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===Rejection of the Spaulding theory by critics of the Book of Mormon=== | ===Rejection of the Spaulding theory by critics of the Book of Mormon=== | ||
Many ''critics'' of the Book of Mormon | Many ''critics'' of the Book of Mormon reject the Spaulding theory as unworkable: | ||
* Davis H. Bays, ''The Doctrines and Dogmas of Mormonism Examined and Refuted,'' (St. Louis: Christian Publishing, 1897), 22, 25 | * Davis H. Bays, ''The Doctrines and Dogmas of Mormonism Examined and Refuted,'' (St. Louis: Christian Publishing, 1897), 22, 25 | ||
::[This theory is] "erroneous, and it will lead to almost certain defeat.... The facts are all opposed to this view, and the defenders of the Mormon dogma have the facts well in hand.... The Spaulding story is a failure. Do not attempt to rely upon it — it will let you down." | ::[This theory is] "erroneous, and it will lead to almost certain defeat.... The facts are all opposed to this view, and the defenders of the Mormon dogma have the facts well in hand.... The Spaulding story is a failure. Do not attempt to rely upon it — it will let you down." |
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Critics claim that Joseph Smith either plagiarized or relied upon a manuscript by Solomon Spaulding to write the Book of Mormon.
Origins of the Spaulding manuscript theory:
Claimed the existence of a second Spaulding manuscript when the first theory failed:
Since the Book of Mormon was first published, many have been unwilling to accept Joseph Smith's account of how it was produced. It's easy to dismiss Joseph's story of angels, gold plates, and a miraculous interpretation process; it's much harder to come up with an alternative explanation that accounts for the complexity and consistency of the Book of Mormon, as well as the historical details of its production.
Many critics, unwilling to credit poor, uneducated, backwater farm boy Joseph Smith as its author, have looked to possible sources he could have plagiarized. One of the earliest theories was that Joseph plagiarized the unpublished manuscript of a novel written by the Reverend Solomon Spaulding (1761–1816).
Spaulding was a lapsed Calvinist clergyman and purported author of an epic tale of the ancient Native American "Mound Builders." The theory postulates that Spaulding wrote his manuscript in biblical phraseology and read it to many of his friends. He subsequently took the manuscript to Pittsburg, where it fell into the hands of a Mr. Patterson, in whose office Sidney Rigdon worked, and that through Sidney Rigdon it came into the possession of Joseph Smith and was made the basis of the Book of Mormon.
There are two major problems with this theory:
The discovery and publishing of the manuscript put to rest the Spaulding theory for several decades. But in the early 20th century the theory surfaced again, only this time its advocates claimed there was a second Spaulding manuscript that was the real source for the book of Mormon. However, supporters of the revised Spaulding theory have not produced this second purported manuscript.
Many critics of the Book of Mormon reject the Spaulding theory as unworkable:
Modern supporters of the Spaulding authorship theory simply ignore the inconvenient fact that the manuscript recovered in the late 19th century bears no resemblance to the Book of Mormon, and that no second manuscript has been discovered.
Until such time as the purported second manuscript appears, all these critics have is a nonexistent document that they can claim says anything they want. This is doubtless the attraction of the "theory," and shows the lengths to which critics will go to disprove the Book of Mormon.
It is interesting to consider that the best explanation such critics can propose requires that they invent a document, and then invent its contents.
Template:BofM authorship theories
Over the years many Latter-day Saints have responded to the "Spaulding Theory" as well.
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