
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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==Endnotes== | ==Endnotes== | ||
#{{note|brodie1}}Fawn Brodie, ''No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith'', 2nd Edition, (New York: Knopf, 1971), p. 71. | |||
#{{note|nibley1}} {{Nibley11|start=3|end=52 }} | #{{note|nibley1}} {{Nibley11|start=3|end=52 }} | ||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.
Critics suggest that the Book of Ether was simply an "afterthought" added by Joseph Smith to the Book of Mormon in order to explain the presence of a wide variety of animals in the New World at the time of the arrival of Lehi's party. The verses used by critics to support this assertion are Ether 2:1-3:
Critic Fawn Brodie postulated in her biography of Joseph Smith, No Man Knows My History, that "[t]his little detail regarding cargo, flung casually into the story, partly settled the question of how animals had come to America, a problem men had puzzled over for three centuries."[1]
Hugh Nibley offered his opinion on Brodie's assertion:
The verses in Ether are sufficiently vague that it is really not possible to pin down exactly which animals the Jaredites brought with them to the New World.

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