You might think
this topic has very little to do with my last post, but in my mind they are
quite closely connected. Perhaps that will become more clear toward the end of
this post. Let me begin by saying that for several years now I have not been a
big fan of apologetics. I am also not a big fan of what I will here call
antiapologetics. Most people probably refer to it is criticism, but criticism
can have a lot of other applications that I find positive and useful, so I will
stick with antiapologetics. What I’m talking about are those who defend
Mormonism and those who attack it. I’ll try to explain why I don’t particularly
care for either approach. Let me start with apologetics.
I don’t claim to
be any sort of expert on apologetics. But I do see a fair sampling of it at
work, and I read a bit more in various other venues. Especially since FARMS
faded away and the Maxwell Institute has shifted gears into what some are
calling the “new” apologetics, BYU Studies seems to be getting more submissions
that could be classified as traditional apologetics. Some we reject. Some we
accept, and it is then often my task to edit them. Which means I have to dig
into the nitty-gritty and ask tough questions, and that’s probably where my
opinions and preferences have been shaped.
The main problem
I see in the apologetics enterprise is that it begins with some preset
assumptions and then goes about trying to prove or at least support those
assumptions. In a way, then, apologetics may be considered a classic example of
begging the question.
I’m not going to
give many specific examples in this post. I have friends and acquaintances who
either are apologists or are devoted to those who are. I have also worked with
authors who have a definite apologetic bent. I appreciate what these good folks
are trying to do, but my experience has caused me to be wary of apologetics. To
avoid getting personal, I want to keep things pretty theoretical here. But let
me start by quoting Daniel Peterson, who described the general approach and
limitations quite well. Referring to the Book of Mormon, one of the two targets
Mormon apologists most frequently try to defend, he wrote:
Having argued for the antiquity of
the Book of Mormon for decades and knowing many, if not most, of those who’ve
been engaged in the same project over that period, I can say that I know of no
serious writers on the subject who believe themselves able to “prove” it, let
alone capable of proving it beyond a reasonable doubt, to the satisfaction of
everyone.
Rather, we understand ourselves to be
patiently engaged in amassing a cumulative case that will show the Book of
Mormon is congruent with what mainstream scholarship is disclosing about the
ancient Near Eastern environment from which the Jaredites, Lehites and
Mulekites are said to have emerged and about the pre-Columbian American
environment in which they lived out their histories. . . .
So, do believers see ancient evidence
for the Book of Mormon only because they’re already committed to its antiquity
on other grounds? In a sense, yes. Does that prove them guilty of
pseudo-scholarship motivated solely by irrational (or, at least, nonrational)
faith? No, it doesn’t.
It’s true that advocates of the Book
of Mormon typically have spiritual convictions regarding it. I know none who
don’t. But they also have nonarchaeological evidence for taking seriously its
claim to antiquity.1
Generally, this
is how Mormon apologetics works. First, the scholar has a spiritual conviction
regarding the truth of a particular proposition. He or she then goes about
“amassing” a body of evidence to support that conviction. I’m not saying this
is bad, and I’m not saying it necessarily leads to inaccurate conclusions.
Actually, it doesn’t lead to any conclusions at all, because the conclusion is
where the scholar starts, not where
he or she winds up. And that can cause problems, four in particular.
First, when a
person begins with a conclusion, he or she tends to cherry-pick evidence,
focusing on only that data that supports the conclusion. This often creates
one-sided scholarship that is, in many ways, blind to data that may not support
the conclusion. I see this in my work as an editor. When you ignore contrary
evidence, you tend to develop a certain blindness to questions that would
naturally arise from a more complete data set.
Second, and I see
this all too often, a person trying to support a particular conclusion tends to
make leaps of logic and to stretch evidence beyond where it will comfortably
go. Sometimes this leads to producing an abstruse or arduous explanation while
discarding the obvious or straightforward one. Most often this comes across as
simply trying too hard. Rather than going with the most simple reading of the
evidence, the scholar will employ some rather impressive mental or verbal
gymnastics to make the evidence fit the already established conclusion, or to
at least make it appear that the evidence suggests the conclusion. Proponents
of pretty much every Book of Mormon geography model are guilty of this, to give
a general example. I could tell some pretty good stories here, but I’ll refrain
for the reasons given above.
Third, apologists
sometimes read meaning into texts that simply aren’t there. This is called
eisegesis. It is the opposite of exegesis. Let me quote from that fount of
knowledge, Wikipedia: “While exegesis is the process of drawing out the meaning
from a text in accordance with the context and discoverable meaning of its
author, eisegesis occurs when a reader imposes his or her interpretation
into and onto the text. As a result, exegesis tends to be objective when
employed effectively while eisegesis is regarded as highly subjective.” Let me
use an example I wrote about in the long series on authority I posted last
year. As Mormons, we tend to read our modern definition of “priesthood” into
both the Bible and the Book of Mormon. We claim, for instance, that Alma
received the priesthood by ordination (from someone) before he baptized his
followers in the waters of Mormon. We read this into the account because,
according to our modern understanding of priesthood, this is how is simply had to happen. But our modern definition
of priesthood is entirely absent from the Book of Mormon. Priesthood in ancient
scripture, including the Book of Mormon, signifies merely the condition of
being a priest. It is not a form of authority you can give or receive or hold.
So any notion of Alma “receiving the priesthood” is being read into the text.
Apologetics tends to fall into this pattern because of the need to make a text
conform to a preconceived idea.
Finally, the
project of apologetics is to defend a proposition or a person. But what if
defending a proposition or a person prevents you from finding and then
defending the truth. Sometimes life is not so black and white as the apologist
wishes it to be. In fact, both real life and real people are incredibly
complex. Prophets are especially complicated. They are notoriously inconsistent
and error-prone and sometimes don’t have perfectly pure motives. And that fact
opens a can of worms. A major flaw I see in most Mormon apologetics is that it
begins with the assumption that Joseph Smith was infallible. Now, of course, no
apologist is going to admit that if you phrase it that way. We all believe that
our prophets are fallible mortals. That is our unwritten fourteenth article of
faith. But when it comes to Joseph Smith, the apologetics enterprise is devoted
to amassing evidence that everything he did or said makes sense if you look at
it through a particular lens. Seriously, have you ever seen an apologist take
all the evidence available and come to the conclusion that Joseph Smith was
simply way off base on a particular doctrine or claim? Of course not. They
can’t allow that. Why? Because that may require us to make space for human
frailty and inconsistency in any number of other areas. And that is a slippery
slope they simply cannot start down. So they end up defending a person or a
proposition in toto, even though the
truth may at times be a casualty in that effort.
I don’t know
exactly when I made this transition, but sometime during the past fifteen
years, I found that my loyalty gradually shifted from Joseph Smith and the
church he founded to the truth. I determined at some point that it wasn’t my
job to defend Joseph or the Book of Mormon or the Church. It was my job to find
the truth and defend that, let the chips fall where they may. That shift in
thinking opened up some avenues that were previously closed. At that point,
many more possibilities were available to my mind than before. It enabled me to
start considering evidence I had previously closed my mind to. Quite often the
evidence creates inner turmoil for me. But I am able to look at things more
objectively (even though I realize that total objectivity is a myth). And it
has reversed the process for me. Instead of beginning with a conclusion and
amassing evidence to support it, I am looking at the evidence, even information
that may be uncomfortable, and asking what conclusions the sum of that evidence
points to. Sometimes the evidence merely points to incredible complexity and no
easy answer. Such is life.
Now, let me
briefly tackle antiapologetics. Obviously, those who are trying to prove
Mormonism or Joseph Smith wrong are going to fall into some of the same traps
that those who defend it are susceptible to. They tend to have predetermined
conclusions and to focus only on evidence that supports these conclusions. They
are especially resistant to considering any evidence that might be considered
subjective, such as spiritual experiences or confirmations. It’s probably
unheard of for an antiapologist to claim to have received a spiritual witness
that Mormonism isn’t true. From my perspective, they don’t tend to stretch
evidence and engage in verbal gymnastics to prove their point, but they are sometimes
so myopically focused on proving Joseph Smith or the Book of Mormon wrong that
they ignore the complexity of people and motives, and sometimes the truth gets
shortchanged. They are just as lopsided in their approach as the apologists,
which likely blinds them to possibilities that would become apparent if they
were able to fairly consider all the evidence.
So, how does my
take on apologetics and its opposite intersect with my last post, about the
difficulty of deciphering spiritual communication? Well, since a spiritual
confirmation of an otherwise unprovable proposition, such as the historical
accuracy of the Book of Mormon, is quite subjective and, I would suggest, not
always easy to interpret, the question arises about how much we should trust a
spiritual feeling about something and how much we should trust the observable
evidence.
I mentioned in my
last post my essay that Dialogue published
several years ago. It detailed a very powerful spiritual experience regarding
Joseph Smith that I had as a missionary. At the time it occurred and at the
time I wrote the essay many years later, I interpreted the experience very
broadly. But in the past few years I’ve become acquainted with a truckload of
evidence that makes a broad interpretation highly unlikely, if not impossible.
The inevitable conclusion after looking at all the evidence I have so far
accumulated, including the spiritual feeling I had all those years ago, is that
the truth is a lot more complicated than either an acceptance of everything
(meaning Joseph was infallible) or a rejection of everything (meaning Joseph
was a fraud) will permit. But such a complex and uncertain conclusion is
unacceptable in the world of subjective certainty that drives most traditional
apologetics. It is also unacceptable to the antiapologists, who are certain
that Joseph was deluded, or worse.
And this brings
me to my actual dilemma: the Book of Mormon. Now, I don’t claim to be a Book of
Mormon scholar. I have published a bit about certain textual elements in the
Book of Mormon and what they might mean. And as part of my job I also proofread
the entire 1,281 pages of Royal Skousen’s recently published analysis of
grammatical variation in the Book of Mormon. Royal claimed that made me one of
three people in the world to have accomplished that feat. I am currently
reading the Book of Mormon for the umpteenth time, but with a much more careful
eye than in the past. I’m finding some interesting and unexpected things. I’ve
also read a few books by others who have tried to figure out what’s going on
with both the contents of the book and the translation. I agree with some of
their conclusions and disagree with others. So far, I can only say that the
Book of Mormon is a very complicated book, probably more complicated than
either the apologists or the antiapologists are willing to admit.
My own relationship
with the Book of Mormon is somewhat unusual and, as you might expect,
complicated. I’ve always liked the book, although parts of it have raised
questions in my mind, but despite Moroni’s famous promise, I have never
received a spiritual witness of its truthfulness. This is certainly not for
lack of effort. I have been praying about the Book of Mormon for over forty
years. Not constantly, mind you, but repeatedly. And what has been the result? Nothing.
Not even a warm feeling, which I wouldn’t give much credence to anyway at this
point. So in the past couple of years, I have changed my prayers. I no longer
ask if the book is true. I don’t even ask “if these things are not true” (Moro.
10:4). True is such a loaded word. It
can mean all sorts of things. I’ve read fiction that is definitely “true.” So I
have made my petitions much more specific. I now ask if the Book of Mormon is
an accurate record of real people. Still no answer. Complete and perfect
silence. No heavenly manifestation. No spiritual feeling of confirmation.
I don’t have the
convenience of “knowing” by a feeling in my heart that the book is “true,” so I
am left with other forms of evidence. In the coming months, I will be talking
about some of that evidence. And I am open to looking at both sides of every
question. Let me just say at this point that I have no reason to doubt either
the firsthand historical accounts by Joseph Smith and his associates who claim
to have received or viewed gold plates or the secondhand accounts of those who
observed the translation process. But I also have no reason to doubt that there
are things in the Book of Mormon that, frankly, have no business being in the
book if it is what it claims to be. That has led me to describe the Book of
Mormon as a million-piece jigsaw puzzle, and we don’t seem to have very many of
the pieces in the right place yet. And that’s part of the fun—unless you’re either
so convinced that it’s a hoax that you can’t entertain any evidence that
supports it or you’re so persuaded it is an ancient record that you have to
spend your time trying to explain away fairly obvious trouble spots rather than
seeking to understand what those inconsistencies may be telling us. Personally,
I hope to remain open to all the evidence and then draw conclusions. Just as I
see no reason to discard the accounts of Joseph Smith and his early associates,
I also see no reason to simply dismiss valid points raised by Book of Mormon
critics, or to explain them away with convoluted arguments.
The question I’m
trying to answer is, What is this book? There is so much evidence to look at—and
so much that seems contradictory—that I am certain I won’t be able to answer this
question anytime soon. But that won’t stop me from presenting some of the
evidence and trying to deal with it fairly. More to come.
__________________
1. Daniel Peterson, “Book of Mormon Apologetics
and Scholarship,” Deseret News, June
16, 2015, http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865632671/Book-of-Mormon-apologetics-and-scholarship.html?pg=all.
I am interested in finding out what things you find in the Book of Mormon that have no business being there. I guess that you can describe me as a TBM type of guy, but I have had a spiritual affirmation that the Book of Mormon is "true". as in that it is a divinely inspired book and the people in it were (and are) real people.
ReplyDeleteThere are things about that book that are puzzling, to be sure. But I will not get into them, but will wait upon your future blogs.
Glenn
I'll mention some of these over time, but there are, for instance, anachronisms that even some apologists recognize. There are some textual elements that raise questions about the translation process (or person). There certainly are some things about the book that are puzzling, which makes it especially intriguing to someone like me who likes to figure things out.
ReplyDeleteRegarding "predetermined conclusions" and how it interferes with objective scholarship and learning, consider Ian Barbour in Myths, Models and Paradigms,
ReplyDelete" There are no bare uninterpreted data. Expectations and conceptual commitments influence perceptions, both in everyday life and in science. Man supplies the categories of interpretation, right from the start. The very language in which observations are reported is influenced by prior theories … The presuppositions which the scientist brings to his inquiry are reflected in the way he formulates a problem, the kind of apparatus he builds, and the type of variable he considers important. Here the emphasis is on theory and the way it permeates observation.
In N. R Hanson’s oft quoted words, ‘All Data are theory-laden.’ The procedures of measurement and the interpretation of the resulting measurement and interpretation of the resulting numerical values depend in implicit theoretical assumptions. Most of the time, scientists work within a framework of thought which they have inherited … But, says Feyerband, when the background theory itself is an issue, when the fundamental assumptions and basic concepts are under attack, then the dependence of measurement on theoretical assumptions is crucial." (Barbour, 95).
Peter Novick spoke at Sunstone on the topic of supposedly objective history:
"I will only report that to an ever-increasing number of historians in recent decades it has not just seemed unapproachable, but an incoherent ideal; not impossible, in the sense of unachievable (that would not make it a less worthy goal than many other goals that we reasonably pursue), but meaningless. This is not because of human frailty on the part of the historian (that, after all, we can struggle against), not because of irresistible outside pressures (these too we can resist with some success, if not complete success). No, the principal problem is different, and it is laughably simple. It is the problem of selecting from [Page 121]among the zillions and zillions of bits of historical data out there the handful that we can fit in even the largest book, and the associated problem of how we arrange those bits that we choose. The criterion of selection and the way we arrange the bits we choose are not given out there in the historical record. Neutrality, value-freedom, and absence of preconceptions on the part of the historian would not result in a neutral account, it would result in no account at all, because any historian, precisely to the extent that she was neutral, without values, free of preconceptions, would be paralyzed, would not have the foggiest notion of how to go about choosing from the vast, unbelievably messy chaos of stuff out there." (Peter Novick, “Why the Old Mormon Historians Are More Objective Than the New,” Sunstone Symopium, 1989, 4 (transcript in my possession).
Rather than worry overmuch about who has what preconceptions and makes which assumptions and performs which experiments on which data and interprets underwhich framework, I think it most productive to figure out how we go about deciding which approach is better.
Kevin Christensen
Canonsburg, PA
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I'm glad to know there are others who don't quite completely know what to make of the Book of Mormon. I admire you still holding out in the faith that one day Moroni's promise might be realized in your life, even after so many years. I continually come back to Isaiah 45:15. No matter the extent of our effort, research, and prayer, God continues to remain hidden, his existence or lack thereof unprovable either way.
ReplyDelete