John A. Tvedtnes discusses ancient texts written on metal plates, the use of stone boxes, and other elements from antiquity paralleling the Book of Mormon.

Date
2000
Type
Book
Source
John A. Tvedtnes
LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Secondary
Reference

John A. Tvedntes, The Book of Mormon And Other Hidden Book: "Out of Darkness Unto Light" (Provo, Utah: Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 2000)

Scribe/Publisher
Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies
People
John A. Tvedtnes
Audience
Reading Public
Transcription

Abstract:

If it existed in only one ancient copy, says John Tvedtnes, the Book of Mormon may have been unique. But in virtually every other way it resembles many ancient books. In this present volume, Tvedtnes shows perhaps fifty things about ancient records that must have been hilarious in 1830 but make perfect sense today: the ubiquity of intentionally hiding books in all kinds of ingenious containers made of many materials, including stone boxes and ceramic jars; books incised on obdurate surfaces, like metals, bones, and ivory; inked papyri and parchments treated with swaddling cloths soaked in cedar and citrus oils to prevent decay; many sealed and open records; waterproofing sealants like bitumen and white lime mortar; caves serving as repositories of treasures buried in many sacred mountains; the ancient perception of permanence and eternalism associated with the preservative functions of writers and guardians of written records. Many twentieth-century discoveries of ancient documents have made all of this visible.

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