An analysis of the book of Mormon with an examination
of its internal and external evidences, and a refutation of
its pretenses to divine authority
by Alexander Campbell
from the Millennial Harbinger a monthly periodical
published by him in Bethany, Virginia February 7th,
1831
EVERY age of the world has produced imposters and
delusions. Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses, and were
followed by Pharaoh, his court, and clergy. They for some
time supported their pretensions, much to the annoyance of
the cause of the Israelites and their leader Moses.
To say nothing of the false prophets of the Jewish age,
the diviners, soothsayers, magicians, and all the ministry
of idols among the Gentiles, by which the nations were so
often deceived, the imposters which have appeared since the
Christian era would fill volumes of the most lamentable
details ever read. The false Messiahs which have afflicted
the Jews since the rejection of Jesus of Nazareth, have
more than verified all the predictions of the Faithful and
True Witness. No less than TWENTY-FOUR distinguished false
Messiahs have disturbed the Jews. Many were deceived, and
myriads lost their lives through their impostures. Some
peculiar epochs were distinguished for the number and
impudence of these impostors. If the people had fixed upon
any year as likely to terminate their dispersions, and as
the period of their return, that year rarely failed to
produce a Messiah. Hence in the twelfth century no less
than TEN false Messiahs appeared.
The year 1666, was a year of great expectation, and gave
birth to one of the most remarkable of the false Christs.
'Great multitudes marched from unknown parts, to the remote
deserts of Arabia, and they were supposed to be the ten
tribes of Israel, who had been dispersed for many ages. It
was said that a ship was arrived in the north part of
Scotland, with sails and cordage of silk, that the mariners
spoke nothing but Hebrew, and on the sails was this motto;
'The Twelve Tribes of Israel.' Then it was said that Sabati
Levi appeared at Smyrna and professed to be the Messiah.
The Jews gave up their business and attended to him. He
obtained one Nathan in Jerusalem to pass for his Elias, or
forerunner. Nathan prophesied for him, and the Jews became
very penitent, and reformed under the expectation that the
Messiah would appear in two years. 'Some fasted so long
that they died - some endured melted wax to be dropped on
their flesh - some rolled in snow - many whipped
themselves. Superfluities in dress and household were
dispensed with; property was sold to large amounts, and
immense contributions were made to the poor. Though he met
with much opposition, his followers increased, and began in
large numbers to prophesy and fall into ecstacies. Four
hundred men and women prophesied of his growing kingdom,
and young infants who could hardly speak, would plainly
pronounce, "SABATI, MESSIAH, and Son of God." The people
were for a time possessed, and voices were heard from their
bowels. Some fell into trances, foamed at the mouth,
recounted their future prosperity, their visions of the
Lion of Judah, the triumphs of SABATI.'
'When he was brought before the magistrates, some
affirmed they saw a pillar of fire between him and the Cadi
or Magistrates, and others actually swore that they saw it.
This the credible Jews believed; those who would not
believe in him, were shunned as excommunicated persons, and
all intercourse with them was prohibited. 'The Grand
Seignor, determined to try his faith by stripping him naked
and setting him a mark for his archers; but rather than
subject himself to this test, he turned Mahometan, to the
great confusion of the Jews.' We have been thus particular
in giving a view, of the incidents of the life of this
impostor, as a specimen of the others; and because of some
remarkable analogies between him and the present New York
imposter.
Numerous have been the imposters among christians since
the great apostacy began; especially since, and at the time
of the Reformation. Munzer, Stubner and Stork, where
conspicuous in the beginning of the 16th century.' These
men taught that among christians, who had the precepts of
the Gospel to guide them, and the spirit of God to direct
them, the office of magistracy was not only unnecessary,
but an unlawful encroachment on their spiritual liberty;
that the distinctions occasioned by birth, rank, or wealth,
should be abolished; that all christians should put their
possessions into one common stock, and live together in
that state of equality, which becomes members of the same
family, and that polygamy was not incompatible with either
the Old or New Testament.
They related many visions and revelations which they had
from above, but failing to propagate their views by these
means, they attempted to propagate them by arms. Many
Catholics joined them, and in the various insurrections
which they effected, 100,000 souls are said to have been
sacrificed.'
Since the Millennium and the evils of sectarianism have
been the subjects of much speaking and writing, impostures
have been numerous. In the memory of the present
generation, many delusions have been propagated and
received. The shakers, a sect instituted by Anna Lesse, in
1774, have not yet quite dwindled away. This elect Lady, as
they style her, was the head of this party, and gave them a
new bible. 'They assert that she spoke seventy-two
languages, and conversed with the dead. Through her all
blessings flow to her followers - she appointed the sacred
dance and the fantastic song, and consecrated shivering,
swooning and falling down, acts of acceptable devotion.
They are for a common stock, and rank marriage among the
works of the flesh, - they are plain in their apparel, and
assume the aspect of the friars and nuns of Catholic
superstition.'
The Barkers, Jumpers, and Mutterers of the present age,
need not be mentioned here. Nor need we detail the history
of Miss Campbell, who in Good Old Scotland a year or two
since came back from the dead and had the gift of tongues,
who was believed in by several ministers of the Scotch
Church. But we shall proceed to notice the most recent and
the most impudent delusion which has appeared in our time.
The people that have received this imposture are called,
THE MORMONITES. I have just examined their bible, and will
first notice its contents. It is called the 'Book of
Mormon', an account written by the hand of Mormon upon
plates taken from the plains of Nephi, wherefore it is an
abridgement of the record of the people of Nephi, and also
of the Lamanites, written to the Lamanites, which are a
remnant of the House of Israel, and also to Jew and
Gentile. Written by way of commandment, and also by the
spirit of prophecy and of Revelation.' - 'By Joseph Smith,
Junior, Author and proprieter. From plates dug out of the
earth, in the township of Manchester, Ontario, New York. -
Palmyra, printed by E.B. Grandin, for the Author, 1830. It
is a collection of books said to have been written by
different persons during the interval of 1020 years - the
1st and second books of Nephi occupy 122 pages; the Book of
Jacob the brother of Nephi occupies 21; that of Enos 3;
that of Jarom 2; that of Omin 4; the words of Mormon 3; the
book of Mosiah 68; that of Alma 186; that of Helaman 44;
that of Nephi the son of Helaman 66; that of Mormon 20;
that of Ether 35; and that of Morom 14 pages; making in all
588 octavo pages.
This romance - but this is for it a name too innocent -
begins with the religious adventures of one Lehi, whose
wife was Sariah, and their four sons, Laman, Lemuel, Sam,
and Nephi. Lehi lived in Jerusalem all his life, up to the
first year of Zedekiah, King of Judah, and when the
prophets appeared foretelling the utter destruction of
Jerusalem, Lehi humbled himself, and after various visions
and revelations, started with his sons into the wilderness.
Lehi, before his departure, forgot to bring with him the
records of his family, and that of the Jews; but Nephi, his
younger son, with much pious courage returned and succeeded
in getting upon plates of brass the records of the Jews
from the creation down to the first year of Zedekiah, King
of Judah, and also the prophets including many prophecies
delivered by Jeremiah.
From the records it appeared that this Lehi was a son of
Joseph. He prevailed on one Ishmael and his family to
accompany him into the wilderness, whose daughters the sons
of Lehi took for wives.
Lehi was a greater prophet than any of the Jewish
prophets, and uttered all the events of the christian era,
and developed the records of Matthew, Luke, and John, six
hundred years before John the baptist was born. - These
pilgrims travelled several days journey in some wilderness,
'a south, south-east direction, along the borders of the
Red Sea.' A ball with pointers on it, inscribed with
various intelligence, legible at proper times, was the
pillar and index in passing through the wilderness for
many, very many days. By their bow and arrow they lived for
eight years, travelling an easterly course from Jerusalem,
until they came to a great sea. By divine revelation Nephi
constructed a ship, and although opposed by his unbelieving
brethren, being greatly assisted by the Holy Spirit, he
succeeded in launching her safely, and got all his tribe,
with all their stock of seeds, animals, and provisions,
safely aboard. They had 'a compass' which none but Nephi
knew how to manage; but the Lord had promised them a fine
land, and after many perils and trials, and a long passage,
they safely arrived in the land of promise. Nephi made
brazen plates soon after his arrival in America, for that
was the land of promise to them, and on these plates be
marked their peregrinations and adventures, and all the
prophecies which God gave to him concerning the future
destinies of his people, and the human race.
After his father's death, his brethren rebelled against
him. They finally separated in the wilderness, and became
the heads of different tribes, often in the lapse of
generations making incurations upon each other. The
Nephites, like their father, for many generations were good
christians, believers in the doctrines of the Calvinists
and Methodists, and preaching baptism and other christian
usages hundreds of years before Jesus Christ was born!
Before Nephi died, which was about fifty-five years from
the flight of Lehi from Jerusalem, he had preached to his
people every thing which is now preached in the state of
New York, and anointed or ordained his brother Enos 'in the
nurture and admonition of the Lord,' gave him the plates,
and left him successor in office over the people of Nephi.
Enos says 'there came a voice to me, saying, Enos thy sins
are forgiven thee, and thou shalt be blessed. And, I
sayeth, Lord how it is done. And he sayeth unto me, Because
of thy faith in Christ, whom thou hast not heard nor seen.'
p. 143. Enos died one hundred seventy-nine years from the
hegira of Lehi; consequently, this happened four hundred
thirty-one years before Jesus Christ was born. He was a
contemporary with Nehemiah, and may we not say how much
wiser and more enlightened were the Nephites in America
than the Jews at their return to Jerusalem!
Enos gave the plates to Jarom, his son. In his time
'they kept the law of Moses and the sabbath day holy to the
Lord.' During the priesthood and reign of Enos, there were
many commotions and wars between his people and the
Lamanites. Then the sharp pointed arrow, the quiver, and
the dart were invented. Jarom delivered his plates to his
son Omni, and gave up the ghost two hundred thirty-eight
years from the flight of Lehi. Omni died two hundred
seventy-six from the hegira, and gave the plates to his son
Amaron, who in the year three hundred and twenty, gave them
to his brother Chemish; he, to his son Abinadom; he to his
son Amaleki; and he having no son, gave them to the just
and pious King Benjamin. King Benjamin had three sons,
Mosiah, Helorum, and Helaman, whom he educated in all the
learning of his fathers. To Mosiah he delivered up the
plates of Nephi, the ball which guided them through the
wilderness, and the sword of one Laban, of mighty renown.
King Benjamin addressed his people from the new temple
which they had erected, for they had, even then, built a
temple, synagogues, and a tower, in the New World.
King Benjamin assembled the people to sacrifice
according to the law around the new temple; and he enjoined
upon them, at the same time, the christian institutions,
and gave them a Patriarchal valedictory. After they had
heard him speak, and had offered up their sacrifices, they
fell down and prayed in the following words: 'O have mercy,
and apply the atoning blood of Christ, that we may receive
forgiveness of our sins, and our hearts may be purified;
for we believe in Jesus Christ the son of God, who created
heaven and earth and all things, who shall come down upon
the children of men.' Then the spirit of the Lord fell upon
them and they were filled with joy, having received a
remission of their sins.' p. 162.
King Benjamin ordered his people to take upon them the
name of Christ, and in these remarkable words, - 'There is
no other name given whereby salvation cometh; therefore I
would that you should take upon you the name of Christ, all
you that have entered into the covenant with God that ye
should be obedient unto the end of your lives. - page 166.
They all took upon them the name of Christ, and he having
ordained them priests and teachers, and appointed his son,
Mosiah, to reign in his stead, gave up the Ghost 476 years
after Lehi's escape from Jerusalem, and one hundred
twenty-four before Christ was born, Mosiah gave up the
plates of brass, and all the things which we had kept, to
Alma the son of Alma, who was appointed 'chief judge and
high priest,' the people willing to have no king, and
Mosiah died five hundred sixty-nine years from the time
Lehi left Jerusalem.
In the 14th year of the Judges, and 69 years before the
birth of Jesus, they sent out missionary priests, who
preached through all the tribes of the country against all
vices, holding 'forth the coming of the soul of God, his
sufferings, death and resurrection, and that he should
appear unto them after his resurrection: and this the
people did hear with great joy and gladness.' - p. 268.
Alma's book reaches down to the end of the 39th year of
the Judges. These were wonderful years - many cities were
founded, many battles were fought, fortifications reared,
letters written, and even in one year a certain Hagoth
built an exceeding large ship, and launched it forth into
the west sea. in this embarked many of the Nephites. This
same ship-builder the next year built other ships, one was
lost with all its passengers and crew. - p.406.
Many prophecies were pronounced; one that in 400 years
after the coming of Christ, the Nephites would lose their
religion. During the time of the Judges, many were called
christians by name, and 'baptism unto repentance' was a
common thing. 'And it came to pass that they did appoint
priests and teachers through all the land, and over all the
churches.' - p.349. 'And those who did belong to the church
were faithful, yea all those who were true believers in
Christ took upon them gladly the name of Christ, or
christians, as they were called, because of their belief in
Christ.' - Page 301. 'And it came to pass that there were
many who died firmly believing that their souls were
redeemed by the Lord Jesus Christ: thus they went out of
the world rejoicing.' - p. 353. The word was preached by
Helaman, Shiblon, Corianton, Amnon, and his brethren,
&c. yea and all those, who had been ordained by the
holy order of God, being baptized unto repentance, and sent
forth to preach unto the people.' Page 623. This happened
in the nineteenth year of the Judges, seventy-two years
before the birth of Jesus. Before this time synagogues with
pulpits were built, 'for the Zoramites,' a sort of
Episcopalians, 'gathered themselves together on one day of
the week, which day they called the day of the Lord.' -
'And they had a place which was high and lifted up, which
held but one man, who read prayers, the same prayers every
week; and this high place was called Rameumpton, which
being interpreted, is the holy stand.' - p.311. The book of
Helaman reacheth down to the ninetieth year of the Judges,
and to the year preceding that in which the Messiah was
born. During the period embraced in Helaman's narrative,
many ten thousands were baptized. 'And behold the holy
spirit of God did come down from heaven, and did enter into
their hearts, and they were filled as with fire, and they
could speak forth marvellous words.' - p. 421.
Masonry was invented about this time; for men began to
bind themselves in secret oaths to aid one another in all
things, good or evil. - p.424. Powers of loosing and
binding in heaven were conferred upon Nephi, the son of
Helaman, and all miraculous power, such as the apostles
possessed. One Samuel, also foretold that 'the Christ would
be born in five years, and that the night before should be
as light as day; and that the day of his death should be a
day of darkness like the night.' - p.445. The book of this
Nephi commences with the birth of the Messiah, six hundred
years from the departure of Lehi from Jerusalem. In the
midst of the threats of the infidels to slaughter the
faithful, the sun set; but lo! the night was clear as
mid-day, and from that period they changed their era, and
counted time as we do. A star also appeared, but it is not
stated how it could be seen in a night as bright as day;
but it was universally seen throughout all the land, to the
salvation of the pious from the threats of their enemies.
The terrors of the day of his death are also stated, and in
the thirty-fourth year from his nativity, after his
resurrection, he descended from heaven and visited the
people of Nephi. Jesus called upon them to examine his
hands and his sides, as he did Thomas, though none of them
had expressed a doubt. Two thousand five hundred men, women
and children, one by one, examined him, and then worshipped
him. He commanded Nephi to baptize, and gave him the words
which he was to use, viz: 'Having authority given me, of
Jesus Christ, I baptize you in the name of the Father and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.' He commissioned
eleven others, who with Nephi, were his twelve American
Apostles, and promised himself to baptize their converts
'with fire and with the Holy Spirit.'
He delivers them the sermon upon the mount, and some
other sayings recorded in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; He
healed all their diseases, and prayed for their children;
but the things spoken were so great and marvellous that
they could not be spoken nor written.
He ordained one to administer the supper, who alone had
authority to dispense it to the disciples baptized in his
name. The only new commandments which were given to the
American christians on his occasional visits which were
repeated, were - 'Pray in your families unto the Father,
always in my name, that your wives and your children may be
blessed.' 'Meet often, and forbid no man from coming unto
you when you shall meet together.' - p. 492.
Nephi was chief among the twelve apostles: he baptized
himself, and then baptized the eleven, whose names were
Timothy, Jonas, Mathoni and Mathoninah, Kumen, Kumenonhi,
Jeremiah, Shimnon, Jonas, Zedekiah, and Isaiah, They were
baptized in fire and the Holy Ghost.' Not a new word,
however, should be written in addition to those found in
the New Testament; for although he spake for several days
to these American disciples, none of the new and marvellous
sayings could be uttered or written! He inspected the
plates of Nephi, and only found one omission, which was
that he failed to mention the resurrection of many saints
in America at the time of the tempest and earthquake. He
commanded these Nephites to be called christians.
The book of Nephi the son of Nephi, gives, in four
pages, the history of 320 years after Christ. In the
thirty-sixth year, all the inhabitants of the land were
converted; there was a perfect community and no
disputations in the land for one hundred seventy years.
Three of the American apostles were never to die, and were
seen four hundred years after Christ; but what has become
of them no one can tell, except Cowdery, Whitmer and
Harris, the three witnesses of the truth of the plates of
Nephi, be these three immortal men. Towards the close of
the history of Nephi or the record Ammaron, sects and
divisions and battles became frequent, and all goodness had
almost left the continent in the year three hundred and
twenty.
Mormon appears next in the drama, the recording angel of
the whole matter, who, by the way, was a mighty general and
great christian; he commanded in one engagement forty-two
thousand men against the Lamanites!!! He was no Quaker!
This dreadful battle was fought A.D. 330. The Lamanites
took South America for themselves, and gave North America
to the Nephites. Mormon was very orthodox, for he preached
in these words, A.D. 362: - 'That Jesus was the very Christ
and the very God.' He must have heard of the Arian
controversy by some angel!!
Moroni finishes what Mormon his father, left undone, and
continues the history, till A.D. 400. He pleads that no one
shall disbelieve his record because of its imperfections!!
and declares that none who receive it will condemn it on
account of its imperfections, and for not doing so, the
same shall know greater things. p. - 532. 'He that
condemneth it shall be in danger of hell fire.' He laments
the prevalency of free masonry in the times when his book
should be dug up out of the earth, and proves that miracles
will never cease; because God is the same yesterday, to
day, and forever - consequently must always create suns,
moons, and stars, every day!! He exhorted to 'take heed
that none be baptized without telling their experience, nor
partake of the sacrament of Christ unworthily?!! - p.537.
Moroni, in the conclusion of his book of Mormon, says if
his plates had been larger we should have written in
Hebrew; but because of this difficulty he wrote in the
'Reformed Egyptian,' being handed down and altered unto us
according to our manner of speech. - p.538. 'Condemn me
not,' says he, 'because of mine imperfections; neither my
father, because of his imperfections, neither them which
have written before him; but rather give thanks unto God
that he hath made manifest unto you our imperfections, that
you may learn to be more wise than we have been.' - p.538.
A very necessary advice, indeed!!
Moroni writes the book of Ether, containing an account
of the people of Jared, who escaped from the building of
the tower of Babel unconfounded in his language. These
people of Jared, God marched before in a cloud, and
directed them through the wilderness, and instructed them
to build barges to cross seas; and finally they built eight
barges, air tight, and were commanded to make a hole in the
top to admit air, and one in the bottom to admit water, and
in them were put sixteen windows of molten stone, which
when touched by the finger of Jesus, became as transparent
as glass, and gave them light under 'the mountain waves,'
and when above the water. He that touched these stones,
appeared unto the brother of Jared, and said, behold I am
Jesus Christ, I am the father and the son.' Two of these
stones were sealed up with the plates and became the
spectacles of Joseph Smith, according to a prediction
uttered before Abraham was born. It was also foretold in
the book of Ether, written by Moroni, that he that should
find the plates should have the privilege of showing the
plates unto those who shall assist to bring forth this
work, and unto three shall they be shown by the power of
God: wherefore they shall of a surety known that these
things are true. - p.548.
And the 8 barges, air-tight, made like ducks, after
swimming and diving 334 days, arrived on the coasts of the
land of promise. The book of Ether relates the wars and
carnage amongst these people. In the lapse of generations,
they counted two millions of mighty men, besides women and
children, slain; and finally, they were all killed but one,
and he fell to the earth as if he had no life. So ends the
book of Ether. -p.573.
The book of Moroni details the manner of ordaining
priests and teachers, the manner of administering
ordinances, and the epistles of Mormon to his soon Moroni.
Moroni seal up the record A.D. 420, and assures the world
that spiritual gifts shall never cease, only through
unbelief. And when the plates of Nephi should be dug out of
the earth, he declares that men should ask God the Eternal
Father, in the name of Christ, 'If these things were not
true.' 'If with a sincere heart and real intent, having
faith in Christ, such prayers are made, ye shall know the
truth of all things.' -p.586. The testimony of Oliver
Cowdery, David Whitmer, and Martin Harris, asserting that
they saw the plates, is appended. They also testify that
they know that they have been translated by the gift and
power of God, for his voice has declared it unto them.
Another testimony is appended signed by four Whitmers,
one Hiram Page, and three Smiths, affirming that they saw
the plates, handled them, and that Smith has got the plates
in his possession.
Such is an analysis of the book of Mormon, the bible of
the Mormonites. For noticing of which I would have asked
forgiveness from all my readers, had not several hundred
persons of different denominations believed in it. On this
account alone has it become necessary to notice it, and for
the same reason we must examine its pretensions to divine
authority; for it purports to be a revelation from God. And
in the first place, we shall examine its internal
evidences.
INTERNAL EVIDENCES.
It admits the Old and New Testaments to contain the
revelations, institutions and commandments of God to
Patriarchs, Jews, and Gentiles, down to the year 1830, and
always, as such, speaks of them and quotes them. This
admission at once blasts its pretensions to credibility.
Admitting the bible now received to have come from God, it
is impossible that the book of Mormon came from the same
author. For the following reasons: -
1. Smith, its real author, as ignorant and impudent a
knave as ever wrote a book, betrays the cloven foot in
basing his whole book upon a false fact, or a pretended
fact, which makes God a liar. It is this: - With the Jews,
God made a covenant at Mount Sinai, and instituted a
priesthood and a high priesthood. The priesthood he gave to
the tribe of Levi, and the high priesthood to Aaron and his
sons for an everlasting priesthood. He separated Levi, and
covenanted to give him this office irrevocably while ever
the temple stood, or till the Messiah came. 'Then, says God
Moses shall appoint Aaron and his sons, and they shall wait
on their priest's office, and the stranger, (the person of
another family,) who cometh nigh, shall be put to death.'
Numbers iii.10. 'And the priests, the sons of Levi, shall
come near; for them the Lord thy God hath chosen to
minister unto him, and to bless in the name of the Lord,
and by their word shall every controversy and every stroke
be tried.' Deut. xxi.5. Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, with 250
men of renown, rebelled against a part of the institution
of the priesthood, and the Lord destroyed them in the
presence of the whole congregation. This was to be a
memorial that no stranger invade any part of the office of
the priesthood. Num. xvi.40. Fourteen thousand and seven
hundred of the people were destroyed by a plague for
murmuring against this memorial.
In the 18th chapter of Numbers the Levites are again
given to Aaron and his sons, and the priesthood confirmed
to them with this threat - 'The stranger that cometh night
shall be put to death.' 'Even Jesus, says Paul, were he on
earth, could not be a priest, for he was of a tribe
concerning which Moses spake nothing of priesthood.' Heb.
vii.13. So irrevocable was the grant of the priesthood to
Levi, and of the high priesthood to Aaron, that no stranger
dare approach the altar of God which Moses established.
Hence, Jesus himself was excluded from officiating as
priest on earth according to the law.
This Joseph Smith overlooked in his impious fraud, and
makes his hero Lehi spring from Joseph. And just as soon as
his sons return with the roll of his lineage, ascertaining
that he was of the tribe of Joseph, he and his sons
acceptably 'offer sacrifices and burnt offerings to the
Lord.' - p.15. Also it is repeated, p. 18 - Nephi became
chief artificer, ship-builder and mariner; was scribe,
prophet, priest and king unto his own people, and
'consecrated Jacob and Joseph, the sons of his father,
priests to God and teachers - almost six hundred years
before the fulness of the times of the Jewish economy was
completed. p.72. Nephi represents himself withal as 'under
the law of Moses,' p. 105. They build a temple in the new
world, and in 55 years after they leave Jerusalem, make a
new priesthood which God approbates. A high priest is also
consecrated, and yet they are all the while 'teaching the
law of Moses, and exhorting the people to keep it! -
p.146,209. Thus God is represented as instituting,
approbating and blessing a new priesthood from the tribe of
Joseph, concerning which Moses gave no commandment
concerning priesthood. Although God had promised in the law
of Moses, that if any man, not of the tribe and family of
Levi and Aaron, should approach the office of priest, he
would surely die; he is represented by Smith as blessing,
approbating, and sustaining another family in this
approbated office. The God of Abraham or Joseph Smith must
then be a liar!! And who will hesitate to pronounce him an
imposter? This lie runs through his records for the first
six hundred years of his story.
2. This ignorant and impudent liar, in the next place,
makes the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, violate his
covenants with Israel and Judah, concerning the land of
Canaan, by promising a new land to the pious Jew.
If a company of reprobate Jews had departed from
Jerusalem and the temple, in the days of Zedekiah, and
founded a new colony, it would not have been so
incongruous. But to represent God as inspiring a devout Jew
and a prophet, such as Levi and Nephi are represented by
Smith, with a resolution to forsake Jerusalem and God's own
house, and to depart from the land which God swore to their
fathers so long as they were obedient; and to guide by a
miracle and to bless by prodigies a good man in forsaking
God's covenant and worship - is so monstrous an error, that
language fails to afford a name for it. It is to make God
violate his own covenants, and set at nought his own
promises, and to convert his own curses into blessings.
Excision from the commonwealth of Israel, and banishment
from Jerusalem and the temple, were the greatest curses the
law of Moses knew. But Smith makes a good and pious Jew the
subject of this curse, and sends him off into the
inhospitable wilderness, disinherits him in Canaan, and
makes him more happy in forsaking the institutions of
Moses, more intelligent in the wilderness, and more
prosperous in adversity, than even the Jews in their best
days, in the best of lands, and under the best of all
governments!!! The imposter was too ignorant of the history
of the Jews and the nature of the covenants of promise, to
have even alluded to them in his book, if he had not
supposed that he had the plates of Moses in his own
keeping, as he had his 'molten plates' of Nephi. To
separate a family from the nation of Israel, was to
accumulate all the curses of the law upon that family. -
Deut. xxix.21.
3. He has more of the Jews, living in the new world,
than could have been numbered any where else, even in the
days of John the Baptist; and has placed them under a new
dynasty. The sceptre, with him, has departed from Judah,
and a lawgiver from among his descendants, hundreds of
years before Shiloh came; and king Benjamin is a wiser and
more renowned king than king Solomon. He seems to have gone
upon an adage which saith, 'the more marvellous, the more
credible the tale,' and the less of fact, and the more of
fiction, the more intelligible and reasonable the
narrative.
4. He represents the temple worship as continued in his
new land of promise contrary to every precept of the law,
and so happy are the people of Nephi as never to shed a
tear on account of the excision, nor turn an eye toward
Jerusalem or God's temple. The pious Jews in their
captivity turned their faces to Jerusalem and the holy
place, and remembered God's promises concerning the place
where he recorded his name. They hung their harps upon the
willow, and could not sing the songs of Zion in a foreign
land; but the Nephites have not a single wish for
Jerusalem, for they can, in their wigwam temple, in the
wilderness of America, enjoy more of God's presence than
the most righteous Jew could enjoy in that house of which
David had rather be a doorkeeper, than to dwell in the
tabernacles of men. And all this too, when God's only house
of prayer, according to his covenant with Israel, stood in
Jerusalem.
5. Malachi, the last of the Jewish prophets, commanded
Israel to regard the law of Moses till the Messiah came.
And Moses commanded them to regard him till the Great
Prophet came. But Nephi and Smith's prophets institute
ordinances and observances for the Jews, subversive of
Moses, 500 years before the Great Prophet came.
6. Passing over a hundred similar errors, we shall next
notice his ignorance of the New Testament matters and
things. The twelve Apostles of the Lamb, are said by Paul,
to have developed certain secrets, which were hid for ages
and generations, which Paul says were ordained before the
world to their glory, that they should have the honor of
announcing them. But Smith makes his pious hero Nephi, 600
years before the Messiah began to preach, and disclose
these secrets concerning the calling of the Gentiles, and
the blessings flowing through the Messiah to Jews and
Gentiles, which Paul says were hid for ages and
generations, 'which in these ages was not made known unto
the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto us the holy
Apostles and prophets, by the spirit; that the Gentiles
should be fellow heirs and of the same body and partakers
of his promise in Christ by the Gospel.' Smith makes Nephi
express every truth found in the writings of the Apostles
concerning the calling and blessing of the Gentiles, and
even quotes the 11th chapter of Romans, and many other
passages before he had a son grown in the wilderness able
to aim an arrow at a deer. Paul says these things were
secrets and unknown until his time; but Smith makes Nephi
say the same things 600 years before Paul was converted!
One of the two is a false prophet. Mormonites, take your
choice!
7. This prophet Smith, through his stone spectacles,
wrote on the plates of Nephi, in his book of Mormon, every
error and almost every truth discussed in N. York for the
last ten years. He decides all the great controversies -
infant baptism, ordination, the trinity, regeneration,
repentance, justification, the fall of man, the atonement,
transubstantiation, fasting, penance, church government,
religious experience, the call to the ministry, the general
resurrection, eternal punishment, who may baptize, and even
the question of freemasonry, republican government, and the
rights of man. All these topics are repeatedly alluded to.
How much more benevolent and intelligent this American
Apostle, than were the holy twelve, and Paul to assist
them!!! He prophesied of all these topics, and of the
apostacy, and infallibly decided, by his authority, every
question. How easy to prophecy of the past or of the
present time!!
8. But he is better skilled in the controversies in New
York than in the geography or history of Judea. He makes
John baptise in the village of Bethabara, (page 22) and
says Jesus was born in Jerusalem, p. 240. Great must be the
faith of the Mormonites in this new Bible!!! The mariners
compass was only known in Europe about 300 years ago; but
Nephi knew all about steam boats and the compass 2400 years
ago.
9. He represents the christian institution as practised
among his Israelites before Jesus was born. And his Jews
are called christians while keeping the law of Moses, the
holy sabbath, and worshipping in their temple at their
altars, and by their high priests.
10. But not to honor him by a too minute examination and
exposition, I will sum up the whole of the internal
evidence which I deem worthy of remark, in the following
details: -
The book professes to be written at intervals and by
different persons during the long period of 1020 years. And
yet for uniformity of style, there never was a book more
evidently written by one set of fingers, nor more certainly
conceived in one cranium since the first book appeared in
human language, than this same book. If I could swear to
any man's voice, face or person, assuming different names,
I could swear that this book was written by one man. And as
Joseph Smith is a very ignorant man and is called the
author on the title page, I cannot doubt for a single
moment that he is the sole author and proprietor of it. As
a specimen of his style the reader will take the following
samples - Page 4th. In his own preface: - 'The plates of
which hath been spoken.' In the last page, 'the plates of
which hath been spoken.' In the certificate signed by
Cowdery and his two witnesses, he has the same idiom,
'which came from the tower of which hath been spoken;' page
16, 'we are a descendant of Joseph.' 'The virgin which thou
seest is the mother of God.' 'Behold the Lamb of God the
Eternal Father,' p. 25; 'Ye are like unto they,' 'and I
saith unto them,' p.44. 'We did arrive to the promised
land;' p.49, 'made mention upon the first plate,' p.50.
Nephi 2400 years ago hears the saying of a Pagan who
lived 634 years after him - 'The God of nature suffers.'
p.51. 'The righteous need not fear, for it is they which
shall not be confounded.' p.58. Shakespeare was read by
Nephi 2200 years before he was born - 'The silent grave
from whence no traveller returns,' 61. 'Your own eternal
welfare' was a phrase then common in America, p.62.
'Salvation is free' was then announced. 'That Jesus should
rise from the dead' was repeatedly declared on this
continent in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar. And at the same
time it was said, 'Messiah cometh in the fulness of time
that he might redeem the children of men from the fall;'
p.65. 'The fall' was frequently spoken of at the Isthmus of
Darien 2400 years ago.
I had no object, says Nephi, in the reign of Zedekiah,
'but the everlasting salvation of your souls.' 66. 'I had
spake many things,' 'for a more history part are written
upon mine other plates.' 69. 'Do not anger again because of
mine enemies,' p. 70. 'For it behoveth the Great Creator
that he die for all men.' 'It must needs be an infinite
atonement.' 'This flesh must go to its mother earth.' 'And
this death must deliver up its dead,' p.70, were common
phrases 2300 years ago - 'for the atonement satisfieth the
demands of his justice upon all those who have not the law
given them,' p. 81. The Calvinists were in America before
Nephi. 'The Lord remembereth all they,' 85. The atonement
is infinite for all mankind,' p.104. The Americans knew
this on the Columbo 2400 years ago. 'His name shall be
called Jesus Christ the Son of God.' An angel told this to
Nephi 545 years before it was told to Mary, p.105. 'And
they shall teach with their learning and deny the Holy
Ghost which giveth them utterance;' this prophecy was at
that time delivered against us, p.112. 'My words shall hiss
forth unto the ends of the earth,' p.115. 'Wherein did the
Lamb of God fill all the righteousness in being baptised by
water,' 118. This question was discussed 2300 years ago.
'The baptism by fire and the Holy Ghost was preached in the
days of Cyrus,' p.119. 'The only true doctrine of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost which is one
God without end. Amen,' p.120. This was decided in the time
of Daniel the Prophet. 'I glory in plainness,' says Nephi.
'Christ will show you that these are his words in the last
day,' p.122. Too late to prove your mission, Mr. Nephi!
'After that ye have obtained a hope in Christ, ye shall
obtain riches if you seek them.' So spoke Jacob in the days
of Ezekial the Prophet. 'They believed in Christ and
worshipped the Father in his name,' p.129. This was said by
Jacob in the time of Daniel. 'Do as ye hath hitherto done,'
says Mosiah, page 158. These Smithisms are in every page.
'And his mother shall be called Mary.' p.160. 'The Son of
God and Father of heaven and earth.' p.161. 'The infant
perisheth not, that dieth in his infancy.' 'For the natural
man is an enemy of God and was from the fall of Adam, and
will be forever and ever,' p.161. This was spoken by King
Benjamin 124 years before Christ. He was a Yankee, too, for
he spoke like Smith, saying, 'I who ye call your king.'
'They saith unto the king,' p.182. This was another Joseph
Smith called Mosiah. 'They were baptised in the waters of
Mormon, and were called the church of Christ,' p.192. This
happened 100 years before Christ was born. 'Alma, why
persecuteth thou the church of God,' p.222. 'Ye must be
born again; yea, born of God - changed from their carnal
and fallen state to a state of righteousness,' 214. This
was preached also 100 years before Christ was born. 'These
things had not ought to be,' 220.
'I, Alma, being consecrated by my father Alma to be a
high priest over the church of God, he having power and
authority from God to do these things (p. 232) say unto
you, except ye repent ye can in no wise enter into the
Kingdom of Heaven.' 237. 'He ordained priests and elders,
by laying on his hands, to watch over the church' - 'Not so
much as a hair of the head shall be lost in the grave' -
'The holy order of the high priesthood.' p.250. The high
priesthood of Alma was about 80 years before Christ. 'The
Lord poured out his spirit to prepare the minds of the
people for the preaching of Alma, preaching repentance.'
p.268. Alma was a Yankee of Smith's school, for he saith:
'The light of everlasting light was lit up in his soul.'
p.47.
During the pontificate of Alma men prayed thus: 'If
there is a God, and if thou art God wilt thou make thyself
known unto me.' p.286. Alma 'clapped his hands upon all
they which were with him.' p.313. 'Instruments in the hand
of God' were the preachers of Alma. p.323. Modest and
orthodox men, truly! 'If ye deny the Holy Ghost when it
once hath place in you, and ye know that ye deny, behold
this is the unpardonable sin.' p.332. So Alma preached.
'And now my son, ye are called of God to preach the
Gospel.' p.340. 'They were high priests over the church.'
p.350. 'The twenty and second year of the Judges this came
to pass.' p.364. 'They were valiant for courage.'
p.376.
These are but as one drop out of a bucket compared with
the amount of Smithisms in this book. It is patched up and
cemented with 'And it came to pass' - 'I sayeth unto you' -
'Ye saith unto him' - and all the King James' HATHS, DIDS
and DOTHS - in the lowest imitation of the common version;
and is, without exaggeration, the meanest book in the
English language; but it is a translation made through
stone spectacles, in a dark room, and in the hat of the
prophet Smith from the REFORMED EGYPTIAN!! It has not one
good sentence in it, save the profanation of those
sentences quoted from the Oracles of the living God. I
would as soon compare a bat to the American eagle, a mouse
to a mammoth, or the deformities of a spectre to the
beauties of Him whom John saw in Patmos, as to contrast it
with a single chapter in all the writings of the Jewish or
Christian prophets. It is as certainly Smith's fabrication
as Satan is the father of lies, or darkness the offspring
of night. So much for the internal evidences of the Book of
Mormon.
Its external evidences are, first, the testimony of the
prophets Cowdery, Whitmer, and Harris; who saw the plates
and heard the voice of God; who are disinterested retailers
of the books. I would ask them how they knew that it was
God's voice which they heard - but they would tell me to
ask God in faith. THAT IS, I MUST BELIEVE IT FIRST, AND
THEN ASK GOD IF IT BE TRUE! 'Tis better to take Nephi's
proof which is promised to us in the day of final judgment!
They say that spiritual gifts are continued to the end of
time among the true believers. They are true believers -
have they wrought any miracles? They have tried, but their
faith failed. Can they show any spiritual gift? Yes, they
can mutter Indian and traffic in new Bibles.
'But Smith is the wonder of the world.' So was the
Apocalyptic beast! 'an ignorant young man.' That needs no
proof. Gulliver's travels is a heroic problem in comparison
of this book of Smith. 'But he cannot write a page.'
Neither could Mahomet, who gave forth the Alcoran. 'Smith
is an honest looking fellow.' So was Simon Magus, the
sorcerer. 'But he was inspired.' So was Judas, by
Satan.
Its external evidences are also the subscriptions of
four Whitmers, three Smiths, and one Page, the relatives
and connexions of Joseph Smith, junior. And these 'men
handled as many of the brazen or golden leaves as the said
Smith translated.' So did I. But Smith has got the plates
of which hath been spoken. Let him show them. Their
certificate proves nothing, save that Smith wrote it, and
they signed it. But Smith gives testimony himself. There is
one who says, 'If I bear testimony of myself, my testimony
ought not to be regarded.'
If this prophet and his three prophetic witnesses had
aught of speciosity about them or their book, we would have
examined it and exposed it in a different manner. I have
never felt myself so fully authorized to address mortal man
in the style in which Paul addressed Elymas the sorcerer as
I feel towards this Atheist Smith. His three witnesses, I
am credibly informed, on one of their horse- swapping and
prophetic excursions in the Sandusky country, having
bartered horses three times for once preaching, represented
Walter Scott and myself as employed in translating these
plates, and as believers in the book of Mormon. If there
was any thing plausible about Smith, I would say to those
who believe him to be a prophet, hear the question which
Moses put into the mouth of the Jews, and his answer to it
- 'And if thou say in thine heart, HOW SHALL WE KNOW THE
WORD WHICH THE LORD HATH NOT SPOKEN?' - Does he answer,
'ASK THE LORD AND HE WILL TELL YOU?' - Does he say 'Wait
till the day of judgment and you will know?' Nay, indeed;
but - 'When a prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord, if
the thing follow not nor come to pass, that is the thing
which the Lord hath not spoken; the prophet hath spoken it
presumptuously: THOU SHALT NOT BE AFRAID OF HIM.'
Deut.xviii.8. Smith has failed in every instance to verify
one of his own sayings. Again, I would say in the words of
the Lord by Isaiah, 'Bring forth your strong reasons, saith
the King of Jacob: let them bring them forth and show us
what shall happen: let them show the former things what
they mean, that we may consider them, and know the latter
end of them - show the things which are to come hereafter,
that we may know that you are prophets: yea, do good or do
evil, that we may be dismayed and behold it together.
Behold you are nothing, and your work of naught: an
abomination is every one that chooseth you.' Is.xli.21-
23.
Let the children of Mormon ponder well, if yet reason
remains with them, the following passage from Isaiah 44;
and if they cannot see the analogy between themselves and
the sons of ancient imposture, then reason is of as little
use to them as it was to those of whom the prophet spake
-
'The carpenters having chosen a piece of wood framed it
by rule and glued the parts together, and made it in the
form of a man, and with the comeliness of a man, to set it
in a house. He cut wood from the forest which the Lord
planted - a pine tree, which the rain had nourished, that
it might be fuel for the use of man: and having taken some
of it he warmed himself; and with other pieces they made a
fire and baked cakes, and of the residue they made gods and
worshipped them. Did he not burn half of it in the fire,
and, with the coals of that half bake cakes: and having
roasted meat with it did he not eat and was satisfied; and
when warmed say, "Aha! I am warmed, I have enjoyed the
fire?" Yet of the residue he made a carved god, and
worshipped it, and prayeth to it, saying, "Deliver me, for
thou art my God."
'They had not sense to think; for they were so involved
in darkness that they could not see with their eyes, nor
understand with their hearts: nor did any reason in his
mind, nor by his understanding recollect, that he had
burned half of it in the fire, and on the coals thereof
baked cakes, and had roasted flesh and eaten, and of the
residue had made an abomination; so they bow themselves
down to it. Know thou that their heart is ashes, and they
are led astray and none can deliver his soul. Take a view
of it, will you not say, "There is indeed a lie in my right
hand?"
'Remember these things, O Jacob, even thou Israel, for
thou art my servant. I have made thee my servant; therefore
O Israel do not thou forget me. For, lo! I have made thy
transgressions vanish like a cloud - and thy sins like the
murky vapor. Return to me, and I will redeem thee.'
A. CAMPBELL. February 10, 1831.
God's Plan of Salvation
You must hear the gospel and then understand and recognize that you are lost without Jesus Christ no matter who you are and no matter what your background is. The Bible tells us that “all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.” (Romans 3:23) Before you can be saved, you must understand that you are lost and that the only way to be saved is by obedience to the gospel of Jesus Christ. (2 Thessalonians 1:8) Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.” (John 14:6) “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)
You must believe and have faith in God because “without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.” (Hebrews 11:6) But neither belief alone nor faith alone is sufficient to save. (James 2:19; James 2:24; Matthew 7:21)
You must repent of your sins. (Acts 3:19) But repentance alone is not enough. The so-called “Sinner’s Prayer” that you hear so much about today from denominational preachers does not appear anywhere in the Bible. Indeed, nowhere in the Bible was anyone ever told to pray the “Sinner’s Prayer” to be saved. By contrast, there are numerous examples showing that prayer alone does not save. Saul, for example, prayed following his meeting with Jesus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:11), but Saul was still in his sins when Ananias met him three days later (Acts 22:16). Cornelius prayed to God always, and yet there was something else he needed to do to be saved (Acts 10:2, 6, 33, 48). If prayer alone did not save Saul or Cornelius, it will not save you either. You must obey the gospel.
(2 Thess. 1:8)
You must confess that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. (Romans 10:9-10) Note that you do NOT need to make Jesus “Lord of your life.” Why? Because Jesus is already Lord of your life whether or not you have obeyed his gospel. Indeed, we obey him, not to make him Lord, but because he already is Lord. (Acts 2:36) Also, no one in the Bible was ever told to just “accept Jesus as your personal savior.” We must confess that Jesus is the Son of God, but, as with faith and repentance, confession alone does not save. (Matthew 7:21)
Having believed, repented, and confessed that Jesus is the Son of God, you must be baptized for the remission of your sins. (Acts 2:38) It is at this point (and not before) that your sins are forgiven. (Acts 22:16) It is impossible to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ without teaching the absolute necessity of baptism for salvation. (Acts 8:35-36; Romans 6:3-4; 1 Peter 3:21) Anyone who responds to the question in Acts 2:37 with an answer that contradicts Acts 2:38 is NOT proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ!
Once you are saved, God adds you to his church and writes your name in the Book of Life. (Acts 2:47; Philippians 4:3) To continue in God’s grace, you must continue to serve God faithfully until death. Unless they remain faithful, those who are in God’s grace will fall from grace, and those whose names are in the Book of Life will have their names blotted out of that book. (Revelation 2:10; Revelation 3:5; Galatians 5:4)