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MORMONISM – DAMAGED BY
DNA
As far back as the mid-1960s, our
Director, Adrian van Leen, put together a paper: THE BOOK OF MORMON
– TRUTH OR FANCIFUL FICTION? His opening comments then, have now
regained recent relevance.
‘The
Book of Mormon claims to present a history of the people of ancient
America. There were three migrations from the Middle East to America. The
first was in about 2 200 BC when the Jaredites came away from the Tower of
Babel. The next migration about 600 BC leaving from Jerusalem under the
leadership of Lehi and Nephi. This second migration of Israelites from
the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh is of major importance. These
Israelites are considered the ancestors of the American Indians. However,
as we shall see, there are many problems associated with this claim.
Indians have come
under much study by anthropologists and are recognised as belonging to the
class “Mongoloid” [Asiatic] and not “Semite”, as are the people of Israel
and others from the Middle East region. Mongoloid [Asiatic]
characteristics are to be found amongst those countries and peoples
bordering the Pacific Ocean, particularly those from Eastern Asia.
Let us briefly examine
some characteristics of both Mongoloids [Asiatics] and Semites.
MONGOLOIDS
[ASIATICS]
-
Lack of facial and
body hair
-
Hair is black,
course and straight
-
Skin pigmentation
varies from saffron to a dark mahogany with a reddish cast
-
The head is
characteristically brachycephalic (wide headed) – the skull’s width
being 80% of it height
-
Prominent cheek
bones
-
Eyes have
epicanthic folds giving “slanted-eyes” appearance.
SEMITES
-
Hairy people –
consider long Jewish beards
-
Hair has brownish
cast, moderately fine and wavy
-
Skin varies from
white to reasonably dark with an olive-grey cast
-
The head is
characteristically dolichocephalic, the skull being less than 80% in
width
-
Cheek bones lack
prominence
-
No epicanthic
fold, usually have deep seated eyes
These are some
contrasting characteristics of these two groups which conflict with the
idea of the Book of Mormon story as the only authentic history of the
early Americans.’
These comments indicating anthropological
evidence to show that the American Indian was of Asiatic, rather than
Middle Eastern Semitic origin, have been significantly strengthened by
developments in the field of genetics and particularly current DNA
evidence.
Simon
Southerton was a Mormon
bishop in Brisbane, Queensland. He is also a scientist and, in the
late 1990s, did medical and biological studies, focusing on molecular
genetics. With his Mormon background he became very interested in recent
research on the DNA of American Indians. The more Simon studied the
scientific evidence, the clearer became the contradiction between the Book
of Mormon myth and the DNA evidence for alternative historical realities.
Apart from his scientific studies, Simon also did some Internet research
after reading an article in the official Mormon magazine, The Ensign.
The January 1998 article was on the Flood and the Tower of Babel. His
Internet surfing led him to discover a statement published by the
Washington based Smithsonian Institution, which shocked him as a Mormon
bishop and as a scientist.
CCG Ministries has been showing Mormons,
and others, the official statement of the Smithsonian Institution since
our Ministry officially commence in late 1979. The opening of the
statement, a couple of decades ago, reads:
‘STATEMENT
REGARDING THE BOOK OF MORMON
1. The Smithsonian
Institution has never used the Book of Mormon in any way as a scientific
guide. Smithsonian archeologists see no direct connection between the
archaeology of the New World and the subject matter of the book.’
(Copies of this statement from the
Smithsonian Institution on the Book of Mormon, mailed out to enquirers
over the past few decades can be found on many Internet websites,
including: http://www.godandscience.org/cults/smithsonian.html)
As a Mormon bishop, Simon Southerton,
realised that he (and many others as well) had been lied to by leaders in
his own church, about American archaeology, the Book of Mormon, and the
Smithsonian Institution.
He acknowledged:
‘I had been told in
seminary that the Smithsonian had been known to use the Book of Mormon in
their research. The statement utterly refuted this claim.’
During 1998 he reached a crisis point in
his faith in the Book of Mormon and in Mormonism. He wrote:
‘As
much as I wanted the Book of Mormon to be true, I suddenly knew that it
wasn’t. It might be full of some remarkable stories and scriptural
writings, but it wasn’t history about real people. My belief in the Book
of Mormon was the foundation for my belief in Mormonism. When it was
shattered it brought a lot down with it…I became aware for the first time
in my life about many other issues surrounding the origin of the Church.
I was particularly troubled to learn more about the Book of Abraham,
another Latter-day Saint scripture originating with Joseph Smith.’
By the end of 1998 Simon Southerton, his
wife Jane, and their five children, left the Mormon Church. In March 2000
he posted details of his struggle over the implications of DNA studies to
the historicity and accuracy of the Book of Mormon on the Internet.
(His full statement can be found at:
www.exmormon.org/whylft125.htm)
Almost three years after Dr Simon
Southerton posted his statement on the Internet, an American Mormon,
Thomas W. Murphy, chairman of the Anthropology Department of Edmonds
Community College in Lynwood, Washington State, became the media focus in
the USA over his threatened excommunication.
Murphy, in his mid-thirties, was heading
for expulsion from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for
giving public talks in which he seriously questioned the authenticity and
authority of the Book of Mormon. At high school Murphy had once been
voted as ‘most spiritual’ in his seminary class (special extra-curricular
programme presenting official LDS teaching to Mormon high schoolers).
Things began to change when he became involved in debating and had to
research opposing viewpoints. His formally ‘black and white’ Mormon world
started to go somewhat grey, with a lack of supporting evidence for many
of his church’s claims.
In more recent times the young
anthropologist became disturbed by the blatant racism in the Book of
Mormon and other significant Mormon writings. He also analysed data
coming from DNA research undertaken (by others) at the major Mormon
university, Brigham Young University. Murphy concluded that the DNA
evidence, along with anthropological evidence clearly showed that,
contrary to Book of Mormon and official LDS Church claims, the American
Indians are not the descendants of ancient Semites from the Middle East.
The very title of his talks:
‘Sin, Skin and Seed:
The mistakes of Man in the Book of Mormon’,
has stirred up Mormon anger. He placed the content of his talks, and his
research, on the Internet. It was all this that led to the threat of his
excommunication by his Stake Council (a ‘Stake’ is a district made up of a
number of ‘wards’ – just like a district Parish made up of a number of
congregations). However, the media (and Internet supporters’ network) got
wind of the threatened expulsion and this result in public protest
meetings. The Stake President stepped in and indefinitely postponed
Murphy’s excommunication – knowing that to go ahead with it would only
give greater attention and focus to these Book of Mormon problems – which
officially the LDS Church is silently trying to ignore.
Murphy’s public (and reported) conclusion
has been that:
‘…the Book of Mormon is
a piece of 19th
century fiction. And that means that we
[Mormons]
have to acknowledge sometimes Joseph Smith lied.’
Unlike Australian, Simon Southerton,
Murphy wants to remain an (American) Mormon – not as a devout believing
Mormon, but as a Mormon intellectual who wants to remain part of the
Mormon community because of its heritage and culture.
To add further to the DNA Mormon/American
Indian controversy, a small independent church, The Living Hope
Christian Fellowship, Brigham City (north of Salt Lake City in Utah)
has poured its savings into making a documentary video on the DNA vs. the
Book of Mormon story.
The video is basically a compilation of
interviews with seven scientists, Mormons and non-Mormons, geneticists and
anthropologists. These scientists discuss issues of Native American
history; anthropological issues; DNA research; the process of DNA testing;
what constitutes DNA evidence; the applicability and implications of this
recent and current research to the Book of Mormon – and more. They also
draw on their experience and knowledge to respond to some of the arguments
against the evidence made by Mormons – but NOT made officially by the LDS
Church. The official Mormon Church’s response is to do its best to ignore
it all and pretend there is no problem.
The Living Hope Ministries sent 7,500
free copies of the video to every household in Brigham City in March
2003. It has produced, distributed and sold about 30,000 copies of the
video worldwide. Even Mormon intellectuals have acknowledged the value
and evidence of the video – and the challenge it presents for the Mormon
Church and all thinking Mormons.
The video (and brief interview clips) can
be viewed or ordered via the Internet at:
http://www.mormonchallenge.com
It
is also worth visiting the following other websites on DNA and the Book of
Mormon:
http://q13.trb.com/kcpq-022403mormon,0,996113.story
http://www.godandscience.org/cults/dna.html
http://mormonscripturestudies.com/bomor/twm/lamgen.asp
http://www.salamandersociety.org/news/
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