by Jerald and
Sandra Tanner
(This article originally appeared
in The Salt Lake City Messenger, Issue No. 82 September, 1992)

A
book analyzing Joseph Smith's translation of the "Book of Abraham" has
caused a real stir in Utah. It is written by Charles M. Larson and is
entitled, By his Own Hand Upon Papyrus: A New Look At The
Joseph Smith Papyri. We understand that before the book was
offered for sale, about 30,000 copies were sent without charge to members
of the Mormon Church. Almost all the homes in one stake received a free
copy. One man told us that his bishop was so upset with the book that he
warned members of his ward not to read it. This, of course, made the man
very curious and he came to our bookstore to purchase a copy.
Mormon
scholars seem to be very worried that Larson's book will cause members to
lose faith in the Book of Abraham. The Mormon apologist John Gee, a
researcher for the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (F.A.R.M.S.),
has written a review of this book which is published in Review of
Books on the Book of Mormon, vol. 4, 1992. While Mr. Gee tries very
hard to find some way to belittle Mr. Larson and undermine his work, we do
not feel that he has successfully answered the major issues. He, in fact,
has made his own mistakes.
For example, on pages 93-94 of his
article, Mr. Gee quotes from a cover letter which was sent out with copies
of Larson's books. He notes that the letter says that the book contains
"the first ever published color photographs of
the Joseph Smith papyri collection." Gee then asserts that this claim is
not true and goes on to state: "...the publishers... are
mistaken in thinking that they are publishing the first
color photographs of the Joseph Smith papyri. They are nearly
a quarter century too late for that, for The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints published a complete set of color
photographs of the Joseph Smith papyri in the February 1968
Improvement Era."
While
the photographs in the Improvement Era give the appearance of
being "color" reproductions of the papyri (we ourselves once thought they
were full-color photographs), the printing was apparently done with sepia
ink, a dark brown or reddish-brown ink. This worked fairly well because
papyrus is basically brown. Unfortunately, however, some of the papyri
contain "rubrics"--portions written in red ink. Wherever rubrics appeared
on the papyrus, the characters did not reproduce well in the church's
magazine, The Improvement Era. Instead of being red, they appear
to be a very light brown and sometimes fade out to the point that they are
hardly readable. In the photographs found in Larson's book, however, real
color printing has been used. Consequently, the rubrics come out red and
are very readable.
While
Michael Marquardt believes John Gee is wrong about the Feb. 1968 issue of
the Improvement Era having real color photographs of the papyri,
he feels that the cover of another issue did have a color photograph of
one fragment of papyrus, Fac. No.1.
It
is interesting to note that when the church received the papyri on Nov.
27, 1967, church leaders only allowed four or five black and white
pictures to be published. Reed Durham, an instructor at the LDS Institute
of Religion at the University of Utah asked if we could furnish
photographs of all eleven pieces of papyri for the library at the
Institute. We replied we could not obtain copies and wondered why he was
not able to obtain them from his own church. He stated that when he
contacted the church's Deseret News, he was told they had a large
number of copies of photographs of all the papyri, but had been ordered
not to release them. Later, however, Grant Heward was able to obtain
photographs from another source after being refused by the Mormon Church.
When the Deseret News learned that Mr. Heward had the
photographs, it caused a great deal of excitement, and word went out that
photographs had fallen into the hands of the enemies of the church. Mormon
leaders knew that if they did not release all the photographs, we would
print them.
Evidence
seems to indicate that there were originally no plans for any pictures of
the papyri to appear in the Feb. 1968 issue of the Improvement Era
and that the publication of the photographs of the papyri were
inserted at the last minute in a hasty and peculiar manner. In the table
of contents on page 1 we read that pages "33-48" are devoted to a section
called "Era of Youth." In the midst of this section, beginning at page 40,
the Era of Youth abruptly ends and ten pages of photographs of the papyri
are inserted. After this the Era of Youth Starts again and continues to
page 48 as the table of contents indicated. Two pages of the Era of Youth
were deleted at the place where the 10 pages of photographs were added.
This, of course, created a problem in the page numbers. To solve this the
photographs of the papyri are numbered as pages 40, 40-A, 40-B, etc.
This
unusual method of producing the February issue of the church's magazine
seems to show that once word got out that our friend Grant Heward had
photographs, the church rushed to get them into print. Church leaders
certainly did not want these photographs to appear first in the Salt
Lake City Messenger! This hasty attempt to get the pictures into
print may have made it expedient to use sepia ink instead of going through
the added trouble of making full color pictures.
Although
we do not have the space here to deal in depth with John Gee's arguments,
we will examine some of his work and also his sensational claim that
papyri have been found that contain the name Abraham. Some of Gee's other
arguments about Joseph Smith's translation of the Book of Abraham have
already been refuted in our book Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?
Chapter 22.
4,000 YEARS OLD?
According
to Mormon writers, the "Book of Abraham" was supposed to have been written
on papyrus by the Biblical patriarch Abraham about 4,000 years ago! Mormon
apologist Sidney B. Sperry said that "the Book of Abraham will some day be
reckoned as one of the most remarkable documents in existence... the
writings of Abraham... must of necessity be older than the
original text of Genesis." (Ancient Records Testify in
Papyrus and Stone, 1938, page 83) Mormon leaders felt the Book of
Abraham was so important that they canonized it as scripture and published
it in the Pearl of Great Price--one of the four standard works of
the church.
The
evidence shows that while Joseph Smith had the Egyptian papyri, he allowed
many people to freely examine them. This was entirely different from the
secretive attitude he had with regard to the "gold plates" from which he
translated the Book of Mormon. He was very careful to keep those plates
concealed from the general public. Although Joseph Smith let some of his
close associates look at the plates, he never allowed experts to examine
them. Naturally, this caused many people to wonder if the Mormon prophet
really had the plates he described. Others suggested that he may have had
some plates which were fabricated to fool his friends and family but that
they were neither ancient nor made of gold. In any case, Smith claimed
that he eventually returned the plates to the angel who had brought them.
Consequently, there is no way to check Smith's claim that he translated
the Book of Mormon from gold plates.
While
one has to depend upon Joseph Smith's own story and the testimony of the
Book of Mormon witnesses concerning the plates, in the case of the Book of
Abraham it can be established with certainty that Joseph Smith had some
ancient Egyptian papyri which were purchased from Michael Chandler while
he was in Kirtland, Ohio. While there is no question about the papyri's
authenticity, many people have had. serious reservations regarding the
accuracy of Smith's translation. Unfortunately, while Joseph Smith had the
papyri in his possession the science of Egyptology was in its infancy.
Therefore, Joseph Smith's work as a translator could not be adequately
tested. To make matters worse, after Smith's death the Mormon Church lost
control of the papyri and it was believed that they were destroyed in the
Chicago fire.
Since
neither the gold plates nor the Egyptian papyri were available, it
appeared that Joseph Smith's ability as a translator would never be
tested. However, on November 27, 1967, the church's Deseret News
announced one of the most significant events in Mormon Church history:
"NEW
YORK--A collection of pa[p]yrus manuscripts, long believed to have been
destroyed in the Chicago fire of 1871, was presented to The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints here Monday by the Metropolitan Museum
of Art.... Included in the papyri is a manuscript identified as the
original document from which Joseph Smith had
copied the drawing which he called 'Facsimile
No. 1' and published with the Book of Abraham."
After
the papyri were recovered by the church, many Mormons felt that Joseph
Smith's work would be vindicated. Church apologist Hugh Nibley, however,
was not optimistic about the matter and warned his people that there was
trouble ahead. On Dec. 1, 1967, the Daily Universe, published at
Brigham Young University, reported these statements by Dr. Nibley: "The
papyri scripts given to the Church do not prove the Book of
Abraham is true,' Dr. Hugh Nibley... said Wednesday night.
'LDS scholars are caught flatfooted by this
discovery,' he went on to say."
Since
Nibley was supposed to be the Mormon Church's top authority on the
Egyptian language, such a pessimistic assessment must have jolted Mormons
who read his comments. After all, anyone could see that there were three
rows of hieroglyphic writing on the right side of the papyrus which Joseph
Smith used as Facsimile No. 1 in his Book of Abraham. In addition, another
row of hieroglyphic writing appeared on the left side of the papyrus.
Since the papyrus was surrounded by Egyptian writing, how could it fail to
prove the Book of Abraham? If Joseph Smith really knew how to translate
Egyptian, the writing would prove that the scene found in Facsimile No. 1
showed "The idolatrous priest of Elkenah attempting to offer up
Abraham as a sacrifice."
As
it later turned out, when the writing found on the papyrus was translated
by Klaus Baer, Associate Professor of Egyptology at the University of
Chicago's Oriental Institute, it became clear that the papyrus was a pagan
document which had absolutely no relationship to Abraham. The translation,
in fact, revealed that the papyrus was really made for a dead man named "Hor"--after
the Egyptian god Horus. Experts who have examined this papyrus agree that
it is drawing of Osiris, the Egyptian god of the dead, being prepared for
burial by the god Anubis. The fact that this is a funerary papyrus is made
clear in Dr. Baer's translation of the line on the left side of the
papyrus: "May you give him a good, splendid burial
on the West of Thebes just like..." (Dialogue: A Journal of
Mormon Thought, Autumn 1968, page 117) Since the text of Joseph
Smith's Book of Abraham says that Abraham survived the attempt to take his
life, there would have been no reason to speak of burial. Furthermore, the
Egyptians would not have given a sacrificial victim a "splendid burial on
the West of Thebes."
Since
the Egyptian papyri did not support Joseph Smith's Book of Abraham, Hugh
Nibley was not anxious for a translation to come forth. In the Spring 1968
issue of Brigham Young University Studies, page 251, Dr. Nibley
made this revealing comment: "We have often been asked during the past
months why we did not proceed with all haste to produce a translation of
the papyri the moment they came into our possession....it is
doubtful whether any translation could do as much good as harm."
We
were very disappointed with Hugh Nibley's attempt to make light of the
importance of the Joseph Smith papyri. We turned to Grant Heward who was
studying Egyptian at the time. Mr. Heward had been excommunicated from the
Mormon Church because he dared to question the authenticity of the Book of
Abraham. Heward was convinced that the papyrus Joseph Smith identified as
the Book of Abraham was in reality the Egyptian "Book of Breathings"-- a
pagan document which was actually a condensed version of the
"Book of the
Dead." We were impressed with Heward's argument and printed his
observations in the March 1968 issue of the Salt Lake City Messenger.
It seemed like a bold move to make at the time, but within a few
months the identification was confirmed by leading Egyptologists.
In
addition, Mr. Heward prepared the first rendering of some of the text from
the Joseph Smith Papyri which we printed in the same issue of the
Messenger. The portion he used was taken from what Joseph Smith
identified as the Book of Joseph. In reality, however, Mr. Heward
demonstrated that it was taken from the Egyptian
Book of the Dead. It
related to a dead woman "Transforming into a Swallow."
It
is interesting to note that even though the original Joseph Smith Papyri
had been found, leaders of the Mormon Church seemed to have had no desire
to produce a translation of the papyri for their people. Like Dr. Nibley,
they must have felt that it was "doubtful whether any
translation could do as much good as harm." The three
Egyptologists who allowed their work to be published by Dialogue: A
Journal of Mormon Thought were not
commissioned by the church. Dialogue is actually an independent
publication which is not controlled by the church and often prints
articles that are disturbing to some of the top leaders of the church.
A DEVASTATING FIND
While
the discovery that the papyri Joseph Smith believed contained the Book of
Abraham and the Book of Joseph were nothing but pagan Egyptian funerary
texts came as a great blow to church leaders, a far more distressing
development occurred. Within six months from the time the Metropolitan
Museum gave the papyri to the church, the Book of Abraham had been proven
untrue! The fall of the Book of Abraham was brought about by the
identification of the actual fragment of papyrus from which Joseph Smith
claimed to translate the book. The identification of this fragment was
made possible by a comparison with Joseph Smith's Egyptian Alphabet
and Grammar--handwritten documents we photographically reproduced in
1966. Charles M. Larson gives this information about this matter:
"Smith's
'Egyptian Alphabet and Grammar,' as it has come to be called, had never
really been lost or missing. For a long time it was simply ignored, and
more recently it had been considered restricted. It was among
that portion of early Church records the Mormons managed to take with them
when they left Nauvoo in 1846, and it was included in the list of
materials recorded in the Church Historian's Office Journal as having been
deposited in the Historian's vault in Salt Lake City in 1855....as late as
1960... Dr. Sperry remarked at BYU's Pearl of Great Price Conference
that he did not know whether or not the Church authorities would yet
allow it to be published, adding that he thought 'it would be a little
premature, perhaps, to do it now, until we can really do a good job of
it.'
"Others who had occasion to come into
contact with the material apparently disagreed with the Church's
reluctance in the matter. Late in 1965 a microfilm copy of the entire work
was 'leaked' to Jerald and Sandra Tanner of Modern Microfilm Company (now
Utah Lighthouse Ministry). The Tanners were former Mormons who were
rapidly gaining a reputation for printing documents relating to Mormonism
that, though authentic, made Church officials uncomfortable. By 1966 the
Tanners had produced the first complete photochemical reprint and
transcription of the entire Egyptian Alphabet
and Grammar.
"But
contrary to what most Mormons evidently expected, publication of the
Alphabet and Grammar in no way substantiated Joseph Smith's ability
to translate ancient Egyptian. Quite the opposite, for the book turned out
to be nothing but page after page of nonsensical gibberish. Though it had
apparently succeeded at one time in impressing unsophisticated minds, the
work was unable to withstand the scrutiny of experts.
"Professional
Egyptologists to whom the Alphabet and Grammar was submitted for
examination were quick to point out that the material in Joseph Smith's
notebook bore no resemblance at all to any correct understanding of the
ancient Egyptian language. As one of them, I. E. Edwards, put it, the
whole work was 'largely a piece of imagination and lacking in any kind of
scientific value.' He added that it reminded him of 'the writings of
psychic practitioners which are sometimes sent to me.'" (By His Own
hand Upon Papyrus, pages 42-43)
When
characters in the original Egyptian papyri were compared with those copied
into the translation manuscripts of the Book of Abraham, found in
Joseph Smith's Egyptian Alphabet and Grammar, it became apparent that
one piece of papyrus supplied the characters which Joseph Smith claimed to
translate as the Book of Abraham! This papyrus was identified in the
Mormon Church's publication Improvement Era, Feb. 1968, p. 40-I,
as "XI. Small 'Sensen' text (unillustrated)." We presented photographic
evidence that Joseph Smith used the "Sensen" text to create his Book of
Abraham in the March 1968 issue of the Salt Lake City Messenger.
In Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? we have additional proof that
Smith used this papyrus. Surprisingly, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon
Thought, asked us to work with Grant Heward to prepare an article
presenting the evidence. This article, "The Source Of The Book Of Abraham
Identified," was published in Dialogue, Summer 1968, pages 92-98.
Egyptologist
Klaus Baer accepted this identification without question. Speaking of the
"Sensen" papyrus, Dr. Baer wrote: "Joseph Smith thought that this papyrus
contained the Book of Abraham." (Ibid., page 111) In footnote 11
of the same article, Professor Baer observed: "This identification is now
certain." Mormon scholar Richley Crapo spoke of "the startling fact that
one of the papyri of the Church collection, known as the Small Sen-Sen
Papyrus, contained the same series of hieratic symbols,
which had been copied, in the same order,
into the Book of Abraham manuscript next to verses of that book!
In other words, there was every indication that the collection of papyri
in the hands of the Church contained the source which led to a
production of the Book of Abraham." (Book of Abraham
Symposium, LDS Institute of Religion, Salt Lake City, April 3, 1970,
p.27)
Although
Mormon apologist Hugh Nibley later reversed his position in a desperate
attempt to save the Book of Abraham, in 1968 he frankly admitted that
Joseph Smith used the "Sensen" papyrus for the text of the Book of
Abraham. At a meeting held at the University of Utah on May 20, 1968, Dr.
Nibley made these comments:
"Within
a week of the publication of the papyri, students began calling my
attention...to the fact that, the very definite fact that, one
of the fragments seemed to supply all of the symbols for the Book of
Abraham. This was the little 'Sensen' scroll. Here are the
symbols. The symbols are arranged here, and the interpretation goes along
here and this interpretation turns out to be the Book of
Abraham. Well, what about that? Here is the little 'Sensen,'
because that name occurs frequently in it, the papyrus in which a
handful of Egyptian symbols was apparently expanded in translation to
the whole Book of Abraham. This raises a lot of questions.
It doesn't answer any questions, unless we're mind readers."
At
one point Dr. Nibley became so desperate to save the Book of Abraham that
he suggested the "Sensen" text may have a second meaning unknown to
Egyptologists (see Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pp.319-20).
In
his article in Dialogue, pp. 111-113, Egyptologist Klaus Baer set
forth another serious problem confronting those who would try to save the
Book of Abraham: the papyrus Joseph Smith identified as Facsimile No. 1
from the Book of Abraham was originally part of the same scroll which
contained the "Sensen" text--i.e., they were both part of the Book of
Breathings. The two pieces had been cut apart in Joseph Smith's time and
mounted on paper, but Dr. Baer demonstrated that they fit together
perfectly. Dr. Hugh Nibley later acknowledged that they were both part of
the Book of Breathings: "It can be easily shown by matching up the cut
edges and fibers of the papyri that the text of the Joseph Smith
'Breathing' Papyrus (No. XI) was written on the same strip of material as
Facsimile No. 1 and immediately adjoining it. (The Message of the
Joseph Smith Papyri: an Egyptian Endowment, 1975, page 13)
The
text of the Book of Abraham itself demonstrates that the drawing appearing
as Facsimile No. 1 was supposed to be at the beginning of the scroll just
as Professor Baer's research has revealed. The original manuscripts of the
Book of Abraham, as they appear in Joseph Smith's Egyptian Alphabet
and Grammar, reveal that Joseph Smith was using characters from the "Sensen"
papyrus when he "translated" the first chapter of the Book of Abraham. In
Abraham 1:12 the patriarch Abraham was supposed to have said the
following: "And it came to pass that the
priests laid violence upon me, that they might slay me also, as they did
those virgins upon this altar; and that you may have a knowledge of
this altar, I will refer you to the representation at the
commencement of this record." It is clear, therefore, that
the picture shown as Facsimile No. 1 was the start of the papyrus scroll,
and that Joseph Smith was claiming to translate from the very next
portion--the Small "Sensen" text.
A
larger "Sensen" text follows the Small "Sensen" text. The name "Abraham"
does not appear on any of the three pieces of papyri. On the other hand,
the Egyptian name Hor appears on every piece. We
have found it in at least nine places. Although the original piece of
papyrus Joseph Smith used to prepare Facsimile No. 3 is missing,
Egyptologists have also found the name "Hor" on the printed facsimile.
Professor Baer believes the scene shown in Facsimile No. 3 ended the Book
of Breathings which was prepared for the man Hor who had died and needed
the magical papyrus which contained the charms which were necessary to
reach the "world of the hereafter."
Hugh
Nibley was willing to concede that Facsimile No. 3 was probably part of
the original Book of Breathings scroll:
"For the Book of Breathings is
before all else, as Bonnet observes, a composite, made up of
'compilations and excerpts from older funerary sources and mortuary
formulas.'...
"Of
particular interest to us is the close association of the Book
of Breathings with the Facsimiles of the
Book of Abraham.... the text of Joseph Smith Pap. No. XI
was written on the same strip of material as Facsimile Number 1, the
writing beginning immediately to the left of the 'lion-couch' scene. The
British Museum Book of Breathing[s], 'the Kerasher Papyrus,' has both the
'lion-couch' scene... and a scene resembling our Facsimile
Number 3... This last stands at the head of the 'Kerasher'
text, and suggests that our Fac. No. 3 was originally attached
at the other end of the Joseph Smith Papyrus, coming after
the last column, which is missing....the Book of Breathings...contains the
essential elements of the Egyptian funerary rites from the earliest
times...The Book of Breathings is not to be dismissed, as it has been, as
a mere talisman against stinking corpses; it is a sermon on breathing in
every Egyptian sense of the word." (Brigham Young University Studies,
Winter 1971, pp. 158, 160, 162, 164, 166)
All of the evidence adds up to the
inescapable conclusion that although Joseph Smith claimed to translate the
Book of Abraham from the papyrus he had in his possession, the words that
he dictated came from his own imagination. That papyrus, in fact, contains
a pagan text having nothing to do with Abraham or his religion. We have
counted the names of at least fifteen Egyptian gods or
goddesses which appear on the papyrus, but it contains
absolutely nothing regarding the God of
the Bible.
Since
the Joseph Smith Papyri were rediscovered and translated by Egyptologists,
a number of prominent Mormon scholars seem to have been living in a
fantasyland with regard to the Book of Abraham. Instead of facing the
truth about Joseph Smith's work, they have come up with a number of
incredible explanations. Dr. Hugh Nibley has led the parade by setting
forth all sorts of reasons why a person should go on believing the Book of
Abraham even though the evidence clearly shows it is the work of Joseph
Smith's own imagination. Since the discovery of the papyri in 1967,
Professor Nibley has stubbornly fought against the truth with regard to
the Book of Abraham. Although he put up many smoke screens to try to
divert attention from the real issues, he has not been successful in
silencing the opposition. In Sunstone, Dec. 1979, Edward Ashment,
a Mormon Egyptologist who has worked in the Translation Department of the
church, demonstrated that Dr. Nibley's work on the Joseph Smith Papyri was
filled with serious errors. He, in fact, demolished Nibley's arguments at
every turn.
In
a response, published in the same issue, Hugh Nibley acknowledged that
"Since hearing Brother Ashment I have to make some changes in what I have
said already." (Ibid., p. 51) On page 49 of the same article, we
find this startling statement coming from the church's chief apologist for
the Book of Abraham: "I refuse to be held responsible for anything
I wrote more than three years ago."
GEE'S MAGICAL PAPYRI
One
of the more desperate attempts to save the Book of Abraham is the attempt
to link it to late magical papyri. John Gee, the Mormon apologist who has
criticized Charles Larson's book, has been trying very hard to promote
this view. On page 116 of his rebuttal to Larson, John Gee reported:
"David Cameron discovered an Egyptian lion couch scene much like Facsimile
1 explicitly mentioning the name Abraham." Mr. Gee has provided research
on this subject for an article published by F.A.R.M.S. and has also
prepared an article for the church's magazine, The Ensign.

(Color Photo from Charles M.
Larson's ..By His Own Hand Upon Papyrus: A New Look at the Joseph Smith
Papyri.)
The "lion couch scene" Gee speaks of is
found in the Leiden Papyrus I 384. The F.A.R.M.S. article concerning this
matter caused some Mormons to be very excited because it stated that the
"lion couch scene" shows "Anubis standing over a person..." (Insight:
An Ancient Window, September 1991, page 1) Many were undoubtedly led
to believe that the "person" on the couch must be Abraham as shown in
Facsimile No. 1 of the Book of Abraham. Unfortunately for Mormon
apologists, this has not turned out to be the case. Mormon Egyptologist
Edward Ashment claimed that it was actually a woman who was lying on the
couch. In his article published in The Ensign, July 1992, p. 61,
John Gee acknowledged that this is the case: "The figure on the lion couch
in this papyrus is a woman."
While
many Mormon apologists have argued that Facsimile No. 1 shows a priest
with a human head attempting to sacrifice Abraham, it has been obvious to
Egyptologists for many years that the standing figure is really the
jackal-headed god Anubis preparing the deceased for burial. The
rediscovery of the Joseph Smith Papyri shows that the head was missing on
the original papyrus, and it is clear that Joseph Smith made an
imaginative restoration which is incorrect. In the papyrus John Gee speaks
of it is obvious that the woman is being attended by the jackal-headed
god. As we have shown, the article in Insights plainly states
that it is "Anubis standing over a person..."
In
The Ensign, Mr. Gee reveals that even the text speaks of the
jackal-headed god: "Later in the text we read, 'I adjure you spirits of
the dead, [by] the dead (pharaohs) and the demon Balsamos and the
jackal-headed god and the gods who are with him.'... The 'jackal-headed
god' is most likely Anubis, who usually
officiates in lion couch scenes..." It is obvious, then, that this papyrus
provides no support for the sacrificial scene found in Facsimile No. 1.
If
this papyrus were dated 2,000 years earlier, the discovery of the name
Abraham on it might be significant. It, of course, would not prove the
Book of Abraham to be true, but would merely establish that the name
"Abraham" was known in Egypt at that time.
One
of the problems with the Book of Breathings Papyrus -- the text Joseph
Smith believed was the Book of Abraham -- is that it is not old enough to
have been written by Abraham. According to Josiah Quincy, Joseph Smith
claimed that the papyrus he had contained the very handwriting of Abraham
himself: "That is the handwriting of Abraham,
the father of the Faithful..." (See Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?
page 321 for additional evidence concerning this matter). A number of
Mormon scholars feel that Abraham lived in the twentieth century B.C.
When
the Joseph Smith Papyri were rediscovered, it soon became obvious that
they were not nearly old enough to support Joseph Smith's claims
concerning the Book of Abraham. Dr. Hugh Nibley admitted that the Book of
Breathings only dated back to the first century: "...It has now become
apparent...that our Joseph Smith Book of Breathings is one of a very
special and limited and uniquely valuable class of documents clustering
around a single priestly family of upper Egypt in the first
century A.D." (The Message of the Joseph Smith Papyri: An
Egyptian Endowment, 1975, p. 3) Since the Book of Breathings --
which, of course, contains the drawing Joseph Smith used for Facsimile No.
1 in his Book of Abraham -- was written about 2,000 years after the time
of Abraham, the Mormon Church is faced with a serious dilemma.
The
magical texts which John Gee uses as evidence for the Book of Abraham
present an even greater problem. In the article published in Insights,
p. 1, it is claimed that the texts "date to about the same time as
the Joseph Smith papyri." According to Edward Ashment, however, they were
not written until the third century A. D. In his article published in
The Ensign, p. 60, Mr. Gee agrees they date "to the third
century A. D...." As we will show, they are so far removed
from the time of Abraham that they are of no value.
In
1978 Morton Smith published a book entitled, Jesus The Magician.
While we disagreed with his conclusion that Jesus was a magician (see
Salt Lake City Messenger, Jan. 1986), Professor Smith presented a
great deal of material concerning the type of magical papyri we are
dealing with here.
Although
we know that Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt, the Bible indicates
that many of them desired to return. By the fifth century B. C. there was
a colony of Jews living at Elephantine in Egypt. Even though these Jews
built a temple, it "has been argued by some scholars that the Jerusalem
priests regarded the Jews in Egypt as semi-heretical, and therefore did
not encourage them in their apostasy." (The Bible and Archaeology,
by J. A. Thompson, 1962, page 226)
In
any case, we know that by the time of Jesus there was a large Jewish
population in Egypt, which was at that time a Roman province. Jesus,
himself, was brought to Egypt by his father and mother to escape the rage
of Herod. On page 62 of his book, Jesus The Magician, Morton
Smith says that "There was a long standing legend that the god of the Jews
was a donkey, or donkey-headed.... The Jews were among the largest groups
of foreigners in Egypt, so their god, Iao, was identified with Seth."
F.
F. Bruce says that "Philo of Alexandria estimated about A. D. 38 that
there were at least a million Jews in Egypt and the neighboring
territories. We may subject this figure to a substantial discount, but the
Jewish population of Egypt was certainly very great. In Alexandria itself
at that time one out of the five wards of the city was entirely Jewish and
a second was very largely so." (New Testament History, 1980, page
136) Bruce felt that "Christianity had found its way to Alexandria by A.
D. 41." (Ibid., p. 294)
It
is obvious that there would have been a good deal of information available
in Egypt concerning the God of Israel and important Biblical characters
long before the magical papyri were written. It is no surprise, then, that
the names of prominent individuals mentioned in the Bible turn up in the
magical texts written in the third century A. D. Many of those who
practiced magic wanted to use the names of as many gods and religious
leaders as possible and seemed to have little concern about mixing the
Hebrew God and Biblical characters with Egyptian gods. C. K. Barrett
observed: "Those in particular who practiced magic were willing to
adopt from any source names and formulas which sounded
impressive and effective." (The New Testament Background: Selected
Documents, by C. K. Barrett, 1987, page 34)
On
pages 34-35, Barrett quotes from the Paris Magical Papyrus,
written about A. D. 300. This text tells how to exorcise demons. We cite
the following from this lengthy text:
"The
adjuration is this: 'I adjure thee by the god of the Hebrews
Jesu [Jesus], Jaba, Jae, Abraoth, Aia, Thoth,
Ele, Elo, Aeo, Eu, Jiibaech, Abarmas, Jabarau, Abelbel, Lona,
Abra, Maroi... I abjure thee by him who appeared unto Osrael [Israel] in
the pillar of light and in the cloud by day, and who delivered his word
from the taskwork of Pharaoh and brought upon Pharaoh the ten plagues
because he heard not. I adjure thee, every daemonic spirit, say whatsoever
thou art. For I adjure thee by the seal which Solomon
laid upon the tongue of Jeremiah and he
spake.... I adjure thee by the great God Sabaoth, through whom the river
Jordan returned backward..."
The
reader will notice that the author mixed Jesus in with the Egyptian god
Thoth. It is hardly surprising, then, that we would find the name Abraham
-- one of the most important characters in the Bible -- mentioned in the
magical papyri. On page 114 of his book, Morton Smith pointed out that,
"Jesus' name was used in spells as the name of a god. So were the names of
Adam (PGM III. 146), Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, and of Moses and Solomon who were famous as magicians."
On
page 63, Morton Smith quotes PGM IV, line 1233: "'Be blessed, God
of Abraham. Be blessed, God of Issac. Be blessed, God of Jacob. Jesus
Christ, holy spirit, son of the Father, who art under the Seven and in the
Seven, bring Iao Sabaoth. May your power increase...until you drive Out
this evil demon, Satan.'" On page 69, we find this statement by Smith:
"The Jews's God, Yahweh...was particularly famous for his usefulness in
magic. In the magical papyri (which contains a sprinkling of Jewish
spells, but are mainly pagan documents) his name outnumbers that of any
other deity by more than three to one." Smith quotes the following from
"an invocation of the world ruler the Good Demon": "For I have taken to
myself the power of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and of the great god-demon
Iao Ablanathanalba." (page 102)
In
the article published in The Ensign, page 60, John Gee notes that
there is a similarity between a verse in the Bible and what is found on
the papyrus with the "lion couch scene": "The first reference occurs in a
chapter on how to make a signet ring. One of the steps is to 'bring
a white stone' and 'write this name upon it...:
Abraham, friend of m[an].'" This, of course, is similar to Revelation
2:17, which speaks of "a white stone, and in the
stone a new name written..." It is interesting
to note that this is the only mention of "a
white stone" in the entire Bible.
The
fact that both documents mention "a white stone" with a "name" written on
it seems too close to be a coincidence. The book of Revelation, of course,
was not written until about A. D. 90. This would be around 2,000 years
after the time of Abraham. The implications of this quotation from the
book of Revelation in the papyrus are clear: the author of the text in the
magical papyrus must have either seen or heard someone read from the book
of Revelation. Once it is conceded that the author was acquainted with the
book of Revelation, then it is also easy to believe that he or she had
access to other information contained in Bible manuscripts and would have
known about Abraham. It should also be noted that the magical papyrus
speaks of "Abraham, friend of m[an]." This sounds like a quotation from
the book of James, which speaks of Abraham as "the Friend of God." (James
1:23)
Speaking
of the same papyrus, John Gee says that the "second instance of Abraham's
name occurs in a description of how to use a ring to obtain 'success and
grace and victory.' As a part of his invocation, the petitioner says, 'O
mighty god, who surpassest all powers, I call upon thee, Iao, Sabaoth,
Adonai, Elohim, [six other names], Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, [82 more
names].' The first four names are Hebrew for 'LORD of hosts, my Lord,
God.'" (The Ensign, July 1992, page 60)
The
brackets found in the quotation above appear in the original publication.
From this it is clear that the name Abraham in
this section of the text was only one of ninety-five names
that were being invoked! It would appear, then, that the
name Abraham was just one of many magic names
needed so that the person who recited the spell would be able to use "a
ring to obtain 'success and grace and victory.'"
There
seems to be no evidence that the name Abraham came from any
ancient Egyptian source or that it had anything to do with the Book of
Abraham. Although John Gee's writings may have given some members of the
Mormon Church the idea that evidence had been found to support Joseph
Smith's translation, when the facts are known, it is clear that the
magical papyri, dating to the third century A. D., provide absolutely no
support for the Book of Abraham. Mr. Gee's attempt to make a case from
these second-rate papyri tends to show how empty-handed Mormon apologists
are when it comes to defending the Book of Abraham. Mormon scholars cannot
find the name of Abraham on any part of the papyrus which Joseph Smith
claimed was written by Abraham himself and even contained Abraham's own
signature. Therefore, they have turned to magical papyri which were
written two centuries after the text Smith translated as the Book of
Abraham. We find it especially strange that they would make an issue of
the name Abraham on other papyri, when it cannot be found on the papyrus
scroll Joseph Smith designated as the Book of Abraham.
On
page 62 of his article in The Ensign, John Gee acknowledges that
the texts he has cited do not really inform us about Abraham or his
history: "Though these texts tell us nothing directly about Abraham, they
do tell us that there were traditions circulating in Roman Egypt.
Traditions we must remember, often stem from older truths.... Even if we
had a manuscript for the book of Abraham in Egyptian, dating to Abraham's
time, the critics still would not accept the book of Abraham. Those who
seek to know the truth of the book of Abraham will have to wait upon the
Lord."
MICHAEL RHODE'S WORK
Although the Mormon Egyptologist Michael
D. Rhodes translated Facsimile No. 2 of the Book of Abraham, he found
nothing regarding Abraham. Nevertheless, he has still tried to defend
Joseph Smith's work. Writing in the church's magazine, The Ensign,
July 1988, pp. 51-53, Rhodes tried to answer the following question:
"Why doesn't the translation of the Egyptian papyri found in 1967
match the text of the Book of Abraham in the Pearl of Great Price? In
this article Michael Rhodes clearly laid out the problem which faced the
church: "First of all, from paleographic and historical considerations,
the Book of Breathings papyrus can reliably be dated to around A.D. 60 --
much too late for Abraham to have written it.... when one compares the
text of the book of Abraham with a translation of the Book of Breathings;
they clearly are not the same."
Rhodes
then proceeds to give "possible explanations why the text of the recently
discovered papyri does not match the text in the
Pearl of Great Price." One of Rhode's suggestions is that the "copy of
Abraham's record" which Joseph Smith used "possibly passed through the
hands of many scribes and had become editorially corrupted
to the point where it may have had little
resemblance to the original..." For this reason Joseph Smith
may have used the "Urim and Thummim, or simply through revelation"
revealed what Abraham had originally written.
Michael
Rhodes was chosen to write two articles for the Encyclopedia of
Mormonism. In vol. 1, page 136, Rhodes set forth the idea that Joseph
Smith chose pagan drawings as illustrations for his Book of Abraham: "In
summary, Facsimile 1 formed the beginning, and Facsimile 3 the end of a
document known as the Book of Breathings, an Egyptian religious
text,... The association of these facsimiles with the book of Abraham
might be explained as Joseph Smith's attempt to find illustrations from
the papyri he owned that most closely matched what he had
received in revelation when translating the Book of Abraham."
In
a letter to a member of the Mormon Church who was troubled with regard to
the origin of the Book of Abraham, Michael Rhodes spoke of a theory he
proposed in his article in the Ensign, July 1988, page 51 --
Rhodes had stated that it was possible that the Book of Abraham "may have
been taken from a different portion of the
papyrus rolls in Joseph Smith's possession." In the letter, however,
Rhodes made it clear that he no longer considered that as a very promising
option. He went on to give more information concerning the idea that the
Book of Abraham did not really come from the papyrus scroll in Joseph
Smith's possession:
"Before
I start, let me say that I... like you, definitely favor the second;
namely that Joseph Smith did not have the actual text of the
Book of Abraham before him, but that it was revealed to
him... The first option I proposed seems pretty unlikely to me
now. There is no doubt that the original Papyrus of
Facsimile Number 1 belongs to the Book of Breathings text. The name of the
owner of the Papyrus, Hor son of Userwer, is found both on this papyrus
and in the text of the Book of Breathings... although we do not have the
original of Facsimile Number 3, the name Hor can clearly be read in the
hieroglyphs on this facsimile, and it seems very probable that this
illustration was originally located at the end of the Book of Breathings
papyrus now in the Church's possession. I am not ruling it out completely,
but I think it is unlikely that Joseph Smith ever had the
actual text of the Book of Abraham in his possession....
"This
still leaves us with the problem of how Facsimile Number 1, a commonly
found representation of the god Anubis preparing the body of
Osiris (or the deceased) for burial, that is part of an
Egyptian funerary document that was produced nearly 2000 years (about 60
A. D.) after Abraham, can possibly be the illustration Abraham refers to
in his book. The best explanation I have for this is that in the original
papyrus Abraham, had drawn an illustration of himself being sacrificed on
an altar by the priest of Elkenah. In the process of translation, this
illustration was revealed to Joseph Smith and he saw that it
was similar to the one found at the beginning of the Book of
Breathings. Joseph Smith therefore used it (with some
modifications) as Facsimile Number one. One of the most
obvious modifications is the changing of the head of the god
Anubis (who has a jackal's head) to that of a
man. Another is putting a knife in the standing figures
hand. (Both the head and the knife are missing
in the papyrus as it exists today.)
"Joseph
Smith may have used the other facsimiles found in the Book of Abraham
similarly.
"I
certainly don't claim this is the only possible explanation; it is simply
the best I have been able to come up with so far." (Letter by Michael D.
Rhodes, dated July 10,1988)
This
extraordinary letter gives the reader an idea of how far some Mormon
scholars will go in their attempt to save the Book of Abraham. It is also
interesting to note that after writing this letter, Michael Rhodes seems
to have changed his mind again concerning the question of whether Joseph
Smith really had the Book of Abraham papyrus. In his article published in
The Ensign, July 1988, p.51, Rhodes had held out the hope that
the Book of Abraham may "have been taken from a different portion
of the papyrus rolls in Joseph Smith's possession" -- a portion which has
since disappeared.
By
the time he wrote the letter cited above, however, he had decided that
Smith probably "did not have the actual text of the Book of
Abraham before him.., I think it is unlikely
that Joseph Smith ever had the actual text of the Book of
Abraham in his possession." To our surprise, when we read an article by
Michael Rhodes printed in Review of Books, vol.4, 1992, we
discovered that he seems to have reverted to the idea that Joseph Smith
may have had a roll of papyrus. On page 122, Rhodes claimed that "a
contemporary source indicates that the scroll of the book of Abraham was
not part of the papyri fragments now in the possession of the Church."
He
cites from a letter written by Charlotte Haven in 1843. Haven claimed that
Joseph Smith's mother "opened a long roll of manuscript, saying it was
'the writing of Abraham and Isaac, written in Hebrew and Sanscrit,' and
she read several minutes from it as if it were English." Because the
papyri the church now has in its possession were supposed to have been cut
into sheets by this time and therefore could not have been a "long roll of
manuscript," Rhodes seems to conclude that there was a third roll of
papyrus which has been lost. This interpretation, which is also held by
John Gee, is erroneous. Significant evidence points to the conclusion that
there were only two rolls of papyrus. Joseph Smith's History
contains this information: "On opening the coffins, he [Mr. Chandler]
discovered... something rolled up... which, when examined, proved to be
two rolls of papyrus, previously mentioned. Two
or three other small pieces of papyrus, with astronomical calculations,
epitaphs, &c., were found with others of the mummies." (History of the
Church, vol. 2, page 349)
Although
the text mentions that there were "Two or three other small pieces of
papyrus," Joseph Smith never identifies a third roll of papyrus.
Furthermore, while Charlotte Haven's statement contains some interesting
information, it contains a number of factual errors. She says that Mother
Smith told Haven that the roll contained the "writing of Abraham and
Isaac, written in Hebrew
and Sanscrit" Mormon leaders have never claimed
that the Book of Abraham was written in "Hebrew and Sanscrit." Joseph
Smith's History makes it abundantly clear that the Book of
Abraham was supposed to be written in "Egyptian characters." (History
of the Church, vol. 2, page 320)
While
Haven's account says that the roll was written by "Abraham and Isaac," to
our knowledge, Joseph Smith did not claim that Isaac wrote anything in the
Book of Abraham. As early as 1969, the Mormon scholar Jay M. Todd saw the
discrepancies in Haven's account and made this observation: "One wonders
if Sister Smith were not just throwing out names of languages she had
heard; or, one wonders if Charlotte is reporting accurately. Until more
evidence is gathered, the sum and value of Charlotte's report
remains clouded on several issues." (The Saga of the Book of
Abraham, by Jay M. Todd, page 249)
Jay
Todd also noted the discrepancy with regard to Haven's claim that Lucy
Smith opened a roll of papyrus. The preponderance of the evidence shows
that both rolls had been cut up by the time Charlotte Haven saw them. Her
statement, of course, could be reconciled by claiming that what she meant
was that Lucy Smith laid out the various pieces of the document
side-by-side so that it appeared in the same order as when the roll was
first opened up.
In
our book, The Case Against Mormonism, vol. 2, pages 121-122, we
give four different accounts by people who saw the original papyri in
Nauvoo. Besides citing the letter by Charlotte Haven, we have included
accounts by Josiah Quincy, Henry Caswall and an account appearing in a
newspaper known as The Quincy Whig. These accounts are written in
the period from 1840 to 1844. Charlotte Haven's account is the only one
which talks of "a long role of manuscript" being opened. Because the
manuscripts were so very fragile (a number of pieces had already broken
off), it would not seem reasonable that Lucy Smith would unroll them time
after time to display them to the many visitors who came to see the
papyri.
As
early as 1840, The Quincy Wig, reported that there were "numerous
fragments of Egyptian papyrus" which were in "several frames, covered with
glass.' The same paper reported that Joseph Smith said: "'These ancient
records... have been unrolled and preserved with
great labor and care." (The Quincy Wig, Oct 17, 1840, as cited in
Ancient Records Testify in Papyrus and Stone, pp. 51-52)
When
Caswall examined the papyri in 1842, he found the rolls had been
cut into "sheets of papyrus" and were kept in "glazed
slides, like picture frames." (The City of the Mormons;
or, Three Days at Nauvoo, in 1842, pp. 22-23)
Both
these accounts were written before Charlotte Haven's letter was penned in
1843. The other account, however, was written by Josiah Quincy, who
visited Joseph Smith in 1844. He also claimed that the papyri "were
preserved under glass and handled with great
respect." (Figures of the Past, 1883, as cited in Among the
Mormons, page 136)
In
his article in Review of Books, pp. 121-122, Michael Rhodes used
a statement made by Caswall to support his argument that there may be a
third role of papyrus containing the Book of Abraham: "In 1842, the
fragments we now have were described as being mounted in a number of
glazed slides, like picture frames, containing sheets of papyrus, with
Egyptian inscriptions and hieroglyphics.'" He then proceeded to quote
Charlotte Haven's letter to support his thesis of a third roll. If Rhodes
had cited more of Caswall's statement, his argument would have fallen
apart. Henry Caswall made it very clear that the very sheets that had been
cut up contained the Book of Abraham. We quote the following from
Caswall's book, pp. 22-23:
"The
storekeeper... drew forth a number of glazed slides,
like picture frames, containing sheets of
papyrus, with Egyptian inscriptions and hieroglyphics. These
had been unrolled from four mummies, which the prophet
purchased at a cost of twenty-four hundred dollars. By some inexplicable
mode, as the storekeeper informed me, Mr. Smith had discovered that
these sheets contained the writings of Abraham,
written with his own hand while in Egypt. Pointing to the figure of a man
lying on a table, he said, 'that is the picture of Abraham on the point of
being sacrificed. That man standing by him with a drawn knife is an
idolatrous priest of the Egyptians."
It
seems obvious from this that Joseph Smith did not
possess another roll of papyrus.
John
Gee uses the exact argument found in Rhodes' article on page 107 of his
review of Larson's book. Like Rhodes, Gee fails to provide the important
context. He does, however, use the last two sentences of the quote we have
cited from Caswall five pages earlier in his article while trying to prove
another point (see page 102). Unfortunately, however, even on page 102 he
uses ellipsis signs (dots) to omit the statement that "Mr. Smith had
discovered that these sheets contained the writings of
Abraham, written with his own hand while in Egypt." Because
of the amount of material between the two quotes and the omission of the
important portion regarding the fact that the Book of Abraham roll had
been cut into sheets, it is doubtful that one person in a thousand would
ever know that Gee's quotation actually refuted what he was trying to
prove.
Many
Mormon scholars would probably charge us with dishonesty if we did this
sort of thing. In any case, an examination of some of the wording in Gee's
quotation with that found in Rhode's article seems to show that one
scholar borrowed from the other. Below is a comparison:
"In
1842, the fragments we now have in the Joseph Smith Papyri
were mounted in 'a number of glazed slides, like picture
frames, containing sheets of papyrus, with Egyptian inscriptions and
hieroglyphics.' The next year, in 1843, a nonmember named
Charlotte Haven visited Lucy Mack Smith and wrote a letter to
her own mother about it: 'Then she [Mother Smith] turned to a long
table..." (John Gee, Review of Books, page 107)
"In
1842, the fragments we now have were described as being
mounted in 'a number of glazed slides, like picture frames,
containing sheets of papyrus, with Egyptian inscriptions and
hieroglyphics.' The next year, in 1843, Charlotte Haven, a nonmember,
visited Joseph Smith's mother, Lucy Mack Smith
and wrote a letter to her own mother about it, saying:
'Then she [Mother Smith] turned to a long table..."
(Michael Rhodes, Review of Books, pages 121-122)
It
would appear from the comparison above that one of these two authors did
the original research on this quotation but failed to realize that if the
quote from Caswall was taken in its entirety, it would refute the entire
argument that there was another roll of papyrus. The other author then
blindly followed the first into the ditch. We, of course, do not know who
made the original mistake, but feel that it resulted from an overzealous
attempt to save the Book of Abraham.
Even
if Rhodes and Gee could have established that there was a third papyrus,
it would not have solved the serious problem faced by the church. The
reader will remember that in the Book of Abraham, 1:12, Abraham was
supposed to have said that he included a drawing of the attempt to slay
him "at the commencement of this record." Now,
it is obvious to all who examine the matter that the drawing in the Book
of Abraham matches the drawing found in Hor's Book of Breathings. Both
John Gee and Michael Rhodes acknowledge this to be true.

If,
then, Joseph Smith had another roll of papyrus which really contained the
Book of Abraham, why did he not use the drawing which Abraham himself said
he placed at the beginning of that roll? Why would Smith switch over to
the pagan Book of Breathings and use an illustration (Fac. No. 1) from
that roll? The problem goes even deeper: why would the prophet include Fac.
No. 3 at the end of the record? The reader will remember that Michael
Rhodes said that "the name Hor can clearly be read in the hieroglyphs" on
Fac. No. 3 and that this drawing was probably "originally located at the
end of the Book of Breathings papyrus." In addition, Smith added Fac. No.
2 in the middle. As we have shown, this is also a pagan document. In the
first printing of the Book of Abraham in the Times and Seasons,
Joseph Smith called every one of these drawings "A Facsimile From The Book
of Abraham."
The
thesis set forth by Rhodes and Gee would actually lead one to believe that
the prophet rejected the drawing Abraham himself put at the beginning of
his record and added a substitute and two other drawings created by idol
worshipers! This in itself would show that Joseph Smith was not inspired
when he produced the Book of Abraham.
Brigham
Young University scholar James R. Harris concluded that the papyri
rediscovered in 1967 did not vindicate Joseph Smith's work and turned to
the idea that the Book of Abraham came through revelation, not through a
translation of the papyrus scroll. He even warns members of the church
against holding out the hope that a papyrus manuscript may yet be found
that will confirm Joseph Smith's work:
"Facsimiles
1 and 3 were created from separate vignettes of a single Sensen text.
Facsimile 2 was created from a disk-shaped amulet that was placed under
the head of the deceased...
"It
is important to understand, precisely speaking, that in their original
context, these illustrations have no connection with the Book
of Abraham. The three facsimiles are, in fact, reproductions
of real Egyptian documents." (The Facsimiles of the Book of Abraham, A
Study of the Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri, 1990, page 5)
"These
two scrolls appear to have been regarded by Church leadership as
scrolls of Abraham and Joseph. An understanding of
the content of the papyrus fragments and the manner in which they were
used by Joseph and Oliver, makes it very improbable that there
are now or ever were any other Abraham or Joseph scrolls in
the Joseph Smith Egyptian collection.
"If
we had some of the missing fragments of these documents there is every
reason to believe that they would contain more of the same material as
that on the present fragments: spells and formulas to protect
the deceased and insure his or her continuation in the
future state....
"As
a caution, if the hope of acquiring an Egyptian text of Abraham is
perpetuated as a major possibility', the perpetrators may be guilty of
leaving future generations of Latter-day Saints with the same
vulnerability that has resulted in many spiritual casualties
in this generation. It is to the end that such casualties be
diminished that I have undertaken this study." (Ibid., pages
86-88)
The
suggestion that Joseph Smith may have obtained the Book of Abraham by way
of direct revelation and not from the papyrus is
now held by a number of prominent Mormon scholars. The problem with this
attempt to escape the serious implications of the evidence furnished by
the papyri is that it flies in the face of everything Joseph Smith ever
wrote or allowed to be published about the subject. In the History of
the Church, Smith made it clear that he had the very writings of
Abraham and Joseph in his possession. He even claimed that he received
this material through translating the hieroglyphs:
"Soon
after this, some of the Saints at Kirtland purchased the mummies and
papyrus... I commenced the translation of some
of the characters or hieroglyphics, and much to our joy found that one of
the rolls contained the writings of Abraham,
another the writings of Joseph of Egypt.." (History
of the Church, vol.2, page 236)
Joseph
Smith not only said that he was going to translate the records, but he
also maintained he produced a "correct translation" of the documents:
"The
record of Abraham and Joseph, found with the
mnmmies [sic] is beautifully written... I have given a brief history of
the manner in which the writings of the fathers, Abraham and
Joseph, have been preserved, and how I came in possession of
the same -- a correct translation of which I
shall give in its proper place." (History of the Church, vol.2,
pp.348, 350-51)
In
his History, Joseph Smith indicated that in 1835 he spent a good
deal of time working on his translation of the Egyptian papyri:
"The
remainder of this month, I was
continually engaged in translating an alphabet to the Book of Abraham,
and arranging a grammar of the
Egyptian language as practiced by the Ancients." (History
of the Church, vol 2, page 238)
"October
1.--This afternoon I labored on the Egyptian
alphabet... during the research, the principles of astronomy
as understood by Father Abraham and the ancients unfolded to our
understanding, the particulars of which will appear hereafter." (Ibid.,
page 286)
"Tuesday, [Nov.] 24.--...In
the afternoon we translated some of the
Egyptian records....
"Thursday,
26.--Spent the day in translating Egyptian
characters from the papyrus..." (Ibid, page 320)
At
the beginning of the handwritten manuscript of the Book of Abraham, Joseph
Smith asserted that it was a "Translation of the Book of
Abraham written by his own hand upon papyrus and found in
the catacombs of Egypt." (see photograph of the first page of the
manuscript in Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? page 312)
The
introduction to the Book of Abraham still maintains that it was "Translated
From The Papyrus, By Joseph Smith" (Pearl of Great
Price, The Book of Abraham, Introduction).
In
spite of Joseph Smith's many statements that he translated
the Book of Abraham from the Egyptian language, Mormon apologist Hugh
Nibley made this astounding assertion: "Joseph Smith never
pretended to understand Egyptian, nor that the Book of
Abraham was a work of his scholarship..." (Brigham Young University
Studies, Winter 1968, page 176) In the same article Nibley said that
he had "never spent so much as five minutes with the Egyptian Grammar"--i.e.,
Joseph Smith's Egyptian Alphabet and Grammar.
A PAGAN BOOK?
The
attempt by Mormon scholars to escape Smith's own statements that he
translated the Book of Abraham from the papyrus appears to be a flight
from reality. It is clear that they realize there is no way to defend
Smith's work as a translator of Egyptian writing. Consequently, they are
forced to resort to some kind of a theory that allows Smith to be a
prophet even though his translation does not coincide with what is found
on the papyrus. The idea that there was another papyrus scroll which
Joseph Smith never had in his possession and that God revealed the text of
that papyrus to Smith by revelation seems to stretch one's credulity
beyond the breaking point.
Even
if a person could accept this theory, it raises another insurmountable
problem: why would God allow his prophet to use three pagan documents (the
facsimiles) to illustrate his Book of Abraham? The facsimiles are filled
with pictures of and praises to these heathen gods. For example, Mormon
scholar Michael Rhodes has translated Facsimile No. 2 and admits that the
text "seems to be an address to Osiris, the god of the Dead,
on behalf of the deceased..." (Brigham Young University Studies,
Spring 1977, page 274) On page 270 of the same article, Rhodes
acknowledges that the same facsimile has a drawing of the "Hawk-headed Re"
-- the Egyptian sun god. Numerous other gods and pagan scenes are shown on
the facsimiles. Rhodes himself admits that there is a "strange assortment
of gods, animals, and mixtures of both" on Facsimile No. 2. (Ibid.,
page 273) To have such an array of pagan gods and activities in a
book purporting to have been written by Abraham appears to be in direct
contradiction to the first commandment:
"I
am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out
of the house of bondage. Thou shalt have no other gods before me." (Exodus
20: 2-3)
Charles
Larson makes some interesting observations concerning this matter in his
new book:
"Quite
early in the game Dr. Nibley had given the impression that he felt that
Mormon people ought to be willing to accept any association that could be
found -- even to pagan Egyptian mythology if need be -- as long as it left
open possibilities.
"However,
Nibley's approach in this regard is certainly in sharp conflict with the
Bible, one of the four LDS standard works. Throughout the Old Testament it
is abundantly clear that God took great pains to dissuade the children of
Israel from any contact with the false gods and idolatrous practices of
their pagan neighbors.... God specifically admonished his people to
repudiate and completely forsake the gods of Egypt, to whom they had been
exposed during their years of captivity there (Joshua 24:14). The Old
Testament records that every time the children of Israel fell into pagan
idolatry, they experienced God's chastening (Judges 2:2, 3, 11-15).
"The
New Testament likewise teaches the same principle that God does not use
pagan or ungodly vessels to bear His truth....
"Since
the Joseph Smith Papyri have been identified with absolute certainty as
prayers to pagan Egyptian gods that, by biblical definition are ripe with
occultism, it is inconceivable, given the holy character of God, that He
would associate Himself or his revelation in any way with these pagan
religious documents. This fact alone is ample grounds for totally
rejecting the Book of Abraham as a revelation from the one True and Living
God." (By his Own Hand Upon Papyrus, pages 119-120)
John
Gee argues that the Book of Breathings "is addressed to no Egyptian gods;
rather, it is addressed to a human individual and reminds him of promises
made to him and things he has experienced." (Review of Books on the
Book of Mormon, vol.4, p. 100) While this diversionary tactic may be
technically correct, those who take the time to read the text will find
that the deceased is promised help from Re (the sun god), Uto (the cobra
goddess), Nekhbet (the vulture goddess), Geb (the earth god), Shu (the god
of air), and other gods and goddesses. (See Klaus Baer's translation in
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Autumn 1968, pp. 116-126.)
As noted earlier, we found at least fifteen pagan gods and
goddesses mentioned on this papyrus!
Moreover, we have shown that the Mormon
scholar Michael Rhodes has translated Facsimile No. 2 of the Book of
Abraham and acknowledges that the text "seems to be an address to
Osiris, the god of the Dead, on behalf of the
deceased..." In addition, the rest of the Joseph Smith Papyri contains
prayers to pagan deities.
We
have to agree with Charles Larson's statement on page 166 of his book:
"...It is surely inconceivable that the God of the Bible would compromise
his exclusivity as the one, true God by co-mingling His revelation with
the idolatrous pagan teachings and rites of Egypt as expressed in the
Joseph Smith Papyri."
RELIGIOUS PORNOGRAPHY?

Figure
7 of Facsimile No. 2 of the Book of Abraham has caused some embarrassment
to Mormon officials. In fact, it was considered so "explicit" that it was
falsified in some printings of the Pearl of Great Price. In 1981,
however, it was restored to match the original woodcut prepared under
Joseph Smith's direction. (In Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? pp.
341-43, 369-D, we discuss this pornographic drawing in detail and give
photographic evidence of the falsification.) Joseph Smith stated that
"Fig. 7. Represents God sitting upon his throne,
revealing through the heavens the grand Key-words of the Priesthood; as,
also, the sign of the Holy Ghost unto Abraham, in the form of a dove." It
is actually an extremely crude representation of the pagan fertility god
Min!
We
have previously spoken of a letter written to Michael Rhodes by a member
of the LDS Church who was troubled with regard to the authenticity of the
Book of Abraham. In this letter, dated June 30, 1988, we find the
following: "...how do you account for the Explanation of the
Facsimiles?... Figure 7 of Facsimile 2 is described by Joseph as being
Heavenly Father (with an erection?),
whereas it is really the Egyptian god Min."
Michael
Rhodes did not mention the problem with regard to Fig. 7 in his response.
However, in his article published in BYU Studies in 1977, he gave
a very honest explanation of this part of Facsimile No. 2:
"7.
A seated ithyphallic god with a hawk's tail,
holding aloft the divine flail.... The seated god is clearly a form of
Min, the god of the regenerative, procreative forces of nature, perhaps
combined with Horus as the hawk's tail would seem to indicate.... The
procreative forces, receiving unusual accentuation throughout the
representation, may stand for many divine generative powers, not least of
which might be conjoined with the blessings of the priesthood in one's
posterity eternally." (Brigham Young University Studies, Spring
1977, page 273)
The
Mormon writer Ian Barber responded to our work with regard to the god Min.
He tried to defend the Book of Abraham but had to admit that Fac. 2, Fig.
7, shows an "ithyphallic" god:
"The
seated god Min in Figure 7... is an ithyphallic deity. The Tanners call
this 'a pornographic representation,' and remark that it is 'hard to
believe that Abraham would draw an obscene picture of God.'... For the
Egyptians, the ritual portrayal of the phallus was not understood to be
obscene, but rather symbolic of the divine, regenerative powers, and it
was even respectfully mummified on occasion. The Tanners are correct in
implying that such an emphasis would be inappropriate in our contemporary
Western culture, and that the explicit portrayal offended
Mormon sensibilities is evidenced by the fact that the phallus has been
removed from several printings of the Pearl of Great
Price..." (What Mormonism Isn't, page F-5)
In
his book, Abraham in Egypt, Dr. Hugh Nibley acknowledges that Min
was an Egyptian sex god who indulged in promiscuity and incest with his
family and even his own mother:
"As the supreme sex symbol of gods and
men, Min behaves with shocking promiscuity. 'The
Egyptians,' wrote Plutarch, 'are accustomed to call Horus "Min" meaning
visible,' referring to the symbol of reproduction publicly paraded at his
festival.... The Greeks identified him with the lustful Pan... His sacred
plants were aphrodisiacal... and he is everywhere represented as
indulging in incestuous relationships with those of his immediate
family.... The rites of Min were secret, and the Chief
Priest was 'the Director of the Mysteries of the god in his character of
Kamutef,' literally the Bull of His Mother....
His special bull titles always denote his too-intimate
relationship with his mother.... For he is the divine beast,
the irrepressible rampart bull ready for anything. In this regard he is
the double of Seth, the two occupying prehistoric shrines directly
opposite each other... Their outstanding characteristic, as Te Velde
describes it, is their insistence on going 'beyond the bounds' of
discretion and morality, completely unrestrained
in their appetites and
passions....

Satyricon,
by Federico Fellini
"The
whip that the Min-images hold with upraised arm is always viewed as a
fertility symbol... some Egyptologists have maintained that it signifies
that Min took advantage of his mother by brute force,
seizing the matriarchal rule of the land by violence
and incest.. What suggested that was his
commonest epithet, Ka-mut-ef, 'Bull of his Mother,'
the title that the youthful successor to the throne went by
at the coronation..." (Abraham in Egypt, 1981, pages 210-211)
That
Joseph Smith would identify this promiscuous god who engaged in incest
with his own mother as "God sitting upon his throne" shows a complete lack
of inspiration.
Unfortunately
for Mormon apologists trying to save the Book of Abraham, the problem with
regard to the ithyphallic god Min spills over onto Facsimile No. 1. As we
have shown, Dr. Nibley has pointed out that the expression "Bull of his
Mother" is applied to the god Min. When the Egyptologist Klaus Baer
translated the original papyrus from which Fac. No. 1 was taken, he found
these words: "Min Bull-of-his-Mother." (Dialogue:
A Journal of Mormon Thought, Autumn 1968, page 116)
The
problem may even go much deeper: Egyptologist Richard A. Parker pointed
out that the portion of the original papyrus which was missing when the
Mormons obtained it was incorrectly restored by Joseph Smith. According to
Professor Parker, the papyrus really contained a sexual scene before the
papyrus was damaged:
"This
is the well-known scene from the Osiris mysteries, with Anubis, the
jackal-headed god, on the left ministering to the dead Osiris on the bier.
The pencilled (?) restoration is incorrect. Anubis should be
jackal-headed. The left arm of Osiris is in reality lying at his side
under him. The apparent upper hand is part of the wing of a second bird
which is hovering over the erect phallus of Osiris (now broken away). The
second bird is Isis and she is magically impregnated by the dead Osiris
and then later gives birth to Horus..." (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon
Thought, Summer 1968, page 86)
The
Egyptologist Klaus Baer agreed with Professor Parker: "He [Osiris] was
almost certainly represented as ithyphallic, ready to beget Horus, as in
many of the scenes at Dendera." (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon
Thought, Autumn 1968, page 119) Since Facsimile No. 2 shows the
ithyphallic god Min, it seems possible that a sexual scene would be shown
on Facsimile No. 1. Dr. Hugh Nibley argues against this interpretation,
but we have shown that his reasoning is fallacious (see
Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? page 350). Nibley acknowledges,
however, that there are "a number of procreation scenes in which the mummy
is begetting his divine successor or reincarnation" (Improvement Era,
October 1968, page 78).

In
his book, By His Own Hand Upon Papyrus, page 102, Charles Larson
restores the scene according to the interpretation given by Egyptologists.
Below his restoration, he comments as follows: "Isis, meanwhile, has taken
the form of a falcon and hovers over the groin of Osiris who holds his
phallus (hence this is known as an ithyphallic drawing) in
anticipation of the procreative act which will make Isis pregnant with
their son Horus."
John
Gee argues that the reconstructed drawing appearing in Charles Larson's
book makes no sense: "Not only is his restoration of Joseph Smith Papyrus
I obscene, it is impossible... the reconstruction is too crude to have
been done by a good artist." (Review of Books on the Book of Mormon,
vol. 4, pp 101-102) While Mr. Gee labels Larson's reconstruction as
"obscene" and "impossible," he neglects to mention the
fact that it was based on the statements of two noted Egyptologists, Klaus
Baer and Richard A. Parker. (It is interesting to note that when Professor
Parker translated the important portion of the Book of Breathings, Dr.
Hugh Nibley publicly stated that he was "the best [Egyptologist] in
America for this particular period and style of writing.")
As
to Gee's statement that the drawing in Larson's book is obscene, most
Christians would feel that it is more obscene, even blasphemous, to have a
drawing of the ithyphallic god Min identified in the Book of Abraham as
"God sitting upon his throne" (see Facsimile No. 2, Figure 7).
Instead
of attacking Larson's restoration, John Gee should be discussing the false
restorations in the facsimiles found in the Book of Abraham. The fact that
Joseph Smith instructed Reuben Hedlock to make incorrect restorations in
the woodcuts of the Book of Abraham facsimiles is acknowledged by noted
Mormon scholars. James R. Harris, who felt that Joseph Smith sometimes
operated under the power of inspiration, admitted that this was not always
the case: "When he was not inspired, and
consequently operated on his own wisdom, Joseph Smith did not
demonstrate an ability to interpret or to make appropriate restorations
of damaged portions of the documents." (The Facsimiles of the Book of
Abraham, A Study of the Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri, page 4)
We
have already quoted Michael Rhodes concerning the "obvious modifications"
in Facsimile No. 1. Edward H. Ashment also frankly discussed Joseph
Smith's false restorations:
"It
can be clearly ascertained that portions of Reuben Hedlock's Facsimiles 1
and 2 were conjecturally restored. Moreover, according to the diary entry
for Friday, March 4, 1842, in the History of the Church, it is
apparent that the prophet was connected with their production.... he
probably was not as concerned with having historically
accurate restorations of Facsimiles 1 and 2 as he was with
having complete pictures to publish in the Times and Seasons.
Neither he nor Reuben Hedlock would have known that a standing human body
would have a dog's head (Facsimile 1, Fig. 3), nor that a bird would have
a human head (Facsimile 1).... It seems that they completed each damaged
section with what was to them logical or important for whatever reason: a
man's head on a man's body... a bird's head on a bird's body..."
(Sunstone, Dec. 1979, page 44)
The
evidence against the Book of Abraham is absolutely devastating. That
Mormons would continue to endorse the Book of Abraham in the face of this
evidence is almost beyond belief. Charles M. Larson made this comment
concerning the sad state of affairs which now exists:
"Sometime
during the mid-1850s... an LDS Apostle named Orson Pratt confidently laid
a dramatic challenge before the world: "...convince of our errors of
doctrine, if we have any, by reason, by logical arguments, or by the Word
of God, and we will be ever grateful for the information, and you ever
will have the pleasing reflection that you have been instruments in the
hands of God of redeeming your fellow beings from the darkness which you
may see enveloping their minds."
"Orson
Pratt was no doubt confident that a successful case against the claims of
Mormonism would never be presented because one simply did not exist. Over
a century-and-a-half of close scrutiny, though, has proven the opposite to
be the case. It is this fact which probably best explains why the
contemporary LDS Church has shifted from the bold, confrontational stance
of Pratt's day, to one of cautioning members to 'rely on faith and not on
historical fact'... The message coming from LDS spokesmen today appears to
be more and more one of accommodation: If facts fail to justify faith
(what one wishes to believe), then faith should overrule facts.
This sort of thinking is evasive, and must be set aside if any real
reckoning with the facts is to take place.
"But
going back to Pratt, the challenge he made is a valid one, and the
tendency of contemporary LDS figures to rationalize away problems instead
of confronting them only underlines the fact that serious problems do
exist. If error or falsehood within a religious system exists, it
should be exposed, and using reason and the Word of God to do so
makes a great deal of sense. Exposing error is the right thing to
do, as only good can be the ultimate result of people learning the truth.
"We are not only justified,
then, in examining the evidences challenging the truth of the Book of
Abraham which God has graciously allowed to come forth, we are firmly
obligated to do so. And it is quite possible
that the case against the Book of Abraham is the strongest evidence ever
provided to test the truthfulness of Joseph Smith's claims....
"One
by one, virtually every Mormon belief about the Book of Abraham once
considered essential to its support and regarded as faith promoting, has
been shattered by the facts.
"Not
one trace of reliable evidence has appeared that would support the LDS
view of the Book of Abraham as an authentic scripture, while an enormous
amount of evidence is available to show that it is a man-made production
of the nineteenth century, created by Joseph Smith to support his claim
among his people to be a 'prophet, seer, and revelator.'... When an
individual fails to respond openly and honestly to such a problem it only
passes the problem--and the pain of dealing with it--to someone else,
multiplying ignorance and hurt in the process....
"So
much potential pain to loved ones and future generations could be avoided!
How? By placing truth ahead of convenience, by being honest with ourselves
and with others.
"The
question of meeting challenges to our faith really does matter, because
truth matters. The Bible gives us the promise that 'the truth shall make
you free' (John 8:32)--and that includes being free from delusion."
(By His Own Hand Upon Papyrus, pages 169, 171, 175, 181)
We
highly recommend Charles Larson's new book. We feel that he has done a
very good job of presenting the case against the Book of Abraham. He has
also examined and refuted some of the theories Mormon scholars have
brought forth in their attempts to save Joseph Smith's work. Besides
taking a very close look at mistakes made by Dr. Hugh Nibley, he also
deals with misrepresentations and errors in the book written by Robert and
Rosemary Brown. This is the first full-size book devoted almost entirely
to presenting the evidence against the Book of Abraham. In addition, it
contains beautiful color photographs of nine pieces of the Joseph Smith
Papyri. By His Own hand Upon Papyrus: A New Look At The Joseph Smith
Papyri is available from Utah Lighthouse Ministry...
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