above the clouds. I will be like the Most High." "Rise above the clouds" is an ancient idiom found throughout the Levant, Egypt and Mesopotamia, along with similar phrases like, "above the clouds," "coming on the clouds of heaven," or "riding on the clouds." We find it in Egypt. Baal was said to be riding on the clouds, and in Daniel we see Yahweh "riding on the clouds of heaven." Something Jesus repeats for Himself before the Sanhedrin. The term was only applied to the God or the gods. With this in mind we can rephrase the verse into something we would say today, Lucifer said in his heart, "I will become a God. I will be like the Most High." This ambition is the very ambition that Joseph Smith taught and is the focus of many of your temple ceremonies today. The teaching of the church is that you to can become a god. You can be like the most high. Your teachings are the very teachings of Lucifer himself. Later in Isaiah 43, God makes it clear. He said, "...that ye may know and believe me, and understand that I am he: before me there was no God formed, neither shall there be after me." What Joesph taught was from the pit of hell and I'm afraid hes there now because of it. Have you ever read rough stone rolling? Remember the list I said we should compare. Even in Rough Stone Rolling the character of Joseph couldn't be hidden.
@bradensorensen9663 жыл бұрын
You don’t need a high percentage of all discovered anachronisms to be debunked. That would make finding anachronisms in favor of the church because you could just make up 1000 anachronisms and solve them all to lower the percentage of the “unsolved” anachronisms. That’s not helpful. You only need ONE anachronism that is impossible and the entire Book of Mormon is called into question. THAT is the problem.
@brettmajeske35253 жыл бұрын
Which is also a high bar. Archeologist rarely debate possible versus impossible, but likely versus unlikely. None of the anachronisms associated with the Book of Mormon are impossible, so if that is your standard of evidence we are doing pretty good.
@bradensorensen9663 жыл бұрын
@@brettmajeske3525 There are at least three in Steel, Horses, and Lamanite DNA.
@brettmajeske35253 жыл бұрын
@@bradensorensen966 Neither of those three are considered impossibilities. Absence of evidence is not itself evidence of absence. There is a minority of non-LDS archeologists who feel horse did not go extinct in the Americas prior to Columbus. While most others think such an interpretation is unlikely, none claim it to be impossible. Same with steel. In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan evidence has been found or iron mines predating European invaders. Steel is extremely fragile, geologically speaking, and if not carefully preserved easily fades after 1000 years. Archeologists are currently reevaluating many bronze age cultures in Egypt and in the British Isles as having had Steel hundreds or perhaps thousands of years earlier then previous believed. Such Bronze Age Steel would represent lost techniques and knowledge. Again, some early American cultures certain had more knowledge of iron work than had been previously understood, though we still do not understand all of the details. Again with DNA, while its existence is considered dispositive, its lack is not. We do not know what markers we should be looking for. Lamanites were not from the tribe of Judah. Given an estimate 90% genicide rate among native Americans, and it gets even more tricky. There is certainly room for possibility.
@bradensorensen9663 жыл бұрын
@@brettmajeske3525 so steel from thousands of years before 1492 could have been gone... what about the steel that would have been made after then? Why didn’t natives have steel post Book of Mormon times? Or did they just suddenly stop producing it for literally no reason?
@brettmajeske35253 жыл бұрын
@@bradensorensen966 It does not seem you understand the claims of the Book of Mormon. Steel is always listed with other precious metals like gold and silver, and then only for the first 100 years of Nephite history. It is used as a sign of wealth, power, and prestige. It is never described has being in common usage. In fact, 90% of the times it is mentioned it is in relation to the old world, the lands around Jerusalem, before journeying to the new. Historians tell us the primary source of iron during the bronze and early iron ages was from meteorites, not mining. This happened in the British Isles, where the ability to forge steel was lost for around a 1000 years, and only returned when iron mines were found. Steel based technology can easily disappear when a limited source of iron becomes depleted or unavailable. We do not know why they stopped, only that all mentions stop after the immigration to Zarahemla. Gold, Silver, and other precious substances still exist, it is only steel that disappears from the narrative. We only know that Native Tribes in North America used iron/steel tools because we have found traces of primitive iron mines, no actual tools have survived. Given the geological fragility of iron and steel, this lack is not remarkable. I have explained this all before in detail on other threads you have commented on, did you not read my posting?
@atheistapostate70193 жыл бұрын
Umm BUT FAIR says wheat in the BoM is mais, aka corn or another crop.. FAIR denies wheat has never been found but makes up other plants in its place... big and EPIC fail
@towardcivicliteracy2 жыл бұрын
Epic fail that reflects the natural, normal nature of language? Mmmmmkay. Are you going to complain, now, that hippos aren’t really river horses?
@atheistapostate70192 жыл бұрын
@@towardcivicliteracy we’re speaking of claims being made and then either changed or weak excuses for why they claim isn’t so. A turkey is not a duck, both have wings, both have beaks and both are birds BUT they are not the same. Wheat is not mais and mais is not wheat even both are a grass. Justification and excuses doesn’t make something so just because ones faith wants it to be
@towardcivicliteracy2 жыл бұрын
@@atheistapostate7019 But the Book of Mormon is an artifact of some mix of Hebrew and Egyptian language culture, probably with in an Aramaic literary style. It's not a book on zoological classifications. Normal language adopts words to new ideas all the time. I really don't understand what you're trying to say. Maybe something like, "Well, I would believe if God would have gotten His zoology right." I have to say, you're certainly not going to appeal to religious people that way. I certainly don't believe in God because he would bow to relatively arbitrary, man-made zoological classifications, which are mostly just worthwhile because they standardize things. Religious people are primarily drawn to what I, and the Greeks, call "eudaimonia"--really the art (though the softer sciences often reflect the underlying truths involved) of living the ethically upstanding, peaceful, kind, just, merciful and happy life. They want to be better, and God appeals to them because of his perfect attributes, that they wish to emulate.
@towardcivicliteracy2 жыл бұрын
@@atheistapostate7019 LDS scholars have differing views on what the language culture probably means by what it says. But, that's a very slippery game, anyway. Not surprising they disagree on it, at all.
@atheistapostate70192 жыл бұрын
@@towardcivicliteracy "LDS scholars have differing views on what the language culture probably means by what it says." Well OF COURSE they say differently, they are trying to DEFEND the churches stances BUT the ironic thing is that LDS scholars do NOT use a lot of LDS materials they spout at the members, when they are dealing with other academics who happen to be none LDS. ;) LDS Scholars and Historians AVOID using the Church History collection when speaking to other scholars because they know it's been heavily edited to omit historical facts and not creditable as a source.
@orangemanbad2 жыл бұрын
I don’t like to poopoo other peoples religions. And I don’t. But I just ask people to use common sense.
@homesteadgamer12574 жыл бұрын
Watching this with the captions on, and so far the intro is very exciting. Steel horses in the Book of Mormon? That sounds amazing! #punctuationmatters
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
I want a steel horse! Where can I find one! (set sarcasm = on)
@mrkurdi222 жыл бұрын
You did not address any anachronism such as Jesus appearing in Americas before he was even born in Bethlehem
@brettmajeske35252 жыл бұрын
According to the Book of Mormon Jesus visited after his death a resurrection, not before his death.
@Youknowitsmeman Жыл бұрын
You literally didn’t do anything to change anyone’s mind. No evidence or proof either way. You just stated that many of the anachronisms have been debunked without explaining how or by who or even which ones. This was a waste of time.
@billsheehy14 жыл бұрын
Just curious, DNA shows that Native Americans and those who live in Central America are over 97 per cent Mongolian DNA, logically attributed to them migrating thru the Aleutian Islands and settling throughout the Americas. So where are all the "lost tribes" of Isreal which would show the DNA of Jews? People can believe whatever they want, it does not make it true. Religion is geographical . If you are born in Boston, odds are you will be a Catholic. Born in Saudi Arabia, take a wild guess who you would be following. Born in Alabama, those wacky Baptists will be knocking on your door. Born in UTAH, nuff said, on planet Earth Mormonism is a small blip on the religious radar, and with the high numbers of people leaving the LSD church, it will be static for a long time. To be a Mormon, you just can't believe in God, oh no. The list is quite long what is required to believe or go along with so as not to rock the ship. If it were all true and restored as claimed, then any changes would be.....well, not necessary at all. But then you have the issue with the Blacks and the priesthood (that changed with Jimmy Carter's threat of losing tax exempt statue) back in 1978, after which the Prophet had a (you guessed it), another vision in downtown SLC.. Then you have the issue of polygamy. If it was right back in the day, it should not matter what the government threatened. Oh yes, statehood for UTAH. Again, it's either right or wrong and not up for discussion. Again, just curious...In the past 20-25 years can anyone point out a prophecy or revelation of any importance by the "Prophet (the Muslims have one of those guys too. And the Catholics have that commie with the pointy hat) Seer, and Revelation dude? It use to be you got your ass excommunicated for being gay. I guess that's out the window now. Probably a few law suits or government proclamations made them lighten up a bit. Just about every multi-level marketing scheme seems to come out of UTAH for some odd reason. The Church Missionary program is the biggest MLM scheme of all time, and to make matters worse, they make the families pick up the tab for these young men and women to fulfill their missions. And Mission Presidents are exempt from tithing. WOW, what a great business plan. But nothing says religion for the masses like filling people full of guilt over every little thing that OTHER people have decided you should live your life by. I'm doubtful that Jesus , our Lord and Savior will be jetting into SLC anytime soon.
@brettmajeske35254 жыл бұрын
Wow, there is so much misinformation in this post I do not know where to start. Since it literally has nothing to do with the video topic though, maybe It should just let it be.
@gregbaker2377 Жыл бұрын
This is a sad and glib attempt to gloss over glaring problems with the book. If Joseph's God is so powerful why does he need this guy and his campy cartoons to spin things in his favor, why not just write the book without anachronisms in the first place. Its all very confusing and doesnt help my testimony.
@corneliusmakin-bird75402 жыл бұрын
lol and John the Beloved is supposed to be alive wandering the earth still as well. How come he does not come forward to disprove these anachronisms?
@livingwaterministries9319 Жыл бұрын
I don't see what mesoamerica has to do with anything the book of Mormon takes place only in America and mostly the eastcoast.
@BrianMillsMFA4 жыл бұрын
So, as of early 2020, we are still going with "the Book of Mormon actually happened?" It hasn't been turned into a "parable" yet? No? I don't know, with all of the shade the LDS Church has thrown on 2 Nephi Chapter 5 this week, I give it about 20 years. By 2040 the official narrative will be "the Spirit gave Jospeh the Book of Mormon as a parable, but he was such a backwards country hick he didn't understand that. And whenever a concept came into his mind fuzzily, he inserted a 19th Century viewpoint to fill in the gaps." MARK. MY. WORDS.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
That's totally cool to have a different belief on this. And we understand we don't agree with each other on this, and that's okay 💜
@coalhouse19814 жыл бұрын
it's really the only place the church at can go
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
@@coalhouse1981 It wouldn't be the truth tho, so the church would never go their. But that's a cool opinion. nice:)
@coalhouse19814 жыл бұрын
@@brendanwilsonvfx5705 well the case against Historicity is quite strong
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
@@coalhouse1981 The Case "Against" the Book of mormons Authenticity is weak itself, when you've got direction from God that its true and how it's true, by obedience and faith to the lords commandments.
@atheistapostate70193 жыл бұрын
Rofl... another dishonest video from SU. Horses are NOT Tapir’s which for those who do not know, is what the church claims as horses. I have a video coming out on this today
@VictorNobrega19864 жыл бұрын
Wait for research to catch up with revelation! Excellent!
@scottvance744 жыл бұрын
We've been waiting for 200 years. Lies are lies. 1 anachronism is all it takes to prove something false. The highly optimistic claims of believers that there are only 34 proven anachronisms seem to be taken as a victory for belief when in fact they merely point to your inability to accept truth/facts/evidence when you have 34x more evidence than you need. Are these 34 anachronisms counted before or after the over 3000 textual changes? Several key ones were not included in the list, such as using the name of Christ 100s of years before his birth (or including his name prior to the angle giving his name in the first edition of the text). Of course, Joseph got rid of that blatant anachronism in the 1837 update. Research has not been kind to the Book of Mormon. As Richard Bushman (mormon apologist) has pointed out, it's pseudepigrapha.
@germanslice4 жыл бұрын
@@scottvance74 What Joseph Smith Saw of the Father and Son in the grove wasn't a lie. They stepped out from behind the curtain to reveal themselves. That Book of Mormon isn't a Lie, for the Bible also contained alot of errors when they translated it... John The Revelator foretold of its coming. That record that was hid up by God and revealed by the angle is now here on the earth among many nations, kindreds, tongues and people just as John saw that this record from the angle containing the everlasting gospel would in the last days get all spread out across the whole planet... Rev 14:7 So The Church of JESUS CHRIST of Latter-day Saints with its distribution of the Book of Mormon is fulfilling John's prophecy. God has a habit of hiding things. God can easily cause earthquakes and floods to uncover things if he wants to, but God also wants to test the faith of his people. Isaiah also said that The Law of God would distributed out out of Zion in the last days from two locations on the planet. From Zion in America and from Zion in Jerusalem. Isaiah 2:2-3 The Bible is already in three thirds of the whole planet. But Isaiah says that in the last days the law of God will be issuing forth from just two locations out to all the nations, and they will come to Zion.
@scottvance744 жыл бұрын
@@germanslice "God has a habit of hiding things." On this at least we can agree. The church has a habit of hiding things too - which makes sense because they're just following the example set by God. It took the church 180 years to reveal the brown seer stone. Will it take them another 180 before they show the white one? How about the green one? Yes, the church is very much like a trickster God who likes to hide things and play games with it's children/followers.
@germanslice4 жыл бұрын
@@scottvance74 No, you misunderstood me. The Church has the truth. But God is not going to reveal all of the truth all at once to us because he works Line by Line, Precept, by Precept. God dosen't work the way as you demand him to, coming from your own lack of faith and judgement and perspective coming from the natural man.. He expects his children to have faith in the things that hes already has revealed.....The truth comes in a little bit at a time so the water is shallow at first, but later on it comes rushing in as a flood as torrents of water keep on pushing in. For the truth will continue to sweep and roll forth across the planet whether you like it or not.. Because God has decreed it, John the Revelator has seen the gospel roll all forth, he has seen our day and time. God knows the past, present and future. The Father will fulfill his covenant with the House of Israel.
@scottvance744 жыл бұрын
@@germanslice Please consider getting counseling. A good therapist could really help you.
@binmyrtmind4 жыл бұрын
As in all things that's true in science today is not true tomorrow; we learn more and more as truths are revealed so i give no credence to naysayers of the Book of Mormon. They are still finding information and further manuscripts related to the Bible; the kings and prophets were far from perfect and that seems to be fine with people, but the Book of Mormon as a second witness to the divinity of Jesus Christ causes an uproar? I listen to ministers talking about the book of Enoch, Jasher, and others which are okay, so why wont they read and study the Book of Mormon? All thats looked for is what they can find wrong to prove a negative point. Well, I'm still waiting to see someone sit down and create a scriptural record that can hold its ground to its like. They also refuse to believe the Lord still talks to his prophets and all I can say is, who are we to challenge God?
@MrRickb75645 Жыл бұрын
But swords and shields and breastplates were found. But most of this evidence was destroyed , by the Smithsonian .
@blusheep2 Жыл бұрын
There is plenty of evidence still for headplates, at least. Describe the swords you say were found.
@johnramer18594 жыл бұрын
U r so anti-russell crow, just like South Park!
@dark_winter82384 жыл бұрын
"Just because you haven't found something yet doesn't mean there is not something there to find" An athiest filling when religions people say there has to be a God because what created the big bang.
@JohnDLee-im4lo11 ай бұрын
Archaeologists Erez Ben-Yosef and Lidar Sapir-Hen of Tel Aviv University released a new study that dates the arrival of the domesticated camel in the eastern Mediterranean region to the 10th century B.C. at the earliest, based on radioactive-carbon techniques. Abraham and the patriarchs, however, lived at least six centuries before then. "There are too many camels in the Bible, out of time and out of place … these anachronisms are telling evidence that the Bible was written or edited long after the events it narrates and is not always reliable as verifiable history.” Hmmmmmmmmm...Why don't you turn your obsession with the BofM to have a look at the Bible? The Bible has a real problem as well...many examples. Horses, camels...who knew?
@SenpaiGanseki4 жыл бұрын
Where in the Americas were all these things extant at the same time? No one place? Huh.
@narleymarley6664 жыл бұрын
Good point I never even thought of that 😂😂😂
@juliopenaloza56553 жыл бұрын
Where in the americas did the entire book of mormon take place at the same time? Not just one place? Huh.
@SenpaiGanseki3 жыл бұрын
@@juliopenaloza5655 - Palmira New York In Joseph Smith's head seems the most likely, but I'd like to hear your timeline that fits the data used in this research... Honestly this research allows for very loose geographical bounds in dismissing anachronisms which leads to very inflated numbers of "debunked" anachronisms. You can't submit archeological evidence of something found in Alaska and another thing found in Chile to debunk two alleged anachronisms in a single verse of the book of Mormon. At most you can claim to satisfy one or the other.
@Pharm404 жыл бұрын
Mesoamerica? Really?
@coalhouse19814 жыл бұрын
the three biggest Anachorisms in my view are 1. Deutero Issiah (imo Mormon apogligsts have no good response to this other than just hand waving scholars away) 2. The Longer Ending of Mark , again I've seen no good LDS response to this other waving scholars away, the same scholars they qoute with the Johannie Comma that supports thier view. 3. Pre Christain Christainity , The BOM contains sermons that talk about being saved by the grace of God, heaven and He'll, being born again.knowing the name of the messiah, the holy Ghost etc... these are not old Testament concepts. I've made this challenge just show me one example of these ideas in old Testament Era Judaism ... it doesn't have from the Bible anything... I don't think these 3 things are resolveable....i get the BOM makes you feel good, but the harsh reality of life is that truth doesn't care about your feelings
@JacobWGowans4 жыл бұрын
Have you read the text? Because the answer to your third point is clearly in the text. No pre-Christian theology is taught in the Book of Mormon until that point at which it was revealed to the people writing it. For the first several chapters, they don't know anything about grace, Holy Ghost, etc. The concepts understood by Christians today are revealed over time to the ancient civilization. You should try reading it. As for your second point, what impact does that have on the Book of Mormon? Not sure how the Deutero-Isaiah theory matters either since it's just a theory. Dead Sea Scrolls back that up.
@coalhouse19814 жыл бұрын
@@JacobWGowans what do you mean? yes I've read the text. the triple authorship of Issiah is accepted by almost all scholars in the field.. be them Athesist Christain or Jew. it's not some fringe theory. The second point has a lot to do with the BOM ... Mormon 9 contains verses that are similar to the the Longer Ending of Mark. now most Mormons may answer this by saying the God would teach the same thing to both people... but the problem with the Longer Ending of Mark is that if Jesus never said these words than its problem. since The BOM would be qouting verses that were added by later scribes rather than the words of Jesus himself. And like the Deutro Issiah problem this isn't a fringe theory even among Christain scholars it's accepted that Mark 16: 9 through 24 were added by later scribes most modern Bibles make a note of this. as for your claim that no pre Christain theology is taught in the BOM...youve got to be kidding me. I'm going try and me charitable here but even Mormons like Royal Skousken and Richard Bushman admit that there is ton of 19th century protestant lanaquene in the book . according to the BOM, the Nephites new the name of messiah, beileved the messiah was God, Alma teaches about Salvation by Grace and being spiritually born again...none of these concepts existed in pre Christain thought .... I mean go ahead and show me....
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
You bring up a good point. It's good and important to remember tho when Brigham young said that Joseph Smith could translate the book of Mormon it could be different and things more brought to by the spirit. So I can see why or how the spirit might guide the readers of 19th century with things they might understand verses better with, with their times understanding. It's interesting to note the book of Mormon was not just for our generation but the 19th century generations as well in a way they could read the book and understand it, and have the spirit confirm it's truth to their world and time.
@brendanwilsonvfx57054 жыл бұрын
It's also interesting how it contains verses from the dead sea scrolls in accuracy. Same with the book of Enoch in Moses as well.
@coalhouse19814 жыл бұрын
@@brendanwilsonvfx5705 I find the three issues I brought very problematic for the BOM... the question of whether the BOM came from God is ultimately an untestable claim. However questions like "we're there lamanites?" "what time period was the text likely written in?" are questions we can investigative. I think Deutro Issiah and the Longer Ending of Mark are the death knell for the BOM
@kourt24693 жыл бұрын
😂😂 you're going to talk about anachronisms, not validate or show any sources or explain what these were, how you came up with that many, and how they were debunked or by who. Clearly you don't care about putting any reasonable effort into your videos. You're no better than the anti mormons. You just do a dis service to the church with this crap. Leave this kinda stuff to the scholars
@juliopenaloza56553 жыл бұрын
Seems like you missed the point of the video
@chadedwards36763 жыл бұрын
You said it better then i could, he just said they were debunked without showing how at all
@sebastianj64954 жыл бұрын
Praying and asking if it's true. Yeah, that worked pretty well for the people in Heaven's Gate, didn't it?
@Hamann96314 жыл бұрын
Sebastian J. I have never heard they studied it out and asked God. Can you provide a link to them saying that. I suspect you are making things up.
@Hamann96314 жыл бұрын
@@davidjanbaz7728. I didn't say or hint that Sebastian was saying that Heaven's Gate prayed about The Book of Mormon. He claimed they prayed about their leader like we (believers in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) pray about The Book of Mormon. I just read an account of Heaven's Gate and didn't see anything in their about praying to know if the leaders were truly guided by God. I am claiming those crazy cults don't have their investigators pray to God like LDS investigators are encouraged to do.
@Hamann96314 жыл бұрын
@@davidjanbaz7728 Thank you for the question. I am an RM. I have knowledge because of that and 42 years of always going to meetings. I have never been a Bishop or other calling higher than that on the totem pole. You correctly defined "investigators". The Book of Mormon being the records of an actual ancient civilization is dogma or our doctrine. One reason for that is one of those people being sent to Joseph Smith as an angel. I'm not sure if one would be disciplined for saying it never happened but is a beautiful parable. People can be disciplined and have been disciplined for believing things contrary to church teachings. I never had someone tell me they wanted baptism but wanted to believe The Book of Mormon stories didn't happen. I don't know what I would have done.
@Hamann96314 жыл бұрын
@@davidjanbaz7728 I just rewatched the video. I think David's position isn't that the Book of Mormon isn't historical. His position is that there isn't proof against it. The Holy Ghost has told him it is true and he is giving a large weight to that evidence in his mind.
@FFM1154 жыл бұрын
All religions appeal to sentimentalism as a tool to manipulate people. Truth is truth, it’s logic, it’s rational. God doesn’t play games with us, religions do
@ronaldoalvarado52424 жыл бұрын
Nice
@ozmer3 жыл бұрын
Well there you have it, it's been deboonked and it's getting even more deboonked over time so at some point in the future it will be 100% deboonked.
@FFM1154 жыл бұрын
How delusional can people really be? Nothing has been debunked, there is that strong and prevalent appeal to use emotions and dismiss logic. You’re doing a huge disservice in trying to elaborate more mental gymnastics. It would be far more productive and healthy to accept the facts that this is not true and remain a good faithful member of your religion just like everyone else. Trying to argue against facts to me indicates a high level of pride.
@TBIhope4 жыл бұрын
34’s my lucky number, but I hope the “anachronisms” creep towards zero!
@TBIhope4 жыл бұрын
david janbaz this is embarrassing. I wrote a short-tempered response, but then I realized I mixed you up with someone else who’s replied angrily to me! Upon further reflection, and after I dug up another comment, I actually admire you and your honesty. In short, please forgive me. I have a hot head sometimes.
@TBIhope4 жыл бұрын
david janbaz which post?
@TBIhope4 жыл бұрын
david janbaz it was a while ago, on an old video, so it’s extra sad that I confused you with the angry commenter!
@livingwaterministries9319 Жыл бұрын
And yes they have already proven there where steel swords here in that time frame.
@footspike55 Жыл бұрын
Lol no they haven't.
@einarnunya7249 Жыл бұрын
This never happened. There were no steel swords in pre-Columbian America.
@orangemanbad2 жыл бұрын
I don’t like to poopoo other peoples religions. And I don’t. But I just ask people to use common sense.