(image from the U.S. Library of Congress
Rare Book and Special Collections Division)
Presentation The presentation and content of the Book of Mormon is divisive. It was written in a
Jacobean style of English similar to that seen in the
King James Bible, despite being penned 2 centuries later. The novelist
Jane Barnes considered the book "difficult to read", and according to religious studies scholar
Grant Hardy, the text is characterized by an "awkward, repetitious form of English" with a "nonmainstream literary aesthetic".
Terryl Givens describes the book as narratively and structurally complex, and historian
Daniel Walker Howe called it "a powerful epic written on a grand scale" that "should rank among the great achievements of American literature". However,
Mark Twain was far less favorable, describing it as "
chloroform in print" and "merely a prosy detail of imaginary history... followed by a tedious plagiarism of the
New Testament." The Book of Mormon presents its text through multiple
narrators who are explicitly identified as figures within the book's own narrative. Many details included in the text reveal a strong and emphatic interest in a self-contained form of
historiography: the various narrators describe the process of
reading,
redacting,
writing, and exchanging records. The prose is accompanied by relevant
sermons delivered by figures from the narrative, which are presented as verbatim. Interspersed throughout the text, these internal orations make up just over 40 percent of the Book of Mormon. Periodically, the book's primary narrators will reflexively describe themselves as creating the book, references that have been described "almost
postmodern" in their
self-consciousness. Historian Laurie Maffly-Kipp explains that "the mechanics of editing and transmitting thereby become an important feature of the text". Barnes calls the Book of Mormon a "scripture about writing and its influence in a post-modern world of texts" as well as "a statement about different voices, and possibly the problem of voice, in sacred literature".
Organization The Book of Mormon is organized as a compilation of smaller books, named either after its primary named narrator, or a prominent character featured therein. The narrative begins with the
First Book of Nephi (1 Nephi) and ends with the
Book of Moroni. The book's sequence is primarily chronological, arranged according to the sequential order of the events depicted. However, there are some exceptions to this, including the
Words of Mormon and the
Book of Ether. The Words of Mormon contains editorial commentary by
Mormon, while The Book of Ether is presented as the narrative of an earlier group of people who had come to the
American continent before the migration described in 1 Nephi. First Nephi through
Omni are written in a
first-person narrative, as are Mormon and Moroni. The remainder of the Book of Mormon is written in a
third-person historical tone, said to be compiled and abridged by Mormon (with Moroni abridging the Book of Ether and writing the latter part of Mormon and the Book of Moroni). Most modern editions of the book have been divided into chapters and verses. Most editions of the book also contain supplementary material, including the "Testimony of
Three Witnesses" and the "Testimony of
Eight Witnesses" which appeared in the original 1830 edition and has been included in every official Latter-day Saint edition thereafter.
Narrative The books from
First Nephi to
Omni are described as originating from "the small plates of Nephi". This account begins in ancient
Jerusalem around 600 BC, telling the story of a man named
Lehi, his family, and several others as they are led by God from Jerusalem shortly before the fall of that city to the
Babylonians. The book describes their journey across the
Arabian peninsula by land, and then to a "
promised land" by ship, presumably an unspecified location in the Americas. These books recount the group's dealings from approximately 600 BC to about 130 BC, during which time the community grows and splits into two warring groups: the
Nephites and the
Lamanites. This internecine conflict features heavily throughout the rest of the narrative. Following this section is the
Words of Mormon, a small book that introduces
Mormon, the principal narrator for the remainder of the text. The narration describes the proceeding content (
Book of Mosiah through to chapter 7 of the internal
Book of Mormon) as being Mormon's
abridgment of "the large plates of Nephi", existing records that detailed the people's history up to Mormon's own time in the
4th century AD. One section of Mormon's narrative is the
Book of Third Nephi, which describes a visit by Jesus to the people of
ancient America sometime after
his resurrection and
ascension in the
New Testament. Historian John Turner calls this episode "the climax of the entire scripture". After this visit, the Nephites and Lamanites unite to form a harmonious, peaceful society which endures for several generations before once again breaking into warring factions, ending in the victory of the Lamanites and the destruction of the Nephites. In the narrative, Mormon himself is a Nephite living during this period of this war, and is killed before finishing the book. From that point, his son Moroni takes over as narrator, describing himself taking his father's record into his charge and finishing its writing. Before the very end of the book, Moroni describes an abridgment (called the
Book of Ether) of a record from a much earlier people from a distant and long forgotten past. This includes a subplot describing a group of families who God leads away from the
Tower of Babel after it falls. Led by a man named
Jared and
his brother, described as a prophet of God, these
Jaredites travel to the "promised land" and establish a
society there. After successive violent reversals between rival monarchs and factions, their society collapses around the time that Lehi's family arrive in the promised land further south. The narrative returns to Moroni's present (
Book of Moroni), in which he transcribes a few short documents, meditates on and addresses the book's audience, finishes the record, and buries the plates upon which they are narrated to be inscribed upon, before implicitly dying as his father did, in what allegedly would have been the early
5th century AD.
Teachings Jesus On its title page, the Book of Mormon describes its central purpose as being the "convincing of the Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God, manifesting himself unto all nations." Although much of the Book of Mormon's internal chronology takes place prior to the
birth of Jesus, prophets in the book frequently see him in vision and preach about him, and the people in the narrative worship Jesus as "pre-Christian Christians." For example, the book's first narrator,
Nephi, describes having a vision of the birth,
ministry, and
death of Jesus nearly 600 years prior to the nativity. Late in the book, a narrator refers to converted peoples as "children of Christ". By depicting ancient prophets and peoples as familiar with Jesus as a Savior, the Book of Mormon
universalizes Christian salvation as being accessible across all time and places regardless of their spatial and/or temporal proximity to Christ himself. By implying that even more ancient peoples were familiar with Jesus Christ, the book presents a "polygenist Christian history" in which Christianity has multiple
origins. Barnes argues that the Book of Mormon depicts Jesus as a "revolutionary new character", different from that of the New Testament in a portrayal that is "constantly, subtly revising the Christian tradition". According to historian John Turner, the Book of Mormon's depiction provides "a twist" on Christian
trinitarianism, as Jesus in the Book of Mormon is distinct from
God the Father—as he prays to God during a post-resurrection visit with the Nephites—while also emphasizing that Jesus and God have "divine unity," with other parts of the book referring to Jesus as "the Father and the Son". Beliefs among the churches of the
Latter Day Saint movement range between
social trinitarianism (such as among Latter-day Saints) and traditional trinitarianism (such as in
Community of Christ).
Plan of salvation The Christian concept of God's
plan of salvation for humanity is a frequently recurring theme of the Book of Mormon. While the Bible does not directly outline a plan of
salvation, the Book of Mormon explicitly refers to the concept thirty times using a variety of terms such as
plan of salvation,
plan of happiness, and
plan of redemption. The Book of Mormon's plan of salvation doctrine describes life as a probationary time for people to learn the
gospel of Christ through
revelation given to prophets and have the opportunity to choose whether or not to obey God. Jesus' atonement then makes
repentance possible, enabling the righteous to enter a
heavenly state after a
final judgment. Although most of Christianity traditionally considers the
fall of man to be a negative development for humanity, the Book of Mormon instead portrays the fall as a foreordained step in God's plan of salvation, necessary to securing human agency, eventual righteousness, This positive interpretation of the
Adam and Eve story contributes to the Book of Mormon's emphasis "on the importance of human
freedom and responsibility" to choose salvation. In the Book of Mormon, figures petition God for revelatory answers to doctrinal questions and ecclesiastical crises as well as for inspiration to guide
hunts, military campaigns, and matters of state. The Book of Mormon depicts revelation as an active and sometimes laborious experience. For example, the Book of Mormon's
Brother of Jared learns to act not merely as a petitioner with questions for God but also as an interlocutor with "a specific proposal" for God to consider as part of a guided process of miraculous assistance.
Apocalyptic reversal and Indigenous or nonwhite liberation The Book of Mormon's "eschatological content" lends to a "theology of Native and/or nonwhite liberation", in the words of American studies scholar Jared Hickman. The Book of Mormon's narrative content includes prophecies describing how although Gentiles (generally interpreted as being whites of European descent) would conquer the Indigenous residents of the Americas (imagined in the Book of Mormon as being a remnant of descendants of the Lamanites), this conquest would only precede the Native Americans' revival and resurgence as a God-empowered people. The Book of Mormon narrative's prophecies envision a Christian
eschaton in which Indigenous people are destined to rise up as the true leaders of the continent, manifesting in a new
utopia to be called "Zion". White Gentiles would have an opportunity to repent of their sins and join themselves to the Indigenous remnant, but if white Gentile society fails to do so, the Book of Mormon's content foretells a future "
apocalyptic reversal" in which Native Americans will destroy white American society and replace it with a godly, Zionic society. This prophecy commanding whites to repent and become supporters of American Indians even bears "special authority as an utterance of Jesus" Christ himself during a messianic appearance at the book's climax. Furthermore, the Book of Mormon's "formal logic" criticizes the theological supports for
racism and
white supremacy prevalent in the antebellum United States by enacting a textual apocalypse. The book's apparently white Nephite narrators fail to recognize and repent of their own sinful, hubristic prejudices against the seemingly darker-skinned Lamanites in the narrative. In their
pride, the Nephites repeatedly backslide into producing
oppressive social orders, such that the book's narrative performs a sustained critique of colonialist racism. The book concludes with its own narrative implosion in which Lamanites suddenly succeed over and destroy Nephites in a literary turn seemingly designed to jar the average antebellum white American reader into recognizing the "utter inadequacy of his or her rac(ial)ist common sense". ==Religious significance==