Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
We must have a poll!
The majority of comments which have been posted regarding the Book of Abraham are entirely inappropriate of Sacred matters and are in fact religious persecution. The Pearl of Great Price is official Scripture and therefore official Doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
http://www.lds.org/scriptures/pgp?lang=eng
The Book of Abraham is a part of the Pearl of Great Price. "A Translation of some ancient Records that have fallen into our hands from the catacombs of Egypt. The writings of Abraham while he was in Egypt, called the Book of Abraham, written by his own hand, upon papyrus."
(See History of the Church, 2:235–36, 348–51.)
This IS the appropriate thread. If you state "I believe A" to begin a thread in a forum such as this, it is exactly, completely and thoroughly on topic for others to say "I do not believe A, and here's why." If you don't get that, you don't get anything.A reminder that the topic of THIS thread is LDS, not "anti-Mormon" or "whatever". Those who have no interest in the actual Doctrines and Teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints should state their beliefs in a more appropriate thread.
We must have a poll!
Try to keep to what has actually been posted rather than incorrectly commenting and embellishing. "Are lying when they say" being the key words responded to of the following:
A reminder that the topic of THIS thread is LDS, not "anti-Mormon" or "whatever". Those who have no interest in the actual Doctrines and Teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints should state their beliefs in a more appropriate thread.
Once again,try to keep to what has actually been posted, rather than incorrectly commenting and embellishing. A question was asked by pakeha:
"Of course" was the answer given to the question as framed. The question of "were they mistaken" was not asked.
Give us a break. Saying, "I don't believe you" and offering reasons why we think you are wrong isn't even remotely near to "religious persecution". Your histrionics are an insult to anyone who has ever faced persecution because of their religious beliefs, including members of the early Mormon church. Please remember that you came to this forum and opened this discussion. If the disagreement of others regarding your beliefs is so offensive to you that you feel persecuted, then perhaps you should leave.The majority of comments which have been posted regarding the Book of Abraham are entirely inappropriate of Sacred matters and are in fact religious persecution.
The Book of Abraham is a work by Joseph Smith. The overwhelming evidence of its fraudulent nature bears relevance to his credibility regarding the Book of Mormon.The Pearl of Great Price is official Scripture and therefore official Doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
http://www.lds.org/scriptures/pgp?lang=eng
The Book of Abraham is a part of the Pearl of Great Price. "A Translation of some ancient Records that have fallen into our hands from the catacombs of Egypt. The writings of Abraham while he was in Egypt, called the Book of Abraham, written by his own hand, upon papyrus."
(See History of the Church, 2:235–36, 348–51.)
Thanks for answering, Janadele.
Just to be clear, you ARE saying Egyptologists are lying when they say Smith's Book of Abraham bear no resemblance to the papyrii he claimed to translate?
And this is official LDS policy?
Of course.
A Prophet, Seer and Revelator, as was Joseph Smith, has far superior knowledge and inspiration... plus Revelation, from the Lord God and creator of this earth. His words are the truth.
I have been following this thread since the beginning and, although I have found it very interesting and informative, I have not felt the urge to contribute - up til now.
I am a professional field archaeologist and I take great exception to your accusation of lying by myself and my colleagues in this field of study. Although I am not an egyptologist (not many Egyptians in the south west of England, lol!) your comment does implicate me and my friends - or is it only those that study ancient Egyptians that lie?
I studied for years to be able to do my job and I work hard, all year round and in all weathers, in order to find out the truth about our ancestors and the way they lived their lives, and you have the audacity to just hand wave that away and say "oh they are liars"!
I really couldn't give a mummy's curse what drivel you want to believe, but when you dismiss the hard work and dedication of a whole professional body of people who dedicate their lives to finding the truth about our past and origins in favour of a con man telling obvious lies, then Madam, you offend me mightily!!
Sorry for the rant guys, that comment just made my blood boil!
D
The claim that any hard science disagreements with the LDS scripture are lies seems to be something only the most fundamentalist sects adhere to, since my LDS acquaintances were nearly all university types, and none of them was anywhere near this view. This thread is reminiscent of the "Noah's Ark" or "Shroud of Turin" arguments for authenticity.In November 1967 the LDS church asked Hugh Nibley, a professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Young University (BYU), to study the fragments. Nibley was a linguist, but not an Egyptologist, and subsequently studied under John A. Wilson and Klaus Baer in an attempt to learn enough about the Egyptian characters to translate them himself.[74] The LDS church published sepia photographs of the papyri in its magazine "The Improvement Era" in February 1968, although a translation was not provided at the time.[75] The editors of an independent quarterly journal Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, arranged a translation of the papyri from the photographs by three American Egyptologists; John A. Wilson (University of Chicago, Oriental Institute), Klaus Baer (University of Chicago, Oriental Institute), and Richard A. Parker (Director of the Department of Egyptology, Brown University).[76] Their translations were published in Dialogue in the summer and autumn of 1968.
Other translations and analyses have been performed at various times since 1968 by Mormon and non-Mormon scholars, including Michael D. Rhodes (BYU),[77] John Gee (BYU),[78] and Robert K. Ritner (University of Chicago).[79] The translations among all of these scholars are consistent.
Cheezey D, there are many non-scientists who appreciate the hard work put into contributing to understandings of the way our ancestors lived their lives. Thank you!
Cheezey D, there are many non-scientists who appreciate the hard work put into contributing to understandings of the way our ancestors lived their lives. Thank you!
Seconded. I appreciate your hard work, Cheezey D.

"mistaken" would have been a better choice of word for pakeha to have used when framing the question. However, the plain and simple fact is, that this statement/question posed by pakeha:Are you saying that the entirety of the Egyptologists are lying when they say what Smith passed off as a 'translation' bears no resemblance to the truth?
The majority of comments which have been posted regarding the Book of Abraham are entirely inappropriate of Sacred matters and are in fact religious persecution. The Pearl of Great Price is official Scripture and therefore official Doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
http://www.lds.org/scriptures/pgp?lang=eng
The Book of Abraham is a part of the Pearl of Great Price. "A Translation of some ancient Records that have fallen into our hands from the catacombs of Egypt. The writings of Abraham while he was in Egypt, called the Book of Abraham, written by his own hand, upon papyrus."
(See History of the Church, 2:235–36, 348–51.)
Let us read again the quote responded to:
"mistaken" would have been a better choice of word for pakeha to have used when framing the question. However, the plain and simple fact is, that this statement/question posed by pakeha:
"when they say what Smith passed off as a 'translation' bears no resemblance to the truth" ... whoever "they" may be, are most certainly incorrect, mistaken, and making a statement which is not the truth.