There are
doctrines in the Book of Mormon that are taught explicitly, and there are
doctrines that can be inferred from the event described in the narrative.
Sometimes these explicit and implicit doctrines do not square with each other.
Let me give two examples. And let me mention at the outset that all Book of
Mormon quotations will come from Skousen’s Earliest
Text, because I want to come as close as I can to what Joseph actually
dictated, not what decades of editing have produced.
The Memo Problem
A dilemma for
Christian scholars over the centuries has been referred to as the
soteriological problem of evil, or the memo problem (billions of God’s children
didn’t get the gospel memo). This dilemma results from the incoherence of two
Christian doctrines and one irrefutable fact: (1) God is loving and just and wants all of his children to be saved; (2)
salvation comes only through an acceptance of Jesus Christ; and (3) billions of
God’s children have lived and died without ever having heard about Jesus. This
is a perplexing problem, about which much has been written. And the Book of
Mormon weighs in on it very explicitly.
Jacob, Abinadi, and Mormon all agree that
those who die without hearing the gospel are saved through the Atonement of
Jesus Christ. Abinadi even goes so far as to say that these people receive
eternal life, although in the Book of Mormon that term does not mean what it
means in modern Mormonism. It is simply another expression for salvation, or
going to heaven, the ultimate reward in Book of Mormon theology.
Jacob declares: “Wherefore he has given a
law. And where there is no law given there is no punishment, and where there is
no punishment there is no condemnation, and where there is no condemnation the
mercies of the Holy One of Israel hath claim upon them because of the
atonement, for they are delivered by the power of him. For the atonement
satisfieth the demands of his justice upon all those who hath not the law given
to them, that they are delivered from that awful monster, death and hell, and
the devil and the lake of fire and brimstone which is endless torment; and they
are restored to that God who gave them breath, which is the Holy One of Israel”
(2 Ne. 9:25–26).
Abinadi agrees: “And now the resurrection of
all the prophets and all those that have believed in their words—or all those
that have kept the commandments of God—these shall come forth in the first
resurrection; therefore they are the first resurrection. They are raised to
dwell with God, who hath redeemed them. Thus they have eternal life through
Christ, who hath broken the bands of death. And these are those who have part
in the first resurrection, and these are they that have died before Christ
came, in their ignorance, not having salvation declared unto them. And thus the
Lord bringeth about the restoration of these, and they have a part in the first
resurrection, or hath eternal life, being redeemed by the Lord” (Mosiah
15:22–24).
Mormon, in his letter to Moroni about child
baptism, includes a similar claim about those who died in ignorance: “For
behold that all little children are alive in Christ, and also all they that are
without the law, for the power of redemption cometh on all they that have no
law. Wherefore he that is not condemned—or he that is under no
condemnation—cannot repent, and unto such baptism availeth nothing” (Moro.
8:22).
This is of course a problematic doctrine, one
that we completely reject today in the Church. If those who died without
hearing the good news of the gospel are saved, or given eternal life, through
the mercy and grace of Christ, then missionary work is not only unnecessary but
ultimately counterproductive, because people would be accountable and may be
damned if they hear the word and reject it. But if they never hear the gospel,
they are automatically saved. Likewise, family history and temple work would be
completely unnecessary.
Because this is an unsatisfactory doctrine,
Joseph Smith rejected it. Charles Harrell, in his book This Is My Doctrine, shows how this doctrine went through at least
three stages of development before arriving at what we now accept. The first
step came in February 1832 with the Vision, now recorded in D&C 76. Here,
those who die without the law inherit the terrestrial glory (D&C 76:72–74).
The next stage came in January 1836 with Joseph’s vision of his brother Alvin
in the celestial kingdom. Here those who die without the restored gospel
receive the celestial kingdom if they “would have received it if they had been
permitted to tarry” (D&C 137:7). They are judged “according to their works,
according to the desire of their hearts” (D&C 137:9), without any need for
the ordinance of baptism or the as yet unrevealed temple ordinances. The final
stage in the development of this doctrine began in 1840 with Joseph’s
introduction of baptism for the dead. This evolved over the years into our current
program of baptizing, endowing, and sealing the dead. A far cry from what we
read in the Book of Mormon.
But it appears from the Nephite narrative
that they didn’t believe Jacob, Abinadi, or Mormon. There is an implicit
doctrine that carries through the entire book. Preaching the gospel to the
ignorant is seen as a necessity. The sons of Mosiah were “desirous that
salvation should be declared to every creature, for they could not bear that
any human soul should perish; yea, even the very thoughts that any soul should
endure endless torment did cause them to quake and tremble” (Mosiah 28:3). But
if Jacob, Abinadi, and Mormon are to be believed, this was a needless anxiety.
In fact, by going to the Lamanites and preaching to them, they ensured that thousands
who heard their words and rejected them would suffer eternal torment. If they
had just stayed home and ruled the kingdom, all those Lamanites would have been
automatically saved through the Atonement of Christ. And their missionary
effort is not unique. The theme runs through the whole Nephite narrative.
Preaching the gospel to the ignorant is viewed as a high priority. Amulek
insists that “this life is the
time for men to prepare to meet God” (Alma 34:32). It is obvious from the Nephite narrative that the implicit doctrine is at
odds with the explicit theology taught by three different prophets.
Modalism among the Nephites?
The second example is a bit messier. For this
doctrine, there is only one extended explicit theological explanation, but
there are several brief references, some of which can be interpreted in various
ways. I became aware of this second example when LDS theologian David Paulsen
sent a book manuscript to us at BYU Studies. The book has not been published,
but in the manuscript Paulsen and two coauthors attempt to refute the notion
that the Book of Mormon teaches modalism.1 They are mostly
successful, but I think their blanket conclusion does not fit all the evidence
they present. The notion of explicit teachings not exactly matching the
implicit teachings comes closer to the mark, in my opinion.
According to Theopedia, “Modalism, also called Sabellianism, is the
unorthodox belief that God is one person who has revealed himself in
three forms or modes in contrast to the Trinitarian doctrine
where God is one being eternally existing in three persons. According to Modalism,
during the incarnation, Jesus was simply God acting in one mode
or role, and the Holy Spirit at Pentecost was God acting in a
different mode. Thus, God does not exist as the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit at
the same time. Rather, He is one person and has merely manifested himself in
these three modes at various times. Modalism thus denies the basic
distinctiveness and coexistence of the three persons of the Trinity.”
The most obvious place where the doctrine of
modalism appears to be taught in the Book of Mormon is again Abinadi’s
preaching to the priests of King Noah: “I would that ye should understand that
God himself shall come down among the children of men and shall redeem his
people. And because he dwelleth in flesh he shall be called the Son of God; and
having subjected the flesh to the will of the Father, being the Father and the
Son, the Father because he was conceived by the power of God and the Son
because of the flesh, thus becoming the Father and Son—and they are one God,
yea, the very Eternal Father of heaven and earth—and thus the flesh becoming
subject to the Spirit, or the Son to the Father, being one God, suffereth
temptation and yieldeth not to the temptation, but suffereth himself to be
mocked and scourged and cast out and disowned by his people” (Mosiah 15:1–5).
Some of this doctrine is admittedly
confusing, but portions of it definitely do sound like a form of modalism.
Paulsen and his coauthors grant that this passage is hard to not see as
modalism, but they also try to spin it in a different direction.
Other passages in the Book of Mormon also
appear to lean toward a modalistic concept of God. For instance, in 3 Nephi
1:14, Jesus, speaking to Nephi4, says, “Behold, I come unto my own
to fulfil all things which I have made known unto the children of men from the
foundation of the world, and to do the will both of the Father and of the Son—of
the Father because of me, and of the Son because of my flesh.” This language is
somewhat confusing, but a plain reading of it has Jesus claiming to be both the
Father and the Son.
Amulek, in his debate with Zeezrom, claims
that Christ “is the very Eternal Father of heaven and earth” (Alma 11:39) and
that “Christ the Son and God the Father and the Holy Spirit” are “one Eternal
God” (Alma 11:44). These verses can be read modalistically, but they can be
interpreted in other ways too.
Another seemingly modalistic passage appears
in Ether 3:14: “Behold, I am he which was prepared from the foundation
of the world to redeem my people. Behold, I am Jesus Christ. I am the Father
and the Son. In me shall all mankind have light—and that eternally—even they
which shall believe on my name; and they shall become my sons and my
daughters.” Here it is possible that Christ is saying he is the Father because
those who believe on his name become his children, but it can also be read with
a flavor of modalism.
Another example comes again from Abinadi in
Mosiah 16:15: “Teach them that redemption cometh through Christ the
Lord, which is the very Eternal Father.” Moroni also uses similar language
(Morm. 9:12).
Finally, there
are a handful of passages in the Book of Mormon that originally referred to
Jesus as “God” or “the Everlasting God” or “the Eternal Father,” but these were
changed by Joseph Smith in 1837 to “Son of God,” “Son of the Everlasting God,”
and “Son of the Eternal Father.” For example, 1 Nephi 11:18 originally read,
“Behold, the virgin which thou seest is the mother of God after the manner of
the flesh.” A few verses later, 1 Nephi 11:21 read in the original, “Behold the
Lamb of God, yea, even the Eternal Father.” And 1 Nephi 11:32 once read, “And I
looked and beheld the Lamb of God, that he was taken by the people, yea, the
everlasting God was judged of the world.” All these had “Son of” added to them
to remove any apparent modalism.
Paulsen and his coauthors argue that the Book
of Mormon does not teach modalism, because the book contains an overwhelming
number of verses that not only imply a trinitarian or tritheistic reading, but
cannot be read any other way. I agree with this assertion for the most part.
There are scores of passages in the Book of Mormon that strongly indicate
separate divine beings in the Godhead. But because of the few verses that do
seem overtly modalistic, I see this as another example of explicit doctrines
teaching one thing and implicit doctrines teaching another.
The most prominent (perhaps only) passage in
the book that actually spells out a doctrine of the Godhead is Abinadi’s sermon
to the priests of Noah. Other verses imply modalism. But the vast majority of
passages referring to members of the Godhead do not support a modalistic
interpretation of the Book of Mormon. So here again we have an explicit
doctrine that seems at odds with multiple expressions of an implicit doctrine.
I’m not going to draw any conclusions at this
point about what this seeming inconsistency between explicit and implicit
doctrines means in terms of how we should consider the Book of Mormon, but it
is valuable to note such examples. By considering them with all the other
evidence, we can hopefully come to a more complete understanding of what this
complex book is.
I haven’t really thought carefully yet about
other doctrines in the Book of Mormon that may show a similar disconnect between
their explicit and implicit forms. If you’ve noticed some, maybe you can
mention them in the comments.
__________________
1. David L. Paulsen, Ari D. Bruening,
and Benjamin B. Brown, The Earliest
Mormon Understanding of God (1829–1844): Modalism and Other Myths, unpublished
manuscript, in my possession.
What if we step away from the notion that "the Book of Mormon" teaches a set of doctrines (implicit or explicit) and focus on what individuals teach. Do they line up according to schools? Do some schools seem to contradict what other schools say? To me, it makes more sense to make a coherent whole out of, say, Abinadi's teaching about the Godhead than the Book of Mormon's. If Abinadi's teaching has modalist and trinitarian elements, then we should perhaps temper our reading of Abinadi's modalism (or trinitarianism, I'm not sure which way the tempering should go), rather than the entire Book of Mormon's, especially since it's not clear how much Alma the Younger's or Mormon's thought should affect how we interpret Abinadi's thinking.
ReplyDeleteA shorter version of Paulsen and Bruening's essay appeared in the FARMS Review of Books 13/2 (2001), conveniently here, and very much worth reading.
ReplyDeletehttps://publications.mi.byu.edu/fullscreen/?pub=1454&index=12
I have also read the long version.
Another aspect of the problem is contextualization, that is do read in light of our own cultural assumptions, or those of the ancients? (2 Nephi 25:1-5). It makes a difference. Brant Gardner has drawn on Mark Smith and Margaret Barker in his Second Witness series, and in a FAIR Presentation, conveniently here:
https://www.fairmormon.org/conference/august-2003/monotheism-messiah-and-mormons-book
I share his enthusiasm for the implications and significance of Margaret Barker's The Great Angel: A Study of Israel's Second God as a telling context for approaching the Book of Mormon.
"There were many in first-century Palestine who still retained a world-view derived from the more ancient religion of Israel [that of the First Temple] in which there was a High God and several Sons of God, one of whom was Yahweh, the Holy One of Israel. Yahweh, the Lord, could be manifested on earth in human form, as an angel or in the Davidic king. It was as a manifestation of Yahweh, the Son of God, that Jesus was acknowledged as Son of God, Messiah and Lord." Margaret Barker, The Great Angel: A Study of Israel’s Second God (London: SPCK, 1992), 3.
FWIW
Kevin Christensen
Canonsburg, PA