Criticism of Mormonism/Online documents/"Questions and Answers" on Mormon Stories/Translation of the Book of Mormon

Response to questions related to the translation of the Book of Mormon


A work by author: John Dehlin

Quick Navigation

"Joseph Smith used this....stone in the hat....to produce the Book of Mormon"

The author's unresolved question

"Joseph Smith used this....stone in the hat....to produce the Book of Mormon"




The "Urim and Thummim" used by Joseph Smith to translate the "gold plates"


Jump to details:


"this same stone in the hat....from his folk magic days"

The author's unresolved question

""this same stone in the hat....from his folk magic days""

Response to the author's claim


How was Joseph to learn to be a prophet from scratch? God allowed Joseph to develop confidence via a method in which he and others already believed he had skill.



Joseph Smith used the same "rock in hat" seer stone for translating that he used for "money digging"


Jump to details:


"this 'translation' process did not involve the golden plates"

The author's unresolved question

""this 'translation' process did not involve the golden plates""

Response to the author's claim


Joseph and the Church have always said that the translation was conducted by "the gift and power of God." This means that of course Joseph would not use the plates in precisely the same way as an academic translator would use a source document.


"which begs the question as to why the plates were needed at all?"

The author's unresolved question

""which begs the question as to why the plates were needed at all?""

Response to the author's claim


The question has a simple answer, even if the author refuses to acknowledge it. If there were no plates, it would be easy—as many cultural Mormons and critics have tried to do anyway—to claim that the Book of Mormon was an "inspired fiction." The existence of real, literal plates seen and handled by witnesses is evidence that the Nephites really existed. The Book of Mormon story is not a mere allegory or fiction—it is real history, about real people, who meet a real, genuine, living Christ.

The plates also probably helped reassure Joseph and those close to him that he was not crazy, or delusional, or lying—he had genuine, tangible artifacts.