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The Jews at Elephantine and those in the Book of Mormon had
a tremendous amount of military
orientation and encounters, and one might wonder if there is any common
denominator between them in the realm of military perspectives? This study discusses some interesting
parallels in this vein, as well as a few unique cultural similarities. And also
asks: is there a contribution that The War Scroll from the Dead Sea Scrolls
might make to Book of Mormon warfare and possibly suggest unique data contained
in the Brass Plates?
WARFARE IN THE BOOK OF MORMON:
Wars were extremely frequent in the Book of Mormon, was
there ever a generation that did not go to war? Then? Or even today? It
seems as if that is one of the first events to begin when they arrived at the
promised-land. It seems that more than one-third of the Book of Mormon concerns
war. "Warfare is a central and nearly constant element in the history of Book
of Mormon peoples." (Largey p. 781) "The Military record [of the Book of
Mormon] is also an interesting history for its own sake. The Book of Mormon
reports many wars, recounting memorable events and courageous deeds of men,
women, and youth. Each war was different and distinct." (Ricks p. 2)
A "Symposium on Warfare in the Book of Mormon, [was] held
24-25 March 1989 at Brigham Young University, under the sponsorship of the
Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (F.A.R.M.S)" (Ricks p.
ix). Certainly the publication of the
papers presented at that Symposium was more than a step in a systematic study
of warfare in the Book of Mormon. The
papers were published a year later. "Most military events in the Book of Mormon
have both a religious and political importance. The Nephites did not
dichotomize their world between church and state as we do." (Ricks p. 4) That
alone is worth a study, and no doubt will be undertaken in time. "To the Nephites, the matters of war were
all important religious affairs and sacred obligations, not the optional
exploits of imperialistic monarchs or of mercenary soldiers of fortune," (Ricks
p. 4), as was much the case for the Classic Maya following the destruction of
the Nephites after 400 AD, and ancient, horribly distorted, war ceremonies
continued and were elaborated by the Mayas.
(Freidel pp 291291)
Following the work as a student and a fellow student, of
John Sorensen, "he [has] identified
approximately one hundred instances of armed conflict in the Book of Mormon."
(Ricks p. 5, and Sorenson pp. 445-477)
These have been given names and briefly analyzed in the publication
mentioned. (Ricks pp. 6-15) Sorensen
did refer to the Elephantine Jewish Colony, mentioning the Temple built there,
but only drew attention to the fact that Colony staid in touch with Jerusalem
and Persian authorities, "while Lehi's people ...were stripped ...culturally of
much of what they knew about calendrical matters at home," (in Ricks p. 451)
and never made contact again with the Eastern Hemisphere. The climatic
conditions were entirely different, festivals lived so faithfully year round in
Israel were not as applicable to the new climate and condition of the Western
Hemisphere. New traditions replaced some old ones. For Lehi and his people
there were drastic changes. In that Book of Warfare there was little other
reference to Elephantine. Of special interest is the treatment by "John W.
Welch who identifies fifteen different wars in the Book of Mormon and examines
the relationship between Nephites and Near Eastern Law and war." (Welch in
Richs pp. 46-102) Welch emphasized the Near East, and did not consider what
happened in the southern borders of Egypt such as at Elephantine. Seldom did
these writers indicate any important contribution that might have been made by
the Brass Plates.
NEPHITE MILITARY STRUCTURE:
The Book of Mormon suggests that the Nephite military
structure was based on the decimal system, similar to that in use in the
vicinity of ancient Palestine and in many other regions. There are references
to units of fifty (Mosiah 11:19), thousands (Alma 43:5, 60:33, 3 Nephi 3:22)
and ten thousand (Mormon 6:10-15). (Merrill, in Ricks pp. 268-69) Formations not mentioned among the Book of
Mormon people were those of tens and hundreds, found in ancient orders (Yadin
p.51) But perhaps "they comprised parts of other units, like fifties
and thousands." (Merrill in Ricks p. 269) But were these organizational details
in the Brass Plates and incorporated into later Book of Mormon military
structure? Where did the ideas of "by tens, or twenties, or fifties" in D&C
103:30 come from? "Units of ten
thousand are most frequently mentioned in the Book of Mormon, at least after
the time of the judges (ca 91 BC). The use of the larger units may have
resulted from increasing population and hence the increased ability or need to
support larger armies. The earlier battles speak of units of fifty and
thousands
(Mosiah 11:19; Alma 43:5) while later battles speak more of
thousands and tens of thousands, (3 Nephi 4:21)." (Merrill in Ricks p. 269).
Wars seem to have evolved into larger and more complex campaigns involving more
and more warriors, until they numbered in the millions. (Mormon 6:10-15).
This present study, then, is another contribution to Warfare
in the Book of Mormon, a small addition, but one that further confirms the
veracity and integrity of the Book of Mormon. The question here is the possible
contribution made to Warfare by the Brass Plates, and confirmation of this that
might be made by some of the Dead Sea Scrolls that the Brass Plates did have all
the numbers, and all this further confirmed by the discoveries made at
Elephantine in Egypt.
MILITARY STATEGY AT ELEPHANTINE:
The later half of Alma, chapters 43-62, is a masterpiece of
military strategy deployed by the Nephites under the Command of Moroni. The Old
Testament is replete with wars that the children of Israel engaged in. The Jews
at Elephantine were essentially mercenaries hired by the Egyptians after 650
BC, and later by the Persians down until nearly 300 BC, to protect the southern
upper Nile cataracts at Elephantine from excursions from the Nubian south. This
is consistent with the Book of Mormon in demonstrating that Jews were at war
outside of Palestine using long held tactics and military structure. Tactics
employed by the Ten Tribes and contained in the Brass Plates. These tactics do
not show up on the Tenakh, but do in other Jewish records, such as the Dead Sea
Scrolls.
As mentioned, (Erickson) Elephantine is an Island in the
Nile River, 500 miles south of Cairo. It served as a border fortress between
Egypt and the southern territories including Nubia [Sudan today], sometimes
under the Egyptians and later the Persian Empire. Elephantine's unique location made it virtually impossible for any
boat traffic to negotiate the Nile north or south bound without the knowledge
and consent of the garrison at Elephantine. This was an extremely desert land,
the Nile was the water source;
military expeditions away from the Nile would be most difficult to mount. The Jewish mercenary military garrison at
Elephantine was both effective against the use of the Nile River as a highway
into Egypt, but also the use of the nearby waterless desert.
In Porten's description of the socio-military organization
at Elephantine, three terms are applied to describe various numbers of
soldiers. The first, hyala, refers
to a garrison or group which included soldiers and their families, such as was
located at Elephantine. The second is century,
referring to a group of one hundred soldiers. The third term is the most
important to this parallel discussion. This final term has to do with the basic
unit of military organization. The main grouping of men for battle was referred
to as the degel which means a thousand. (Porten p. 29).
THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS:
Yagael Yadin, the late Jewish archaeologist and former
General and Chief of Staff and Head of the Haganah in the Israeli Army,
described at Qumran (Where the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered in 1945,
announced in 1946, and at that time, still under translation), the importance
of the degel; the thousand. The War Scroll was finally translated into English in1962.
(Yadin) The degel served as a common denominator for a combat unit and was
equivalent to the "thousand." (Yadin
pp. 49-51) The concept of a thousand is profoundly significant to
students of the Book of Mormon. In describing the battles which took places
among the descendants of Lehi, the unit of a thousand is mentioned ninety-three times in the Book of Mormon.
You have general No. 1 with his thousand
over here, general No.2 leading his thousand
over there, and of course, general No. 3 and his thousand on their way! One example of this is found in Mormon
6:11-14.
In 1962, The Dead Sea Scroll THE WAR OF
THE SONS OF LIGHT AGAINST THE SONS OF
DARKNESS, finally published. (Yadin
2, 1962) is an important and singular confirmation of the Book of Mormon and
the content of the Brass Plates. Other scrolls are of use, too, as noted.
THE FAMILY-THE MYRIAD-THE THOUSAND-HUNDREDS-FIFTIES ANDTENS:
In the Old Testament and in particular for most of the
history of the Ten Tribes, every Tribe must organize itself along proscribed
lines. "the conscription unit which was formed from the ‘family' (the main
subdivision of the tribe) is the ‘myriad'. The myriad is composed of ‘thousands' formed by the subdivision of
the family." (Yadin p. 49)
There was also a
"tactical unit bearing a similar name...the inscription ‘degalim [thousands] of God' ...donates the point of intersection in the
military organization and the conscription units and combat units....The degal [thousand] served as a common denominator for both a conscription
and a combat unit." (Yadin p. 49).... "the ‘degel'
[thousand] constitutes the largest
permanent tactical-organization unit...[the Tribal family] has to supply the soldiers
need for replacing the losses of the degel."
(Yadin p. 50) "This conception is not
artificial, but was derived from that of the Biblical texts" (Yadin p. 50) But
the Biblical Texts were not that clear nor complete: "The value of the [War] Scroll lies in the fact that it clearly
shows the connection...A survey of the principal researches on this subject from
the beginning of this century [20th] shows that the identification
of the [Tribal] ‘family' with the ‘thousand'
passes through them [the Ten Tribes] like a purple thread and is the one most
widely accepted. ...B. Luther in his study on the structure of the tribes of
Israel was first amongst the scholars of the [20th] century to
arrive at this conclusion, though he added that decisive proof of it was
lacking... Ed. Myer took the thousand
to be the unit identical with the family, and the myriad with the tribe."
(Yadin p. 50)
Yadin then provides a graphic representation of the source
materials found incomplete in the Old Testament in Joshua, Judges, and compares
that with the Scroll. The essential
organization described in the Scroll organizes the sub-division of the tribe
into Ten, Fifty, and Hundred,
which is the subdivisions for the thousand.
Then into the degel/thousand, and then to the Myriad or Ten Thousand. (Yadin p.
51) For the Nephites, the pattern for this order could have apparently come from the Brass Plates which
included a long record of the Tribes, and the Dead Sea War Scroll reflects how
the northern tribes organized themselves in great detail. The Jewish Bible did not transmit this
information completely, the Book of Mormon only partially, but the Brass Plates did, as confirmed by the Dead Sea
Scrolls and Mormon Pioneer Practices. .
"In fact we see that the conception of the [War] Scroll,
which identifies the family with the myriad [thousands] and the clan with the thousand, and the degel,
and fixes the point of intersection between the tribal conscriptional and
tactical units at the level of the thousand,
derives from the author's [of the Scroll] understanding of the scriptural
data." [referring back to the time of the Ten Tribes] (Yadin p. 52) Gideon's argument in Judges 6:15 were that
his thousand was the poorest in
Manasseh and that "it would be absurd for the weakest thousand to go to war." (Yadin p. 53) A further connection between the Household and Thousand is in l Sam. 17:17-18, "which
shows that David's three brothers served under one chief of a thousand." (Yadin p. 53) Yadin thinks that Josh 22:14, a difficult
verse, should in essence read "And with him ten princes (of each household), a
prince to each of the tribes of Israel and each one (with) the heads of their
households for the [ten] thousands of Israel'" (Yadin p. 53)
each prince the head of a thousand,
ten princes for ten thousand.
The whole pattern, interestingly enough, was followed by the
Pioneers on their trek west. (D&C 136:58)
All of this seems to be a singular conformation of the Brass Plates and
the role they played in the organization and military structure of the Nephites
throughout all their generations, and adsorbed from the Book of Mormon by the
Pioneers in their trek west.
BANNERS-ENSIGNS AND SLOGANS:
In addition to this stunning confirmation of the Brass
Plates, which would have had the order of battle and the organization of the
tribes and the units of a thousand
and tens of thousands, from which the Nephites could have obtained their
knowledge of military strategy, there is also the Banner and the Ensign of God
as well. "The basic ‘slogan" on the [main] banner of the tribe [of Israel] is
‘ensign of God'. (Yadin pp. 48, 51) On this the War Scroll and the Book of
Mormon agree! An expression the LDS are quite familiar with, but almost
meaningless to none LDS. A complete
Table provided by Yadin "Makes clear
the system of the banners and the division of the congregation into
groupings...The Banners and Units of the Whole congregation."(Yadin pp.
41-43) The Table provides details as to
the name of the banners and groupings, the inscriptions on them, changing
inscriptions for different phases of War, and the length and size of the
banners. Because Yadin is describing all of this as understood and applicable
to the Tribes, it can be assumed that something like this information was
contained in the Brass Plates. Other evidence that this is so is provided
below. In fact, the Brass Plates are
really the only authentic history of the Northern Tribes and remnants of the
tribes down until Nephi obtained the plates from Laban. While the Jewish
Scriptures does contain information about the Ten Tribes down until their
deportation northward about 722 BC, we understand from the many quotes made by
Nephite Prophets that the Brass Plates also contained a lot of additional
information, historical and theological, that was lost to the Jews, just recall
the references to the Prophets Zenos,
and Zenock (Hel. 8:19, l Ne 19:10,
21). (Largey p. 803) Nibley thinks
there are some parallels to these prophets in the Thanksgiving Psalms of the
Dead Sea Scrolls. (Nibley 2, 303-327)
AN ENSIGN TO ALL NATIONS:
The Hebrew word, Ensign,
meaning Banner, is not found in the
Old Testament nor the Jewish Tanakh (Mandel) but it is found in the War Scroll
and the Book of Mormon (2 Ne 23:2). It also means standard (1 Ne 21:22, Num 2:2), as employed by Isaiah to represent
a rallying or gathering point. (2 Ne 29:2) The Ensign also points to the restored gospel or church as the Ensign to all Nations. (2 Ne15:26,
21:10, 6:6, l Ne 22:8). Captain
Moroni did "raise the standard
[banner] of liberty...and thousands did flock unto his standard," as an ensign. (2 Ne 23:2, 1 Ne 21:22, Alma 62:4-6, Largey p. 245)
"The Roman Army used banners
in a whole system of signals and arrangement of units in battle." (Yadin p.
63) But their system would have been
developed many centuries after the Ten Tribes had developed the basic outline
of such military organization. So what is being outlined in this study clearly
had great antiquity. It is clear from the Book of Mormon that the banners, in the thick of battle, served
as means of identification and rallying points for combatants of different
units. (Alma 62:5) Certainly Captain Moroni was "encouraging the combatants by
keeping before the eyes of the warriors the fighting slogans whose principal aim was to show that the war of the Sons of
Light was a ‘war of God', and that the soldiers of the congregation are the
‘chosen ones of God', exactly as reflected in the Scrolls and ancient records.
(Yadin p. 64) The Book of Mormon has stolen
the thunder of the Scrolls and scholars with a record available to all since
1829. Why did they ignore it? Why still ignore it?
ANCIENT TACTICS AND ORGANIZATION AND THE BOOK OF MORMON:
"The book of Joshua
[he was an Ephramite, was his record
in the Brass Plates?] clearly shows the system of the division of the
congregation for mustering into tribes, families and ‘clans'. (Yadin 51) The organization of the Tribes as laid out
in the War Scroll and most probably reflecting exactly how it was laid out in
the Brass Plates, "corresponds perfectly to the ‘reorganization' attributed in
Ex. 18 to Jethro, for the needs of
administrating Justice and the security of the wanderers under Moses...The
organization is the same as that when Judas Maccabaeus put his army on a regular footing, he divided it into
thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens." (Yadin p. 59) The name Jethro means ‘His Excellence'. (Mandel p. 272) He was Priest of
Midian, gave the Priesthood to Moses, (D&C 84:6) and admonished Moses to
organize his peoples into ‘tens, fifties, hundreds, and thousands'. (Ex. 18:21)
From the record it would appear that it was Jethro who established, through
Moses, the organization that persisted with the Tribes in Israel down to the
Nephites and to the Pioneers on their trek west. The very same organization and
terms were used by Josephus in
describing his own army when he fought against the Romans. (Wars 11, xx,
7) Another scroll, the CDC, tells of
the groupings of ten men, as the minimum, the fifties, and the hundreds, and
the thousands. (CDC xii, 22-23;
xiii, 1:2) "We will take ten men of a
hundred throughout all the tribes of Israel, and a hundred of a thousand, and a
thousand out of ten thousand, to fetch
victuals for the people." (Yadin p. 51,
Ju. 20:8-10) The Book of Mormon had
preempted all of these when it was published in 1829.
When the Combatants were readied for war, detailed
formations were proscribed as outlined in the War Scroll. (Yadin pp.
162-163) The frontal formation "shall
be ...a thousand men, seven frontal arrays [one thousand each] to one formation,
depending on men available, there could be seven frontal arrays each of seven thousand men. The ‘skirmishing battalion numbers l,000 men'." (Yadin p.
166) A defined distance is designated
for "each front formation [which] numbers 3,000, made up of 3 battalions of
1,000 men each." (Yadin p. 162) "A
front formation of 3,000 combatants divided into three units of 1,000 men each,
fits in well with the tradition of the Israelite army." (Yadin p. 174) Yadin's study of the War Scroll provides
much more detail beyond what this study intends. But it is evident that the Book of Mormon and its predecessor,
the Brass Plates, are authentic historical texts, now confirmed in this aspect
by various discoveries made in Egypt and Palestine-Israel.
THE TEN THOUSAND:
Mormon relates, "And when they had gone through and hewn
down all my people save it were twenty and four of us, (among whom was my son
Moroni) and we having survived the dead of our people, did behold on the
morrow, when the Laminates had returned unto their camps, from the top of the
Hill Cumorah, the ten thousand of my
people who were hewn down, being led
into the front by me. And we also
beheld the ten thousand of my people
who were led by my son Moroni. And
behold, the ten thousand of Gidgiddonah had fallen, and he also in
the midst. And Lamah had fallen with
his ten thousand; and Gilgal had fallen with his ten thousand; and Limhah had fallen with his ten
thousand; and Jeneum had fallen with
his ten thousand; and Cumenihah, and Moronihah, and Antionum,
and Shiblom, and Shem, and Josh, had fallen with their ten
thousand each. And it came to pass that there were ten more who did fall by
the sword, with their ten Thousand each..." (Mormon 6:11) Did
you count how many had fallen? Count
again, more than 230,000 fell on the Nephite side alone, including the ten thousand Mormon led himself. If
they killed close to that many enemy, and most likely they did, perhaps as many
as million were involved in the battle, let alone the uncounted members of
families for both sides.
It is interesting to note that the wars among the Nephites
and Lamanites the term "million" is not used once. But this term is used twice in military references in the
Book of Ether, (Ether 16:2) one where a million people had been slain, another
where a million mighty men had been slain. This is important for a number of
reasons. First, it identified that even though the Nephites did not use an
equivalent word to designate "million" in their battles, a numerical unit of
million was had among the Nephites, since Mormon, who abridged the records and
knew of the translated Jaredite record prepared by Mosiah, must have known of
the numerical terms. And when Moroni translated and abridged the 24 plates and
included them in the sealed portion of the gold plates, he would also have
known of the terms, so Joseph Smith could have translated the word. Secondly,
it shows that Joseph was familiar with the word "Million" and used it in the
Book of Mormon when a word in reformed Egyptian with equivalent value was found
on the plates. Third, the military unit degel
was in military usage among the ten tribes with that record, as the Brass
Plates, becoming part of the legacy Lehi brought to the Americas in the sixth
century, which would be over 2000 years later than the time of Ether. At that time another unit may have been in
vogue.
The question is placed to the reader: How could Joseph have
known in 1829 that in the Middle East during the history of the Ten Tribes,
with their records kept by Laban into the sixth century BC, that the unit of a
"thousand" (degel) was the most common military unit, and then use it correctly
in the Book of Mormon? The answer I
propose is the same as purported throughout the Book: Joseph translated an authentic ancient record by the
gift and power of God. It is a record
actually written and abridged by prophets of old who held the same customs as
their contemporaries in other lands.
This is now being confirmed from the "dust of the ground." This is a
major contribution of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Archives of Elephantine to
the substance and correctness of the Book of Mormon.
BANNERS AND THEIR INSCRIPTIONS:
"Before passing onto the examination of the division into
thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens and its relation to the structure of the
[Qumran] sect, we have to consider the organization of the families...and their
banners, and to sum up the system of inscription on the banners of the
congregation." (Yadin pp. 53-54) There
was a banner and an inscription on the banner for the "sub-units in accordance
with the military organization of the host of service and of war...it [the War
Scroll] describes the banners and inscriptions of the sub-units (thousands,
hundreds, fifties, and tens)....For the Levites as well as the banners for all
the others would have on them: (1) A slogan,
Indicating the character of the grouping. (2) The name of the leader of the
grouping. (3) The name of the heads of the sub-groupings under his command."
(Yadin p. 54) For most this would mean
"at least six inscriptions (tribe, family, thousand, hundred, fifty, tens)"
(Yadin p. 54) and included such inscriptions as ‘Truth of God,' ‘Justice of
God,' ‘Glory of God' ‘Judgement of God'.
Compare that with the inscription put on the Banner created out of his
own torn garment made by Moroni: "and he did raise the Standard of Liberty." (Alma 62:4-5) and "he caused the ‘title of liberty' to be hoisted." (Alma
46::36)
In the Scroll there was also a banner for the Congregation
and one for the Camp. "The length of
the banners varies, the largest, that of the entire congregation, being 14
cubits [21 feet] down to the banner of
the ten which was 7 cubits [10.5 feet]." (Yadin p. 57) Yadin provides a chart and summary of the
system of banners on page 57 of his book.
In the War Scroll, "The heading of this list [of banners and
inscriptions] is: ‘Disposition of the banners of the whole congregation
according to their groupings.' iii, 12." (Yadin p. 40) and "The
disposition of
the banners of the congregation on going out to war." (Yadin p.
42) There were two types of banners: "the banner of the
whole congregation both
of the host of service and the host of war, in contrast to the rest of
the
banners of the congregation and of the families of Levi." (Yadin
p. 44)
According to The Book of Numbers, the tribes of Israel were
divided into camps under four tribes, Judah, Reuben, Ephraim and Dan, each of
these tribes had three tribes in their camp. The prince of the tribe, under
which each group of three served was the leader. Each had a ‘banner of the
tribe'. (Yadin p. 46) This would have
been before the split of Israel and Judah into two groups. The Ten Tribes
continued to utilize the old manner of organization. There is much the Dead Sea
Scrolls have to contribute to understanding the Book of Mormon. The War Scroll
was published in 1962; Ty made his preliminary study in 1977, but it seems few
people are really studying the Scrolls today. In the future we will have
occasion to return to them many more times. The Scrolls and many other
discoveries have a great deal to say about the integrity of the Book of Mormon.
PROPHET GENERALS:
Let us turn now to some cultural comparisons. In the Old Testament at any given time the
scribe, who recorded scriptures, was a different person from the leader of the
people i.e. Kings were separate individuals.
Except for the Book of Psalms, nearly all of scriptures were written by
prophets who did not hold political office.
This is unlike the Book of Mormon where nearly the entire 1000 years
span is recorded by men who acted as the spiritual and political leaders and
military leaders in addition to being scribes.
On the surface, this seems to be radically different form the Old Testament.
The Book of Mormon is true, pointing out contradictory styles in political and
scribal life between the two hemispheres. Joseph did not try to conform with
old world styles.
Porten describes two Jewish related documents from Egypt,
one in demotic from approximately 92 BC , and the other in Aramaic from 426 BC
which indicate that the political [or military] leader and scribe could have
been held by the same individual. This is a significant
confirmation of the style found throughout the Book of Mormon. (Porten p.
56) And it is an indictment of the Old
Testament for not having been transmitted down through time correctly and
fully.
Another area of comparison is in the area of textiles. It is interesting to note that garments worn
by the Elephantine Jews included materials such as: linen, wool, and leather.
(Porten pp. 89-90) All three of these
materials are also mentioned in the Book of Mormon (Mosiah 10:5, 2 Nephi 8:8,
Mosiah 10:8) Little details perhaps, but
the Devil is in the detail, and the Book of Mormon ought to have the details correct.
PRESERVING LANGUAGE
One final idea concerns the people's willingness to preserve
Hebrew as their language. We learn in the Book of Mormon that, at least among
the People of Zarahemla (commonly termed the Mulekites) there was no concern
for linguistic preservation. In Omni
1:17 it states, "And at the time that Mosiah discovered them, they had become
exceeding numerous. Nevertheless they had many wars and serious contentions,
and had fallen by the sword from time to time; and their language had become
corrupted; and they had brought no records
with them; and they denied the being of their creator; and Mosiah, nor the
people of Mosiah could understand
them." This same tendency is found at Elephantine. "The Elephantine Jews were
apparently not overly concerned that their children could not speak the
language of Judah." (Porten p. 250). It
seems that many of the Jews from Elephantine ended up in Alexandria, Egypt,
where they spoke Greek. About 250 BC
things were so bad they had to bring some 70 Jewish Scholars from Jerusalem to
Alexandria to translate the Jewish Scriptures into Greek. This became known as
the Septuagint. (Miller p. 662)
We learn two important points from these passages. First,
both the Elephantine Jews and the Mulekites were consistent in their lack of
feeling that Hebrew was important. Secondly, there was a connection between
belief in God and an understanding of Hebrew - probably since the scriptures
were written in Hebrew. This may be one of the reasons that Nephi was sent back
to Jerusalem to retrieve the Plates of Brass so that even though the people may
have changed their spoken and written language over the generations the
important aspects of their language, and their religion, could still be
understood even 1000 years after they left Jerusalem. This is attested to by
the fact that Moroni was fluent in Hebrew. (Mormon 9:33) For brevity they wrote in reformed Egyptian, but their
doctrines and history were explained
in Hebrew, though slightly altered by them.
Unfortunately no sacred documents have been found at
Elephantine so a comparison of religious thought and practices is not yet
possible with the Book of Mormon. But we do know that they were monogamous. In
one of the Elephantine papyri it states in quite personal terms, "It shall not
be lawful for Heraclides to bring home another wife, in insult of Demetria nor
to have children by another women nor to do any evil against Demetria on any
pretext." (Porten pp 297-98) Compare
this with Jacob's condemnation recorded in Jacob 2. "And also it grieveth me
that I must use so much boldness of speech concerning you, before your wives
and your children, many of whose feeling are exceedingly tender and chaste and
delicate before God...Wherefore, my brethren, hear me, and hearken to the word of
the Lord; for there shall not any man among you have save it be on wife; and
concubines he shall have none."
We can therefore see that there are substantial parallels
between the life styles and military practices of the Elephantine Jews and the
Peoples of the Book of Mormon, especially when comparing military organization
with the Dead Sea Scrolls. There is no way Joseph Smith could have predicted
such evidences would be forthcoming had he alone written the Book of Mormon.
"The Archives of Elephantine are the most important single discovery confirming
the Book of Mormon ever found [up to that time]." (Nibley p. 53) Then came the discovery of more than 500,000
tablets, and then the Dead Sea Scrolls, and a hundred other discoveries after
that. .
No, it must have been an inspired translation of an actual
ancient document just as he claimed.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alexander, David,
& Pat Alexander, Eerdmans' Handbook
to the Bible, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan,
1977
Erickson, Einar
C., Discoveries at Elephantine, This
web site. 2005
Flint, Peter V.,
& James C. Vanderkam, The Dead Sea
Scrolls After Fifty Years, Brill, Leiden, 1999
Freidel, David,
Linda Schele, & Joy Parker, Mayo
Cosmos, Quill, William Marrow New York. 1993.
Hunt, Norman B., Historical Atlas of Ancient Mesopotamia, Checkmark
Books, New York, 2004
Mandel, David, Who's Who in Tanakh, Aerial Books, Tel
Aviv, Israel
Martinez, Forentineo Garcia, & Eibert J. C.
Toigchelaar, Brill, The Dead Sea
Scrolls-Study Edition, Brill, Leiden, 1977
Miller, Madeleine
S., & J. Lane Miller, Harper's Bible
Dictionary, Harper & Row, New York,
1973
Nibley, Hugh, Since Cumorah, Deseret Book Company,
Salt Lake City, Ut. 1967
...........2, The Prophetic
Book of Mormon, Vol. 8 FARMS,
Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1989
Porten, Bezalel, Archives From Elephantine, California
Press, Berkeley, 1968
Ricks, Stephen
D., and Williams J. Hamblin, Ed. Warfare
in the Book of Mormon, Desert Book Co., Salt Lake City, Utah & FARMS, 1990
Schiffman, Lawrence
H., & James C. VanderKam, Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Vol.
1-2, Oxford, University Press, New York, 2000
Weisberg, David
B., Texts From the Time of
Nebuchadnezzar, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1980
Yadin, Yagael, The Scroll of the War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness, Oxford Press, Oxford, 1962
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