Colour Blnd? Not according to Joseph Smith
Published by Admin in Mormonism · Tuesday 26 Feb 2019 · 11:30
Tags: Apologetics, Cults, Mormon, Uncategorized
Tags: Apologetics, Cults, Mormon, Uncategorized
This excerpt is from "Mormonism, Shadow or Reality", Pages 96A and 96B
I can't take any credit for this, but it's such a good summary of how the LDS Church is only a product of its current age:
- The Book of Mormon originally written in the 1800's, conformed to the prevailing culture at the time.
- And now the LDS Church and the Book of Mormon has conformed to the prevailing culture at this time
Let
me be clear, this old teaching is repugnant and disgusting. The LDS
Church claims that it has received a new divine revelation and that
people with dark skin are acceptable to God and can attain the
priesthood. So does that mean that Joseph Smith had it wrong before?
He's supposed to be God's mouthpiece, the Book of Mormon is supposed to
be the most correct revelation that God has ever given man. Why the
changes then?
CHANGE IN BOOK OF MORMON TO COVER UP EMBARRASSING TEACHING ABOUT SKIN COLOUR.
In
the beginning, the Mormon Church taught that a dark skin is a sign of
God's displeasure. This teaching comes directly Joseph Smith's Book of
Mormon. The Book of Mormon teaches that about 600 B.C. a prophet named
Lehi brought his family to America. Those who were righteous (the
Nephites) had a white skin, but those who rebelled against God (the
Lamanites) were cursed with a dark skin. The Lamanites eventually
destroyed the Nephites; therefore, the Indians living today are referred
to as Lamanites. The following verses found in the Book of Mormon and
explain the curse on the Lamanites:
"And
it came to pass that I beheld, after they had dwindled in unbelief,
they became a dark, and loathsome, and a filthy people, full of idleness
and all manner of abominations." (Book of Mormon, 1 Nephi 12:23)
"And
he had caused the cursing to come upon them, yea, even a sore cursing
because of their iniquity ... wherefore, as they were white, and
exceeding fair and delightsome, that they might not be enticing unto my
people the Lord God did cause a skin of blackness to come upon them." (2
Nephi 5:21)
"And the skins
of the Lamanites were dark, according to the mark which was set upon
their fathers, which was a curse n them because of their transgression
... " (Alma 3:6)
The Book of Mormon stated that when the Lamanites repented of their sins "their curse was taken from them, and their skin became white like unto the Nephites"
(3 Nephi 2:15). The Book of Mormon also promised that in the last days
the Lamanites-i.e., the Indians-will repent and "many generations shall
not pass away among them, save they shall be a white and delightsome
people." (2 Nephi 30:6) One of the most embarrassing things about the
doctrine concerning the Indians is that they are not becoming "white" as
the Book of Mormon prophesied. The anti-Mormon writer Gorgon H. Fraser
claims that the "skin colour" of the Indians converted to Mormonism "has
not altered in the least because their adherence to the Mormon
doctrines" (What Does The Book of Mormon Teach, p. 46) .
It now
appears that the Mormon leaders are trying to dissolve" the doctrine
that the Indians will turn white after turning to Mormonism. The Church
has just released its 1981 printing of the "triple combination" which
contains the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants and Pearl of Great
Price. This new publication contains a very important change. Previous
editions of the Book of Mormon had said that in the last days the
Indians "shall be a white and delightsome people." (2 Nephi 30:6) In the
new edition this has been altered to read that the Indians "shall be a
pure and delightsome people."
The official Church magazine, The Ensign, tries to justify this change by stating:
"Most
students of latter-day scriptures are aware that from the very first
printing typographical errors have crept into the Book of Mormon ....
"The Prophet himself attempted to correct some of these kinds of errors,
but his many duties prevented him from completing the project; and even
so, some of his corrections seem to have disappeared again in later
editions. For example, the 1830 and 1837 printings of the Book of Mormon
contained a prophecy that the Lamanites would one day become "a white
and delightsome people" (2 Ne. 30:6). In the 1840 printing, which the
Prophet edited, this passage was changed to read 'a pure and delightsome
people,' but for some reason later printings reverted to the original
wording." (The Ensign, October 1981, pages 17-18)
It should be
noted that Church leaders are unable to produce any documentary evidence
to support their claim that this was merely a correction by Joseph
Smith of a typographical error. There were originally two handwritten
manuscripts for the Book of Mormon-a copy which was written by Joseph
Smith's scribes as he dictated it and a second "amended" copy that was
prepared for the printer. Unfortunately, most of the first manuscript
was destroyed through water damage. The Mormon scholar Stanley R. Larson
informs us that this manuscript "does not exist for this section of the
text ... " ("A Study of Some Textual Variations in the Book of Mormon
Comparing the Original and the Printer's Manuscripts and the 1830, the
1837, and the 1840 Editions," Unpublished M.A. thesis, Brigham Young
University, April 1974, page 283)
Fortunately, the second
handwritten manuscript-the copy given to the printer to use to set the
type for the first printing of the Book of Mormon-was preserved by Book
of Mormon witness David Whitmer and is still in excellent shape. This
handwritten manuscript does contain the portion printed as 2 Nephi 30:6.
It uses the word "white," and therefore does not support the claim that
Joseph Smith was only correcting a typographical error (see Restoration
Scriptures, by Richard P. Howard, Independence, Missouri, 1969, p. 49).
It should be remembered that both the first two editions of the Book of
Mormon (1830 and 1837) used the word "white." It is especially
significant that the 1837 edition retained this reading because the
preface to this edition stated that "the whole has been carefully re
examined and compared with the original manuscripts, by elder Joseph
Smith, Jr., the translator of the book of Mormon, assisted by the
present printer, brother 0. Cowdery, .. ," (Book of Mormon, 1837
Edition, Preface, as cited in The Ensign, September 1976, page
79)Besides all the evidence from the original Book of Mormon manuscript
and the first two printed editions, there is another passage in the Book
of Mormon which makes it very clear that Joseph Smith believed that the
Lamanites' skins could be turned "white" through repentance:
"And their curse was taken from them, and their skin became white like unto the Nephites;" (3 Nephi 2:15)
We
have taken this quotation directly from the new "triple combination" to
show that the Mormon Church is still bound by the belief that
righteousness affects skin colour even though Church leaders have
changed the verse appearing as 2 Nephi 30:6.
The fact that Joseph
Smith believed that the Indians' skins would actually become white seems
to also be verified by a revelation he gave in 1831. In the updated
material for the chapter on polygamy we discuss this revelation and show
that it was suppressed until 1974 when we printed it in Mormonism Like
Watergate? Since that time the Mormon Church Historian Leonard J.
Arrington and his assistant Davis Bitton published the important portion
of it in their book, The Mormon Experience, page 195:
"'For it is
my will, that in time, ye should take unto you wives of the Lamanites
and Nephites that their posterity may become white, delightsome and
just, for even now their females are more virtuous than the gentiles."'
Like
Joseph Smith, President Brigham Young taught that the Indians would
"become 'a white and delightsome people'" (Journal of Discourses, Vol.
2, p. 14:11. Mormon leaders from Joseph Smith to the present time have
continually used the Book of Mormon to prove that the Indians would
become white if they turned to Mormonism.
Spencer W. Kimball, who
became the twelfth President of the Church on December 30, 1973 strongly
endorsed that teaching. In the LDS General Conference, October 1960,
Mr. Kimball stated:
"I saw a striking contrast in the progress of
the Indian people today ... they are fast becoming a white and
delightsome people .... For years they have been growing delightsome,
and they are now becoming white and delightsome, as they were promised
.... The children in the home placement program in Utah are often
lighter than their brothers and sisters in the hogans on the
reservation.
"At one meeting a father and mother and their
sixteen-year-old daughter were present, the little member girl---sixteen
-sitting between the dark father and mother, and it was evident she was
several shades lighter than her parents-on the same reservation, in the
same hogan, subject to the same sun and wind and weather .... These
young members of the Church are changing to whiteness and to
delightsomeness. One white elder jokingly said that he and his companion
were donating blood regularly to the hospital in the hope that the
process might be accelerated." (Improvement Era, December 1960, pp.
922-23)
The reader will notice that Spencer W. Kimball used the
Book of Mormon phrase, "a white and delightsome people." This. of
course, is the very phrase that has now been changed to read, "a pure
and delightsome people." After using the word "white" to prove his point
in a conference address, one would think that President Kimball would
he opposed to changing it to "pure." The Ensign, however, seems to
indicate that he approved of the change. It states that "every
correction" in the triple combination "was approved by the First
Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve, and the Brethren felt good
about each of them" (October 1981, p. 18). We find it very difficult to
find any evidence of inspiration in the whole matter.
In any
event, the Church now wants to suppress the Book of Mormon's teaching
concerning skin color. Ron Barker, of the Associated Press, questioned
Church spokesman Jerry P. Cahill concerning the matter:
"Asked
whether church members should assume that faithful Mormon Indians would
one day become light complexioned, Cahill said they should assume that
they will become a 'pure and delightsome people."' (Salt Lake Tribune,
September 30, 1981)
We can probably expect more revisions in
Mormon books to cover up this embarrassing doctrine. Apostle Bruce R.
McConkie, who has recently had to revise his book Mormon Doctrine to
conform to the change on the anti-black doctrine, will undoubtedly have
to revise his section on the "LAMANITE CURSE." On pages 428-29 of the
1979 printing of Mormon Doctrine we find the following:
" ... a
twofold curse came upon the Lamanites: ...'they became a dark, and
loathsome, and a filthy people, full of idleness and all manner of
abominations.' (1 Ne. 12:23.) So that they 'might not be enticing' unto
the Nephites, 'the Lord God did cause a skin of blackness to come upon
them.' (2 Ne. 5:20-25; Alma 3:14-16.) ...
"During periods of great
righteousness, when groups of Lamanites accepted the gospel and turned
to the Lord, the curse was removed from them .... the curse was removed
from a group of Lamanite converts and they became white like the
Nephites. (3 Ne. 2:15-16.) ...
"When the gospel is taken to the
Lamanites in our day and they come to a knowledge of Christ and of their
fathers, the 'scales of darkness' shall fall from their eyes; 'and many
generations shall not pass away among them, save they shall be a white
and delightsome people.' (2 Ne. 30:6.) Finally, before the judgement bar
of God, all who have been righteous, Lamanites and Nephites alike, will
be free from the curse of spiritual death and the skin of darkness.
(Jae. 3:5-9)"
We believe, of course, that Apostle McConkie has the
right to alter his book in any way he desires. His changes concerning
the anti-black doctrine are certainly a step in the right direction.
When it comes to the Book of Mormon, however, I wonder how the Mormon
leaders can justify altering words that were supposed to have been
translated by the power of God.
