Book of Mormon Central just published the sixth video in its stellar Evidences series. This new production analyzes Book of Mormon names with interesting origins in ancient Semitic and/or Egyptian languages.
The blog article entitled "Watch: Five Evidences for Book of Mormon Names" has a long list of references documenting the copious scholarship behind this video.
The five other superb videos in the Book of Mormon Central Evidences series are all available on the BMC Studios YouTube Channel. Elder Larry Y. Wilson of the Seventy saw the Complexity video and thought it was so good it should be featured on the churchofjesuschirst.org homepage so every Church member could see it. These are the highest quality Book of Mormon evidence videos ever produced. They deserve a wide audience. The first one was published in June, 2017 and in the intervening year and a half they have garnered over 500,000 views in English and Spanish. Videos with this much animation are costly to produce. Dozens more videos in this series are possible if funding materializes.
Friday, December 28, 2018
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Mulekite Zarahemla
2 Nephi 1:9 mentions other people the Lord would bring out of the land of Jerusalem (the Mulekites). When he uttered this prophecy, Father Lehi was already in the Americas. The next to leave the Near East would be Mulek and his party. This passage contains details that can help us locate the Mulekites in time and space.
The Mulekite capital, the city of Zarahemla, will be found in an area that was relatively isolated during the nearly 400 year period from ca. 580 BC to ca. 200 BC.
Serious proposals for the city of Zarahemla in Mesoamerica include:
We can test the various Zarahemla candidates against this isolation narrative. We know from the work of Barbara Arroyo, Lucia Henderson, Takeshi Inomata, and others that all 3 candidates for the city of Nephi were within early Kaminaljuyu (KJ)'s sphere of influence. We also know that 4 of the 6 candidates for the city of Zarahemla were within this same sphere of influence that reached along the Grijalva to Chiapa de Corzo, along the Usumacinta to Chama, and along the Pasion to Cancuen and Ceibal.
Only Zarahemla candidates Nueva Esperanza and Yaxchilan pass this KJ influence test.
Since the Olmec (ca. 1,200 - 400 BC) generally preceded the Mulekites, areas with large numbers of Olmec or Olmec-influenced sites are incompatible with the isolation narrative we are testing. Only Zarahemla candidates Nueva Esperanza, Yaxchilan, and Salinas de los Nueve Cerros pass this Olmec influence test. Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa, and Ceibal were all Olmec or Olmec-influenced sites themselves, and in close proximity to other Olmec sites.
Sites within the area shaded blue in the map above are incompatible with the isolation narrative we are testing. Only Zarahemla candidates Nueva Esperanza and Ceibal pass this Zoque influence test.
The site pictured is Nueva Esperanza, Chiapas, just west of the Usumacinta in Palenque municipality. John Clark told Garth Norman about the site which motivated Garth and me to visit it in 2006. It has about 200 mounds similar to the ones shown above. Garth did a little surface scavenging and found preclassic pottery shards. We saw no evidence of excavation or looting except for a couple of backhoe gashes in larger mounds. Robert L. Rands (1922 - 2010) wo(rked at this site and the backhoe trenches were probably dug under his direction. He was the recognized expert on the preclassic built environment around Palenque. Rands spent time with George (1935 - 2014) and David Stuart at the former's Boundary End Archaeology Research Center in North Carolina prior to the publication of the Stuart's Palenque: Eternal City of the Maya in 2008.
Rands published an article entitled "Palenque and Selected Survey Sites in Chiapas and Tabasco: The Preclassic" in Damien B. Marken, editor, Palenque: Recent Investigations at the Classic Maya Center (Lanham, MD: Altamira Press Division of Rowman & Littlefield, 2007). In his article, Rands discusses Nueva Esperanza, aka Zapatillo. Based on his study of ceramics, he says the site had limited external relationships in the Early Preclassic prior to 950 BC. It's relationships were mainly with the Olmec and Zoque areas to the west during the Middle Preclassic (950 - 400 BC). Relationships with the Maya Lowlands to the east strengthened in the Late Preclassic (400 BC - AD 250). Rands finds stylistic links with ceramics from such far-flung places as Tres Zapotes (390 air kilometers to the NW), Oaxaca (535 air kilometers to the SW), and Ceibal (230 air kilometers to the SE).
Based on Rands' results at Nueva Esperanza and nearby sites, the Stuarts reported in their 2008 joint masterwork that Nueva Esperanza was the archetype of a unique early cultural tradition that was neither Olmec nor Maya. Palenque did not evolve from Nueva Esperanza 40 air kilometers up the road toward the Usumacinta. (Nueva Esperanza was the riverside port on the shortest route between Palenque and the sea.) Palenque evolved from the early Maya culture in the Mirador Basin 225 air kilometers to the east. The Nueva Esperanza development, coterminous with El Mirador and Nakbe, was less ornate than the great early Maya centers, and it died out without ever becoming classic Maya as did Palenque. See the article "Palenque." Cultural anomaly Nueva Esperanza is an A-list candidate for the Mulekite and later Nephite capital city, Zarahemla.
Another test we can use to determine best fit to the text is the distance narrative described in the articles Plotting Alma, The Usumacinta/Sidon Correlation, and Test #6 Relative Distances. For a variety of reasons, we believe 15 air kilometers is a reasonable approximation for the value of the standard Nephite distance measure "one day's journey." See the article "Land Southward Travel Times." The text is so explicit on the distance between Nephi and Zarahemla (Mosiah 23:3, Mosiah 24:20, Mosiah 24:25 total 21 days) one senses Mormon is leaving bread crumb clues in his record so we moderns can locate these landmark locations 1,600 years later. This is how the various Nephi to Zarahemla candidates measure up in ascending distance order:
The Limhi Explorer Narrative offers three additional ways for us to test the various Zarahemla candidates. See the articles Ramah/Cumorah and Test #8 Limhi Expedition for context. Basically, the 43 men dispatched by King Limhi thought they knew where Zarahemla was and how to get there. Overshooting Zarahemla, they found remains of the once-mighty Jaredite nation in the general vicinity of Hill Ramah/Cumorah. Returning to King Limhi in the city of Nephi, they reported that they had found Zarahemla and the King believed them until Ammon and his party from the real Zarahemla showed up. Limhi, himself a record-keeper, had access to his grandfather, Zeniff's records, so he had some knowledge of these matters.
We map four proposed Ramah/Cumorah hills associated with the six Zarahemla correlations we are testing.
The first Limhi Explorer Narrative test determines how close to its Zarahemla a proposed Nephi to Ramah/Cumorah transect passes. If the 43 men could have passed right by the Zarahemla they were searching for on their way to the final Jaredite battleground, that scenario is not as believable as if they probably passed dozens or hundreds of kilometers distant from the Zarahemla they sought. The black lines in the map above are straight line transects from a candidate Nephi to its corresponding Ramah/Cumorah. When we measure the distance from each straight line transect to its corresponding Zarahemla, the data shows in ascending order:
- they would be kept from all other nations
- they would possess their land unto themselves
- their righteousness would bring blessings
- none would molest them to take away the land of their inheritance
The Mulekite capital, the city of Zarahemla, will be found in an area that was relatively isolated during the nearly 400 year period from ca. 580 BC to ca. 200 BC.
Serious proposals for the city of Zarahemla in Mesoamerica include:
- Yaxchilan, Chiapas (RLDS candidate since Louis Edward Hills, 1917)
- Santa Rosa, Chiapas (John L. Sorenson followed by Joseph & Blake Allen)
- Salinas de los Nueve Cerros, Alta Verapaz (F. Richard Hauck followed by Joe V. Andersen, Stanford S. Smith, and Lenard C. Brunsdale)
- Santa Cruz, Chiapas (Gareth W. Lowe)
- Ceibal, Peten (Robert Roylance & Richard Terry)
- Nueva Esperanza, Chiapas (V. Garth Norman followed by Kirk Magleby & Javier Tovar)
We can test the various Zarahemla candidates against this isolation narrative. We know from the work of Barbara Arroyo, Lucia Henderson, Takeshi Inomata, and others that all 3 candidates for the city of Nephi were within early Kaminaljuyu (KJ)'s sphere of influence. We also know that 4 of the 6 candidates for the city of Zarahemla were within this same sphere of influence that reached along the Grijalva to Chiapa de Corzo, along the Usumacinta to Chama, and along the Pasion to Cancuen and Ceibal.
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Attested Diplomatic and Trade Relations with Early KJ ca. 600 - 200 BC |
We can plot known Olmec and Olmec-influenced sites.
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Zarahemla Candidates with Known Olmec & Olmec-Influenced Sites |
Bruce R. Bachand with BYU's NWAF has extensively studied Chiapa de Corzo. He documents a Zoque sphere of influence centered on Chiapa de Corzo that extended southeastward to La Lagunita and eastward to the Usumacinta ca. 1,000 to 400 BC.
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Zoque Sites and Sphere of Influence ca. 1,000 - 400 BC |
The results of these 3 isolation narrative tests:
- Nueva Esperanza passes all 3 tests.
- Yaxchilan passes 2 tests.
- Salinas de los Nueve Cerros passes 1 test.
- Ceibal passes 1 text.
- Santa Cruz and Santa Rosa fail all 3 tests.
Among the Mesoamerican proposals we have considered for the city of Zarahemla, Nueva Esperanza best fits the isolation narrative described in 2 Nephi 1:9.
This is the first slide of John E. Clark's powerful presentation at the Library of Congress Worlds of Joseph Smith Conference in 2005. The conference commemorated the bicentennial of the prophet's birth in 1805.
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John Clark's Joseph Smith Bicentennial Presentation Title Slide |
Rands published an article entitled "Palenque and Selected Survey Sites in Chiapas and Tabasco: The Preclassic" in Damien B. Marken, editor, Palenque: Recent Investigations at the Classic Maya Center (Lanham, MD: Altamira Press Division of Rowman & Littlefield, 2007). In his article, Rands discusses Nueva Esperanza, aka Zapatillo. Based on his study of ceramics, he says the site had limited external relationships in the Early Preclassic prior to 950 BC. It's relationships were mainly with the Olmec and Zoque areas to the west during the Middle Preclassic (950 - 400 BC). Relationships with the Maya Lowlands to the east strengthened in the Late Preclassic (400 BC - AD 250). Rands finds stylistic links with ceramics from such far-flung places as Tres Zapotes (390 air kilometers to the NW), Oaxaca (535 air kilometers to the SW), and Ceibal (230 air kilometers to the SE).
Based on Rands' results at Nueva Esperanza and nearby sites, the Stuarts reported in their 2008 joint masterwork that Nueva Esperanza was the archetype of a unique early cultural tradition that was neither Olmec nor Maya. Palenque did not evolve from Nueva Esperanza 40 air kilometers up the road toward the Usumacinta. (Nueva Esperanza was the riverside port on the shortest route between Palenque and the sea.) Palenque evolved from the early Maya culture in the Mirador Basin 225 air kilometers to the east. The Nueva Esperanza development, coterminous with El Mirador and Nakbe, was less ornate than the great early Maya centers, and it died out without ever becoming classic Maya as did Palenque. See the article "Palenque." Cultural anomaly Nueva Esperanza is an A-list candidate for the Mulekite and later Nephite capital city, Zarahemla.
Another test we can use to determine best fit to the text is the distance narrative described in the articles Plotting Alma, The Usumacinta/Sidon Correlation, and Test #6 Relative Distances. For a variety of reasons, we believe 15 air kilometers is a reasonable approximation for the value of the standard Nephite distance measure "one day's journey." See the article "Land Southward Travel Times." The text is so explicit on the distance between Nephi and Zarahemla (Mosiah 23:3, Mosiah 24:20, Mosiah 24:25 total 21 days) one senses Mormon is leaving bread crumb clues in his record so we moderns can locate these landmark locations 1,600 years later. This is how the various Nephi to Zarahemla candidates measure up in ascending distance order:
- Tzalcam to Salinas de los Nueve Cerros 105 air kilometers or 5 km/day
- Tzalcam to Ceibal 162 air kilometers or 7.7 km/day
- San Juan to Yaxchilan 201 air kilometers or 9.6 km.day
- Kaminaljuyu to Santa Rosa 258 air kilometers or 12.3 km/day
- Kaminaljuyu to Santa Cruz 318 air kilometers or 15.1 km/day
- Kaminaljuyu to Nueva Esperanza 376 air kilometers or 17.9 km.day
- Tzalcam to Salinas de los Nueve Cerros 83 air kilometers or 4 km/day
- Tzalcam to Ceibal 120 air kilometers or 5.7 km/day
- San Juan to Yaxchilan 188 air kilometers or 9 km/day
- Kaminaljuyu to Santa Rosa 220 air kilometers or 10.5 km.day
- Kaminaljuyu to Santa Cruz 305 air kilometers or 14.5 km.day
- Kaminaljuyu to Nueva Esperanza 322 air kilometers or 15.3 km.day
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Teal Lines are Longer City to City Transects White Lines are Wilderness Border to Wilderness Border |
We map four proposed Ramah/Cumorah hills associated with the six Zarahemla correlations we are testing.
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Black Lines from Candidate Cities of Nephi to Hills Ramah/Cumorah |
- Santa Rosa - transect passes 9 air kilometers away
- Santa Cruz - transect passes 10 air kilometers away
- Ceibal - transect passes 45 air kilometers away
- Salinas de los Nueve Cerros - transect passes 62 air kilometers away
- Yaxchilan - transect passes 122 air kilometers away
- Nueva Esperanza - transect passes 165 air kilometers away
The second Limhi Explorer Narrative test measures how far they actually traveled versus how far they should have traveled. The greater the proportional distance, the less likely the scenario becomes. Suppose someone sets out from Salt Lake City, Utah expecting to travel to Moab, Utah which is an air distance of 315 kilometers. When they get to Flagstaff, Arizona, which is an air distance of 619 kilometers, they will have traveled 1.97 times their intended distance. They are highly likely to realize by that point that they overshot Moab and went too far. Here are the Mesoamerican Zarahemla candidates ranked by proportional distance from Nephi to Zarahemla versus Nephi to Ramah/Cumorah:
- Nueva Esperanza - should have traveled 376 air kilometers from Kaminaljuyu, actually traveled 604 air kilometers to Cerro San Martin Pajapan - overshot target by a factor of 1.61
- Santa Cruz - should have traveled 318 air kilometers from Kaminaljuyu, actually traveled 664 air kilometers to Cerro Vigia - overshot target by a factor of 2.09
- Ceibal - should have traveled 162 air kilometers from Tzalcam, actually traveled 354 air kilometers to Achotal - overshot target by a factor of 2.19
- Santa Rosa - should have traveled 258 air kilometers from Kaminaljuyu, actually traveled 664 air kilometers to Cerro Vigia - overshot target by a factor of 2.57
- Yaxchilan - should have traveled 201 air kilometers from San Juan, actually traveled 755 air kilometers to Cerro Rabon - overshot target by a factor of 3.76
- Salinas de los Nueve Cerros - should have traveled 105 air kilometers from Tzalcam, actually traveled 655 air kilometers to Cerro Vigia - overshot target by a factor of 6.24
The third Limhi Explorer Narrative test discriminates between land forms. The 43 men traveled from the highlands, through the coastal plain, back into the highlands, and announced they had found Zarahemla. This implies Zarahemla was in the coastal plain. Nueva Esperanza passes this test. It is the only one of the six Zarahemla candidates in the coastal plain. Salinas de los Nueve Cerros, Ceibal, and Yaxchilan neither pass nor fail this test. They are in the lowlands, but not in the coastal plain. Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz are in the highlands, so they fail this test.
Another test we can apply to the various Zarahemla candidates derives from the incommunicado narrative. The Nephites in Nephi and the Mulekites in Zarahemla were unaware of each other's existence for nearly 400 years. This scenario is plausible if a great distance separates the two, or if the area between them is sparsely populated. This is a map of Mesoamerican Nephi/Zarahemla candidates overlaid with ancient American archaeological sites known to science.
Several patterns emerge from this data. Santa Cruz and Santa Rosa fail the Nephi to Zarahemla incommunicado test. There were simply too many ancient settlements in between them - so many that the teal lines we have drawn on the map are almost blotted out. Tzalcam and Ceibal neither pass nor fail the test. They both have a paucity of intervening sites, but their distances are so modest the 400 years without contact scenario seems unlikely. Yaxchilan and Nueva Esperanza pass the test nicely. Significant distances separate them from their corresponding Nephis, and there are multiple areas between each pair of sites with relatively low ancient settlement densities such that the teal lines show through more or less intact.
Another test we can apply to the various Zarahemla candidates derives from the incommunicado narrative. The Nephites in Nephi and the Mulekites in Zarahemla were unaware of each other's existence for nearly 400 years. This scenario is plausible if a great distance separates the two, or if the area between them is sparsely populated. This is a map of Mesoamerican Nephi/Zarahemla candidates overlaid with ancient American archaeological sites known to science.
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Nephi - Zarahemla Combinations in Context with Archaeological Sites |
In summary, we have documented 9 tests that determine how well a particular Zarahemla candidate fits the text.
- Isolation Narrative KJ Influence
- Isolation Narrative Olmec Influence
- Isolation Narrative Zoque Influence
- Isolation Narrative Obsidian Trade Patterns
- Nephi to Zarahemla Distance Narrative
- Limhi Explorer Transect Proximity
- Limhi Explorer Expected Distance
- Limhi Explorer Land Forms
- Nephi to Zarahemla Incommunicado Narrative
Yaxchilan passes 4/9 tests.
Ceibal passes 1/9 tests
Salinas de los Nueve Cerros passes 1/9 tests
Santa Cruz passes 1/9 tests
Santa Rosa passes 0/9 tests
Toward Consensus on Nephi and Zarahemla
Book of Mormon geographical correlations are being proposed throughout the Americas. Serious Book of Mormon geographical correlations are being proposed from the Andes on the south (George Potter, Bret Eborn) to Baja California on the north (Lynn & David Rosenvall). Several serious Book of Mormon geographical correlations are being proposed in Mesoamerica. Looking at the Mesoamerican theories, I find it impressive how tightly clustered the various proposals for the city of Nephi and the city of Zarahemla are within the vast landscape of Mesoamerica (about 830,000 square kilometers or about the size of Texas and Louisiana combined).
Six correlations are represented on the map above.
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Proposed Nephis and Zarahemlas |
- Aric Turner in the RLDS (Community of Christ and Restoration Branch) tradition put Nephi at San Juan, Baja Verapaz and Zarahemla at Yaxchilan, Chiapas.
- Gareth W. Lowe put Nephi at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala and Zarahemla at Santa Cruz, Chiapas.
- John L. Sorenson followed by Joseph & Blake Allen put Nephi at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala and Zarahemla at Santa Rosa, Chiapas.
- Robert Roylance & Richard Terry put Nephi at Tzalcam, Baja Verapaz and Zarahemla at Ceibal, Peten.
- F. Richard Hauck followed by Joe V. Andersen, Stanford S. Smith, and Lenard C. Brunsdale put Nephi at Tzalcam, Baja Verapaz and Zarahemla at Salinas de los Nueve Cerros, Alta Verapaz.
- V. Garth Norman followed by Kirk Magleby & Javier Tovar put Nephi at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala and Zarahemla at Nueva Esperanza, Chiapas.
A priority is to identify the river Sidon (Grijalva, Usumacinta, or Pasion tributary of the Usumacinta) which would shrink the potential Zarahemla landscape significantly. I (Kirk Magleby) became convinced the Usumacinta is the Sidon after working on the problem during the second half of 2011. See the article The Usumacinta/Sidon Correlation. Discoveries since that time have significantly strengthened the Usumacinta/Sidon correlation. See for example "Obsidian Trade Patterns," "75 BC," and "Ground-Truthed LiDar."
Eventually, truth will prevail. In the meantime, it is satisfying to know movement toward consensus is possible because many of the Mesoamerican correlations are relatively close to each other for the key sites Nephi and Zarahemla.
Eventually, truth will prevail. In the meantime, it is satisfying to know movement toward consensus is possible because many of the Mesoamerican correlations are relatively close to each other for the key sites Nephi and Zarahemla.
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Prophecy Fulfilled 020
Father Lehi prophesied that multiple nations would come to the Americas and steal the native's land 2 Nephi 1:11. These 13 European nations colonized parts of the New World beginning in the years indicated:
1. Spain 1492
2. Portugal 1500
3. France 1534
4. England 1607
5. Netherlands 1615
6. Scotland 1622
7. Courland & Semigallia (Poland, Lithuania) 1637
8. Sweden 1638
9. Knights Hospitaller (Malta) 1651
10. Denmark 1665
11. Brandenburg - Prussia 1689
12. Norway 1754
13. Russia 1784
By the mid 1700's nearly all of the Western Hemisphere was claimed by one or more of the European colonial powers. Lehi's prophecy was explicitly fulfilled.
1. Spain 1492
2. Portugal 1500
3. France 1534
4. England 1607
5. Netherlands 1615
6. Scotland 1622
7. Courland & Semigallia (Poland, Lithuania) 1637
8. Sweden 1638
9. Knights Hospitaller (Malta) 1651
10. Denmark 1665
11. Brandenburg - Prussia 1689
12. Norway 1754
13. Russia 1784
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Extent of Spanish and Portuguese Empires in 1790 |
Prophecy Fulfilled 019
Nephi saw in vision the book of the Lamb of God which had proceeded forth from the mouth of the Jew (Bible) going from the Gentiles (Europeans) to the remnant of the seed of his brethren (Lamanites) 1 Nephi 13:38.
This prophecy was dramatically fulfilled in 1553 and 1554 when Domingo de Vico's Theologia Indorum was composed and distributed in Guatemala. de Vico was a Dominican friar with a gift for languages. After studying at Úbeda and Salamanca, he came to Guatemala in 1544. His Theologia Indorum translated biblical passages into Mayan with commentary. Over a dozen hand-written manuscripts exist today in the Newberry Library in Chicago, the University of Pennsylvania Library, the Firestone Library at Princeton, the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, and the Bibliothèque nacionale in Paris. The various copies are in Kaqchikel, Q'eqchi', Tz'utujil, and K'iche' Mayan. We know from historical sources that the Theologia Indorum was translated into other Mayan dialects as well, but those manuscripts are currently lost to science.
Domingo de Vico was killed while preaching to the Lacandon Maya in 1555. His work is the longest manuscript in a native American language known from the colonial era and the first translation of the Bible into a New World language.
This prophecy was dramatically fulfilled in 1553 and 1554 when Domingo de Vico's Theologia Indorum was composed and distributed in Guatemala. de Vico was a Dominican friar with a gift for languages. After studying at Úbeda and Salamanca, he came to Guatemala in 1544. His Theologia Indorum translated biblical passages into Mayan with commentary. Over a dozen hand-written manuscripts exist today in the Newberry Library in Chicago, the University of Pennsylvania Library, the Firestone Library at Princeton, the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, and the Bibliothèque nacionale in Paris. The various copies are in Kaqchikel, Q'eqchi', Tz'utujil, and K'iche' Mayan. We know from historical sources that the Theologia Indorum was translated into other Mayan dialects as well, but those manuscripts are currently lost to science.
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Domingo de Vico, Theologia Indorum in K'iche' Mayan American Philosophical Society Indian ms. 178 |
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Prophecy Fulfilled 018
The Savior prophesied that the Gentiles would help gather the remnant of Jacob (Lehi's posterity) in unto the New Jerusalem 3 Nephi 21:23-24. The city New Jerusalem will be built at some future date in Jackson County, Missouri D&C 84:2-4. The scriptures also reference a land called New Jerusalem associated with the city D&C 45:66, 3 Nephi 20:22.
This prophecy is being fulfilled as thousands of missionaries from the United States and other Gentile nations serve throughout Latin America. Inevitably, some of those who join the Church in Latin America emigrate to the U.S. I served in Peru from 1972 - 1974 and some of the members of the Church I worked with in that country now reside in the U.S.
The "B" on the hill in the photo above stands for "Benemerito de las Americas," the name of the school whose campus became the MTC in 2013. Thousands of young Mexican Latter-day Saints who received an excellent high school education at Benemerito went on to be leaders of the Church in their country. The school letter on the hill is a transplanted Utah tradition.
This prophecy is being fulfilled as thousands of missionaries from the United States and other Gentile nations serve throughout Latin America. Inevitably, some of those who join the Church in Latin America emigrate to the U.S. I served in Peru from 1972 - 1974 and some of the members of the Church I worked with in that country now reside in the U.S.
Sisters from the U.S. at the Mexico City MTC |
Monday, December 17, 2018
Prophecy Fulfilled 017
Father Lehi prophesied that his posterity would be scattered upon all the face of the earth as part of the scattering of the house of Israel which was also going to be scattered upon all the face of the earth 1 Nephi 10:12-13. This suggests we will find Lamanites across a wide area in multiple modern nations. See the article "Face of the Land" for context.
Samuel the Lamanite prophesied that the Lamanites would be driven to and fro upon the face of the earth and scattered abroad Helaman 15:12. The "face of the earth" reference implies a wide area in multiple modern nations as the article "Face of the Land" explains. "Scattered abroad" means moved from their homeland to distant places, even overseas places.
Jesus Christ prophesied that the Lamanites would be scattered upon all the face of the land 3 Nephi 21:24. As above, this refers to a wide area in multiple modern nations.
When the Spanish invaded the Americas, they explicitly fulfilled this prophecy. First, they sent enslaved Taino from the Caribbean to Spain. Then they imported Lucayo slaves from what we now call the Bahamas into Hispaniola (Dominican Republic). After despoiling the Nicaraguan natives of their gold and pearls, the Spanish enslaved them. 200,000 Nicaraguan slaves were exported to South America between 1528 and 1540 to work the rich mines in Peru. Most died en route or in the merciless mines. The Spanish sent enslaved natives from many places in Central America to Cuba and other Caribbean islands. Slaves from what is today Florida were sent throughout the Spanish realm, as were enslaved natives from northern South America (modern Colombia and Venezuela). The Pueblo Revolt in 1680 was caused by the enslavement of natives in what is today New Mexico who were sent to work the rich silver mines of central Mexico.
A good source on native American slavery under Spanish rule is Andrés Reséndez, The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016).
Reséndez documents native Americans being scattered abroad, driven to and fro upon the face of the earth, and being scattered upon all the face of the land in direct fulfillment of Book of Mormon prophecy.
Samuel the Lamanite prophesied that the Lamanites would be driven to and fro upon the face of the earth and scattered abroad Helaman 15:12. The "face of the earth" reference implies a wide area in multiple modern nations as the article "Face of the Land" explains. "Scattered abroad" means moved from their homeland to distant places, even overseas places.
Jesus Christ prophesied that the Lamanites would be scattered upon all the face of the land 3 Nephi 21:24. As above, this refers to a wide area in multiple modern nations.
When the Spanish invaded the Americas, they explicitly fulfilled this prophecy. First, they sent enslaved Taino from the Caribbean to Spain. Then they imported Lucayo slaves from what we now call the Bahamas into Hispaniola (Dominican Republic). After despoiling the Nicaraguan natives of their gold and pearls, the Spanish enslaved them. 200,000 Nicaraguan slaves were exported to South America between 1528 and 1540 to work the rich mines in Peru. Most died en route or in the merciless mines. The Spanish sent enslaved natives from many places in Central America to Cuba and other Caribbean islands. Slaves from what is today Florida were sent throughout the Spanish realm, as were enslaved natives from northern South America (modern Colombia and Venezuela). The Pueblo Revolt in 1680 was caused by the enslavement of natives in what is today New Mexico who were sent to work the rich silver mines of central Mexico.
A good source on native American slavery under Spanish rule is Andrés Reséndez, The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016).
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Important Book First Published in 2016 |
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