Moroni’s title page
1) UPON PLATES TAKEN FROM THE PLATES OF NEPHI.
In this instance the
plates of Nephi referred to are the large plates. The golden plates which Joseph Smith received from Moroni
contained several different sets of plates, including 1) the small
plates of Nephi (Nephi's unabridged record which constitutes 1 Ne, 2 Ne, Jacob,
Enos, Jarom, Omni), 2) Mormon's abridgment of the large plates of Nephi
which included the history of the people from Lehi to Mormon's day (the 116
pages contained Mormon's abridged record from the days of Lehi to the days of
king Benjamin), 3) Moroni's continuation of Mormon's record (Mormon 8:1)
which includes Moroni's abridgment of the record of the Jaredites and his own
history, and 4) the sealed portion which contains the writings of the
brother of Jared, see Ether 3:25-27.
2) Explanation of the
term, “Jew and Gentile.”
Some have been confused by
the Book of Mormon's use of the term, "Jew." In the Book of Mormon and often in
colloquial English, the term Jew refers to one who is of the House of
Israel. It does not mean one who is of
the tribe of Judah. By Lehi's day, the
ten tribes had already been taken north by the Assyrians and the Kingdom of
Judah consisted mostly of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. There would have been a few Levites among
the group and according to 1 Chron 9:3, some of the tribes of Ephraim and
Manasseh. Thus Lehi's ancestors were
Manassehites which lived in the southern kingdom and had avoided capture by the
Assyrians.
When the Book of Mormon
uses the term, "Gentile," it refers to one who is not of the House of
Israel. Frequently, it refers to the
northern European nations and their descendants, including the early
inhabitants the United States of America.
In spite of the fact that other sources suggest that there is quite a
bit of the blood of Israel scattered among these peoples, they are referred to,
in general, as Gentiles.
3) What about the
Mulekites?
Moroni explains the record
as an abridgment of the records of two peoples, the Nephites/Lamanites and the
Jaredites. The Mulekites were left off
this list because they did not keep any records which could contribute to the
record (Omni 1:15-19) and because they were assimilated into the Nephites
shortly after they were discovered in Zarahemla.
4) If there are
faults they are the faults of men;
A) Moroni was concerned that the Gentiles would find
fault with the Book of Mormon. Writing
in reformed Egyptian, which was not his native language, he felt his writings
were not powerful like the brother of Jared’s.
It should be noted that the brother of Jared had the advantage of
writing in his native language which originated from the perfect, Adamic
language. See Mormon 8:12, Mormon 9:31-33, and Ether 12:23-26.
B) Doctrinally, the Book of Mormon is “the most correct
of any book on earth,” but occasionally one can find problems with syntax,
grammar, etc. In one case, the
awkwardness of Mormon's engraving on plates becomes clear, thus we see that they buried their weapons of peace,
or they buried the weapons of war, for peace. (Alma 24:19) These small imperfections are of no doctrinal consequence and
their occurrence does not detract from the correctness of the book.
C) Some readers have difficulty with the language of
the Book of Mormon and its wordiness. A
famous Mark Twain quote about the Book of Mormon is taken from his work, Roughing It, written in 1872, “It is
chloroform in print. If Joseph Smith composed this book, the act was a miracle
-- keeping awake while he did it was, at any rate…. Whenever he (Joseph Smith)
found his speech growing too modern which was [p.111] about every sentence or
two -- he ladled in a few such scriptural phrases as 'exceeding sore,' 'and it
came to pass,' etc…and made things satisfactory again. 'And it came to pass,'
was his pet. If he had left that out, his Bible would have been only a
pamphlet." In poking fun of this
great work, readers need to remember the reply of the Lord to Moroni’s concern
as recorded in Ether 12:26, Fools mock, but they
shall mourn; and in Mormon
8:12, And whoso receiveth this record, and shall not
condemn it because of the imperfections which are in it, the same shall know of
greater things than these.