by Edward H. Ashment
© 1990 by Signature Books, Inc. Used by permission of author.
Taken from Dan Vogel, ed., The Word of God: Essays on Mormon Scripture (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1990), 221-35.
In the 1830s, William Miller calculated that Jesus Christ's second coming would occur in 1843. He preached his doctrine and attracted a large following of believers. The rapturous day came and went. After several more "Specific dates for the return of the Lord were set and passed--finally all was staked on 22 October 1844," but still no Rapture. Not surprisingly, Miller's followers were disillusioned.1 Such disillusionment is a manifestation of cognitive dissonance, which occurs when the opposite of a belief follows from the premise upon which it is based.2 Cognitive dissonance is also often the result of a logical non sequitur.
Students of dissonance observe that it "produces discomfort," with the result
that there is pressure for a person to "reduce or eliminate" it. They identify
several ways a person may try to reduce dissonance: (1) "change one or more
of the beliefs, opinions, or behaviors involved in the dissonance"; (2) "acquire
new information or beliefs that will increase the existing consonance and thus
cause the total dissonance to be reduced"; or (3) "forget or reduce the importance
of those cognitions that are in a dissonant relationship."3 In the
case of the Millerites, "some returned to their churches, others lost interest
in religion, while a few remained faithful to the Adventist or millenarian cause,
believing that somehow a chronological error had been made."4
An exact date for Jesus' return to earth is not a pillar of the religion
founded by Joseph Smith. Instead, perhaps the greatest vulnerability to
dissonance in the LDS church lies in the historicity of its founding prophet's
Book of Mormon, "New Translation" of the Bible, Book of Moses, and Book of
Abraham--all proclaimed by church authorities to be authentically ancient. The
Book of Abraham provides an instructive test case.
A
survey of LDS responses to attacks against the historicity of the Book of
Abraham reveals two areas of concentration on dissonance reduction. The first
concerns the dissonance-producing proposition: Because all extant evidence
indicates that a portion of the "Breathing Permit of Hor" (referred to hereafter
as Pap JS 11) was the Egyptian original from which at least the first two
chapters and eighteen verses of the Book of Abraham were produced,5
and because a translation of the Breathing Permit does not match that section of
the Book of Abraham in any way, then Joseph Smith's translation of the Book of
Abraham is spurious.
Mormon scholar Hugh W. Nibley summarizes the elements of the dissonant
cognition this way: "1) We are asked to see Joseph Smith diligently composing an
'Alphabet' and a 'Grammar' of the Egyptian language, 2) by employing which he
works out the translation of the Book of Abraham from certain Egyptian
characters in his possession. 3) The source of those characters, an Egyptian
writing called the Book of Breathings, suddenly surfaces in 1967, and it does
not contain anything suggesting the Book of Abraham. 4) Therefore the Book of
Abraham is a fraud."6
The second area concerns the contents of the Book of Abraham and posits
a new proposition to replace the first. This reduces dissonance thus: If what is
now known about ancient Near Eastern history generally, and the stories about
Abraham specifically, can be made to match the contents of the Book of Abraham,
which was produced when relatively little was known about the ancient Near East,
then the Book of Abraham can be affirmed to be authentically ancient.
Accordingly, Nibley declares: "the story of Abraham told in the Book of Abraham
has the support of very ancient tradition," with the result that we must "take
the Book of Abraham seriously, even while it raises many interesting
questions."7
In other words, because the evidence about the translation process of
the Book of Abraham leads to a negative conclusion about Joseph Smith's ability
to translate ancient languages--which consequently produces dissonance--a major
strategy of apologists is to shift the focus of the LDS community to the new
belief that the Book of Abraham is authentically ancient because several
parallels to it have been affirmed from other sources.
Accordingly, two of the four responses to cognitive dissonance which
biblical scholar Robert P. Carroll has proposed are relevant to this discussion:
"the production of rationalisations which explain (or explain away) the causes
of dissonance"; and "the introduction of new cognitions which modify or
neutralise the dissonance arousing cognition."8 Incidentally, this is
how "dissonance gives rise to hermeneutic,"9 which is an "explanatory
scheme" that is "designed to change the original cognitive holdings [i.e.,
beliefs] or to rationalize dissonant cognitions."10
In order to understand the nature of the relationship between the
Breathing Permit of Hor and the text of the Book of Abraham, it is necessary to
review how the relevant Joseph Smith Egyptian Papers came into existence.
In July 1835, an enterprising man named Michael Chandler arrived in
Kirtland, Ohio, exhibiting four ancient mummies and "two or more rolls of
papyrus covered with hieroglyphic figures and devices."11 It did not
take Joseph Smith long to begin a "translation of some of the characters or
hieroglyphics" on the rolls, which he announced "contained the writings of
Abraham, [and] the writings of Joseph of Egypt."12 His followers
purchased the collection. However, Smith's excitement was soon overshadowed by
the crises surrounding the Kirtland Safety Society and his followers' settlement
attempts in Missouri. A number of years passed before efforts concerning the
papyri again surfaced in church history--this time in Nauvoo, Illinois.
Those Joseph Smith Egyptian Papers relevant to this
essay consist of work sheets associated with early efforts to decipher the papyri.
They can be categorized into two groups: those that reflect an attempt to develop
an alphabet and grammar of ancient Egyptian, and those that pertain directly
to the Book of Abraham.13
Because he "seldom used the pen himself," Smith employed scribes to take
dictation.14 Determining the beginning and ending dates of each
scribe's tenure establishes the correct temporal boundaries during which the
Egyptian Papers were produced. Four handwriting styles are discernible on the
relevant documents: Joseph Smith's, Oliver Cowdery's, William W. Phelps's, and
Warren Parrish's. Smith wrote either prior to or contemporary with Oliver
Cowdery. Cowdery's scribal tenure terminated when he moved to Missouri sometime
in 1837.15 He was excommunicated in April 1838.16
Though he was in Kirtland during the time that Chandler displayed his
mummies and papyri, William W. Phelps was a resident of Missouri, where he
served as "a printer unto the church" (LDS D&C 57:11; RLDS D&C 57:5a).
On 16 May Phelps and his oldest son had arrived in Kirtland for a temporary
stay, when they lived in Joseph Smith's house.17 They left Kirtland
and returned to Missouri on 9 April 1836.18 Because of problems that
would develop between Phelps and the church in the next few years, it could only
be during this eleven-month period that he served as one of the prophet's
scribes.
Warren Parrish was employed by Smith on 29 October 1835.19
During a portion of his tenure, Parrish was ill and consequently unable to
record for Smith--this was from at least 22 December 1835 to 8 February
1836.20 He surely was no longer a scribe by July 1837, when he was
accused of having embezzled $25,000 from the Kirtland Safety
Society,21 and by that December he would be out of the
church.22
Thus, what Oliver Cowdery recorded had to have been before September
1837; what William W. Phelps recorded had to have been before 9 April 1836; and
what Warren Parrish recorded had to have been between 29 October and 22 December
1835 and between 8 February 1836 and ca. July 1837. Anything that Phelps and
Parrish wrote together had to have been done between 29 October 1835 and 9 April
1836. And as will be pointed out, Cowdery had stopped writing for Smith by the
time that Parrish began.
There are several indications that the "Alphabet and
Grammar" (hereafter A-G) documents were produced prior to the Book of Abraham
manuscripts. In the first place, there is a chronological development from the
former to the latter. The first three A-G documents analyze, among other things,
the Egyptian symbols of Papyrus JS 1--the original of the Book of Abraham's
Facsimile 1--and conclude with the first two hieratic symbols that are the beginning
of the Breathing Permit (Pap JS 11)--exactly the point at which the second manuscript
of the Book of Abraham begins. (Other manuscripts of the Book of Abraham--1a
and 1b--will be discussed later.) The three earliest A-G documents were written
by (1) Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery, (2) Oliver Cowdery, and (3) William
W. Phelps. The book form of the "Alphabet and Grammar," which goes into more
detail but does not decipher as many signs, is based on these three documents.23
Finally, it appears that the major effort on the A-G documents had been completed
before Warren Parrish became a scribe, because his handwriting appears only
at the end of each, identifying the last sign dealt with, identified as Kolob.
As mentioned, the last two signs of Joseph Smith's A-G document (as well
as Cowdery's and Phelps's) are the same as the first two signs of Book of
Abraham Manuscript 2. The first of these was deciphered as "The land of the
Chaldeans." The second seems to have been connected with Abraham's name,
interpreted in the Smith-Cowdery A-G to mean: "In the first degree
Ah-broam--signifies The father of the faithful, the first right, the elder.
Second degree--Same sound--A follower of righteousness--Third degree--Same
sound--One who possesses great knowledge--Fourth degree--same sound--A follower
of righteousness, a possessor of greater knowledge. Fifth degree--Ah-bra-oam.
The father of many nations, a prince of peace, one who keeps the commandments of
God, a patriarch, a rightful heir, a high priest."
The relationship between these decipherments and the contents of Abraham
1:1-2 is obvious. It is significant in this regard that it was felt that one and
the same sign--and even parts of signs--could be used on several different
levels in order to produce expanded meanings, with the result that entire verses
could be produced from a single sign. Thus, contrary to Nibley's assertions that
the A-G documents "were not used in any translation,"24 they indeed
were and indicate the "modus operandi"25 for Smith's "translation" of
at least the first two chapters and eighteen verses of the Book of Abraham.
Book of Abraham Manuscripts 1a and 1b appear to have been recorded by
Phelps and Parrish simultaneously at the dictation of Smith. For, in addition to
various individual misspellings and other errors, both contain corrections where
Smith apparently changed the wording of his translation as he dictated it.
Moreover, the punctuation in both is sparse, resulting in numerous run-on
sentences (also a feature in the dictated original manuscript of the Book of
Mormon); and the existing punctuation is not consistent between Phelps's and
Parrish's manuscripts, indicating that each was trying as best he could to
punctuate as he wrote. This evidence contradicts Nibley's affirmation that
Manuscripts 1a and 1b represent "the finished or nearly-finished text of the
Book of Abraham … not deriving that text from, of all things, eighteen hieratic
marginal symbols."26 In this respect, it seems that Nibley has not
taken into account the appearance of the original manuscript of the Book of
Mormon, which in the same way resembles a "finished or nearly-finished
text."
Further evidence indicates that the "eighteen hieratic marginal symbols"
(there are twenty-seven in Manuscript 2) were indeed felt to be closely
connected with the text of the Book of Abraham. That each of the various
hieratic signs from Papyrus JS 11 was written before its corresponding English
text in at least Manuscripts 1a and 2 is demonstrated by the fact that in
several cases all the English text which was juxtaposed to a set of hieratic
signs invades the space alloted for the text accompanying the next set of
signs.27 In Manuscript 1b, Parrish actually drew a horizontal line in
several places to divide the English text that accompanied one set of signs from
that which accompanied the next.28 Throughout the remainder of
Manuscript 1b and all through Manuscript 2, Parrish used paragraphs to separate
the English text that accompanied one set of signs from the text that
accompanied the next.29
Yet another indication that the hieratic signs were contemporary with
the English text is that Phelps's crabbed penmanship is apparent in the hieratic
characters in the manuscript that he penned (1a), while the neat work of Parrish
is matched in the hieratic characters in the one that he penned (1b). When the
handwriting changed from Phelps's to Parrish's in Manuscript 2, the linking of
the hieratic characters also changed from Phelps's dark tint to Parrish's
lighter tint.
This evidence not only contradicts Nibley's assertions that "the English
of the Book of Abraham was here copied down before the Egyptian signs were
added,"30 and that the hieratic characters "were copied out … by a
single scribe in a bold and rather skillful hand,"31 but demonstrates
that in these manuscripts the "eighteen hieratic marginal symbols" from Papyrus
JS 11 are directly connected with the English text of the Book of
Abraham.32
Finally, the status of Cowdery, Phelps, and Parrish, between 1835 and
1836 is important since Nibley has claimed that they "were impatient of Joseph
Smith's scholarly limitations and were at the same time invited by him to
surpass them" and that they "turned against Joseph Smith at the very time that
they were working on the Egyptian Papers."33
However, on 14 February 1835, Oliver Cowdery, one of the three witnesses
to the Book of Mormon, helped choose the twelve apostles; on 14 September, he
was appointed to act as recorder for the church; on 13 January 1836 he was made
a member of the presidency of the High Council at Kirtland; and on 3 April 1836
he and Joseph Smith witnessed, in vision, Jesus Christ on a breastwork of gold
(LDS D&C 110). In that Oliver Cowdery had not worked on any of the Joseph
Smith Egyptian Papers after Warren Parrish had begun--that is, after 29 October
1835--it is not true that he "turned against Joseph Smith at the very time that
they were working on the Egyptian Papers."
On 16 May 1835 William W. Phelps arrived in Kirtland and lived at
Smith's house. He was involved in founding the School of the Prophets on 2
November 1835. He took a prominent seat during the dedicatory services, with the
other church authorities, and actively participated in these exercises. He
received the ordinance of the washing of feet on 29 March 1836 in the Kirtland
temple.34 In a letter addressed to Phelps's wife Sally, Smith
described him as a man "whose Merits and experiance and acquirements, but few
can compete with in this generation and few I fear will ever appretiate the
worth of such men; men upon who god in his wisdom hath bestowed gifts, that duly
qualify them to lead men in the way of life and salvation."35 Phelps,
therefore, appears to have been in good standing during all this time, not
lashing out against Smith sometime around November 1835--"the very time that [he
was] working on the Egyptian Papers."
Joseph Smith recorded that he spent 30 December 1835 with Warren Parrish
studying Hebrew. Parrish had been ill and was now "recovering his health, which
gives much satisfaction, for I delight in his company." On 14 November 1835,
Smith gave this revelation about Parrish: "Behold, it shall come to pass in his
day, that he shall see great things show forth themselves unto my people; he
shall see much of my ancient records, and shall know of hidden things, and shall
be endowed with a knowledge of hidden languages; and if he desire and shall seek
it at my hands, he shall be privileged with writing much of my word, as a scribe
unto me for the benefit of my people; therefore this shall be his calling until
I shall order it otherwise in my wisdom, and it shall be said of him in time to
come, Behold Warren, the Lord's scribe for the Lord's Seer, whom He hath
appointed in Israel."36 Thus, it is safe to assume that the documents
scribed by Parrish were dictated by Smith and that Parrish was in the best
standing with Smith during this period.
Consequently, there is no basis for Nibley's attempt to reduce
dissonance by asserting that "The brethren at Kirtland were invited to try their
skill at translation; in 1835 the Prophet's associates, miffed by his superior
knowledge and determined to show him up, made determined efforts to match up the
finished text of the Book of Abraham with characters from the J. S. Papyrus No.
XI; but they never got beyond the second line of characters--if they were really
trying to translate, they soon demonstrated that it simply didn't work. When at
that very time they turned savagely against Joseph Smith and told every
scandalous thing they could invent about him, none of them ever made mention of
his involvement in any of these frustrated exercises."37
Instead, the evidence indicates: (1) that Cowdery, Phelps, and Parrish
served faithfully as Joseph Smith's scribes--not his rivals--each man being in
good standing with Smith during the time that these documents were produced; (2)
that the A-G documents represent initial efforts at deciphering, among other
things, the hieroglyphics from Papyrus JS 1 (the original from which Facsimile 1
was taken), ending with the first two signs of the Breathing Permit of Hor
(Papyrus JS 11); and (3) that the Book of Abraham Manuscripts are the written
results of Smith's dictating his interpretation of hieratic characters from the
Breathing Permit and imaginatively reconstructed signs, with each scribe first
drawing the designated characters prior to recording accompanying
interpretations.38
The "Egyptian original" of the Book of Abraham is not "lost"--in spite
of Nibley's dissonance-reducing assertions to the contrary, which he bases on
Cowdery's passing description (incorrectly attributed to Joseph
Smith39) of the entire collection of papyri (i.e., the "record of
Abraham and Joseph," the son of Jacob).40 Cowdery summarized the
appearance of this collection as "beautifully written on papyrus with black, and
a small part, red ink or paint, in perfect preservation."41
But only one papyrus was beautifully written. The handwriting on the
other was crabbed and contained no rubrics. In 1841 William I. Appleby observed
that "there is a perceptible difference between the writings [of Abraham and
Joseph]. Joseph appears to have been the best scribe"42 (i.e., the
writing on the papyrus attributed to Abraham was of inferior quality). Thus,
despite Nibley, the evidence indicates that the Book of Abraham was developed
from "that badly written, poorly preserved little text, entirely devoid of
rubrics, which is today identified as the [Breathing Permit of
Hor]."43
After attempting to explain away the dissonance between the evidence and
the Book of Abraham, Nibley tries to shift the focus by declaring that "it is
the Book of Abraham that is on trial, not Joseph Smith" and that Smith's
"reputation must rest on the bona fides of the book, not the other way
around."44 And he issues the challenge: "Is [the Book of Abraham] an
authentic autobiography of Abraham the Patriarch, or is it
not?"45
Efforts to establish the historical authenticity of the Book of Abraham
face major obstacles. For instance, even Nibley acknowledges that one means used
to establish the authenticity of a document is to compare it "with documents
known to be authentic coming from that same time and place, and to weigh the
points of conflict or agreement among them."46 Assuming Abraham's
historicity, there is no agreement about when he would have lived.47
Nibley uses this advantageously, because he wants as much latitude as possible,
and accordingly postulates that Abraham could have lived anytime during a
comfortable span of two thousand years.48 Because there can be no way
of discerning which documents come "from that same time"--sometime within
Nibley's two thousand years--it is impossible to make any valid comparisons with
the contents of the Book of Abraham.
These obstacles are ignored by Nibley, however, who is determined to
"make up for the absence of reliable dates to give us texts contemporary with
Abraham" by accepting as valid any old documents "actually bearing the name of
Abraham."49 Thus by "the [p.230] study of parallels"50 he
can refer to documents which are temporally and/or culturally disparate in the
extreme.51 Here is an illustration of this commonly used
"parallelomania"52 methodology in Nibley's writings.
To show how "typically Egyptian" the first several verses of the Book of
Abraham are, Nibley juxtaposes them against several quotations which range from
the Egyptian Old Kingdom (2575 B.C.) through the Christian Period, including
quotations from Plutarch and Plato. In this manner, he asserts that the Book of
Abraham and Egyptian inscriptions "confirm and support each other."53
Unfortunately, this methodology does violence to the historical integrity of the
documents used in the manner described.
As with the writings of noted nineteenth-century British anthropologist
James Frazer, there is a "complete absence of historical
consciousness"54 in the "parallel school" of Book of Abraham
apologetics. For it is an anathema to it to rely on a method that "insists that
the essential requirement for interpretation of a text is to read it in context:
not merely in literary context, but in the wider, deeper social and cultural
context in which both author and audience lived, and in which the language they
employed took on the connotations to which the interpreter must seek to be
sensitive."55
Nibley has dismissed such scholarly methodology as "pointless
preoccupation with method and intrigue to avoid head-on confrontation with the
text." His apparent antipathy against scholarship is further demonstrated by his
claim that "to this day no Egyptologist can do more than pretend to understand
the Book of Breathings or the facsimiles to the Book of Abraham. Though by
departmental courtesy we credit them with knowledge they do not possess, it is
safe to say that they are still without a foothold in reality."56
Nothing could be further from the truth; it is just that scholarly
methodology does not yield the results that dissonance-reducing apologists
want--results that can only be obtained when proper historical methodology is
ignored. For Nibley, the only "really effective means of testing any method [is]
by the results that it produces"57--a Machiavellian approach to be
sure.
By analogy, because the movies The Sword in the Stone and
Camelot contain the name of King Arthur, the "parallelomania" approach
would accept them as valid evidence in establishing the historicity of the book
King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Such comparisons would
of course convince everyone except the medievalists, who are bound to "have a
preoccupation with method."
In conclusion, there is no factual basis to the rationalizations
which have been devised to explain away the dissonance caused to the Book of
Abraham by the Joseph Smith Egyptian Papers and by the Joseph Smith Papyri.
Moreover, the attempt to demonstrate the historicity of the Book of Abraham
by means of searching far and wide for parallels is suspect because of its complete
disregard for the cultural, temporal, and spatial matrices of the material it
uses.
It is therefore suggested that such means of dealing with the dissonance concerning
the Book of Abraham be abandoned. An observation by biblical scholar Jacob Neusner
is appropriate here: "an old Christian text, one from the first century for
example, is deemed a worthy subject of scholarship [by historians of religion].
But a fresh Christian expression (I think in this connection of the Book of
Mormon) is available principally for ridicule, but never for study. Religious
experience in the third century is fascinating. Religious experience in the
twentieth century [or the nineteenth] is frightening or absurd."58
Mormon apologists have thoroughly accepted the flawed hypothesis of which Neusner
speaks. Evidence of this is their attempt to make the Book of Abraham "a worthy
subject of scholarship" and to keep it from being an object of ridicule by unnecessarily
archaizing it. It seems more appropriate--as well as more accurate--to regard
it as "a fresh Christian expression" also. Let the LDS community begin to study,
ponder, and learn from the Book of Abraham for what it is--not for what some
within that community want it to be.