Showing posts with label Book of Mormon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book of Mormon. Show all posts

Sunday, December 6, 2020

A capsule look at the 'Three Nephites'

 

                       Moroni was the last known mortal Nephite to live on the American Continent.


Elder Orson Pratt was the first leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to call attention to the famed “Three Nephites” to the general church.

He did so on April 7, 1855 in a sermon at the new bowery in Salt Lake City.

(The “Three Nephites” are translated beings, like John the Revelator from the New Testament. They cannot die and are beyond the powers of earth. They will remain on earth until Jesus Christ returns.)

Elder Pratt’s sermon said these heavenly beings can show themselves unto whomever they choose to. Otherwise, they remain unseen. They do come among us openly because the time is not right and there is work for humans to do to prepare to Christ’s return. They work in secret to promote righteousness.

Elder Erastus Snow and Brigham Young also gave sermons later that alluded to the existence of these Three Nephites.

However, Elder James E. Talmage, an LDS Apostle in the early 20th Century stated the church members in his era were too eager to attribute any unusual happening to the Three Nephites. As such, he said they must be the most overworked of all individuals.

Later, it has been assumed that since physical struggles are so easy for us in modern times, that we don’t have the need to these individuals, at least for physical matters.

Notwithstanding, in many of the tales of visits by these beings, they are described as old men with white hair and beards.

From ghostly hitchhikers who appear, offer some spiritual advice and eventually just disappear from a back car seat, to beggars who ask for food to test our generosity, there are various such stories from Utah over the decades.

In others, someone is saved from death. For example, in the 1950s, a young boy fell into deep water at the Ogden Bay Bird Refuge, located west of Hooper. He might have drowned had not an older man appeared out of nowhere to save him. Then, the man vanished.

In another tale, two young girls were hiking in the mountains around Richfield in the early 20th Century. They became lost and then a man appeared and led them back to the trail, before disappearing.

-Some of these stories are contained in a 1947 book by Hector Lee, “The Three Nephites: The Substance and Significance of the Legend in Folklore,” (1947), a Ph.D. dissertation for the University of New Mexico.

 

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Did the Gadianton Robbers live in the Wasatch Mountains?

                       The High Uintas, with the Wasatch Mountains in the far background.

DID the infamous Gadianton Robbers of the Book of Mormon (Helaman 6:18-29) inhabit western U.S. mountains?
Yes, they did and even the Wasatch Mountains, according to Brigham Young:
"There are scores of evil spirits here -- spirits of the old Gadianton robbers, some of whom inhabited these mountains, and used to go into the south and afflict the Nephites. There are millions of those spirits in these mountains, and they are ready to make us covetous, if they can; they are ready to lead astray every man and woman that wishes to be a Latter-day Saint." (Journal of Discourses, 8:344, from a discourse by President Young on January 20, 1861, in the Tabernacle of Salt Lake City.

-On a trip to southeast Deseret territory by W.D. Huntington and with 11 other men and one Indian in 1854 by a request from Brigham Young, is another Gadianton Robber tale:

This group of explorers found some extensive Indian ruins which the current Native Americans said they didn't build and which were very old. The estimates were the group was about 500 miles southeast of Salt Lake City. Here was the men's conclusion:

"We very readily came to a conclusion drawn from  the Book
Of Mormon In second Chapter of  the  book  of
Nephi that the ancient possessors of these strong holds
were robbers of the Gadianton band and we considered this locality as one of their strongholds." (-From the Deseret News Dec. 28, 1854.)


              Navajo Mountain in S.E. Utah.                                   Photo by Ravell Call


-EXTRAPOLATING on these comments is more proof that NORTH AMERICA was where the Nephites and Lamanites primarily lived, NOT Central or South America ....

NOTE: This article and all of the NighUntoKolob blog are NOT an official website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. They are the author's conclusions and opinions only.


Monday, August 19, 2013

Was Elvis Almost a Church Member?

Was Elvis Presley almost a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)?
Did an archived Book of Mormon in the Church History Building once belong to the king of rock 'n' roll?
A Book of Mormon — possibly Elvis Presley's personal copy, reputed to have been in his room when he died — is contained in the archives of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
And, a 2007 movie, "Tears of  A King: The Latter-Days of Elvis Presley, The King of Rock N Roll meets The King of Kings," was .filmed in Utah and was inspired by that archived Book of Mormon and the story behind it.
The background story goes like this:

                              A Book of Mormon similar to what Elvis may have had.

The Book of Mormon was given to the LDS Church by members of the Osmond family, who received it from a woman named Cricket Butler. Butler, a friend of Elvis, gave the Book of Mormon to him in the months preceding his death. The book was subsequently returned to Butler by Elvis' father, Vernon, two days after Elvis' death.
 "It is well known that Elvis Presley was a devout Christian who had deep religious convictions despite his personal weaknesses and struggles with a Hollywood lifestyle that was thrust upon him at an early age," Robert Starling, associate producer of "The Tears of A King movie" stated back in 2006.  "What is lesser known is that he reportedly met on several occasions with missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and that he studied carefully the Book of Mormon."
The movie crew videotaped an interview with Bobby Kauo, who gave the LDS Church missionary discussions to Elvis when Presley was in Hawaii to film "Paradise Hawaiian Style."
Genuine or fake?
Ken Sanders, who owns Ken Sanders Rare Books in Salt Lake City, said back in 2006 the Elvis book could easily be worth $5,000 to $10,000, if it is indeed authentic. That's pretty good for a soft-cover Book of Mormon of that period, generally worth $5 to $6.
He said $100,000 is the most any early Book of Mormon has been worth to date. However, Sanders said he remains skeptical the book was truly Elvis'.
"All my initial instincts are it's a forgery," he said, after examining four pictures showing pages from the book.
Sanders' philosophy is a book is a fake until proven genuine. 
Grant A. Anderson, church history specialist in the LDS Archives, confirmed in 2006 that the archives do have a book reputed to be Elvis Presley's, a 1976 edition common in its day.
"All we know is what has been told to us," Anderson said. He stressed that the book's history of transfer looks consistent and logical, but the church has conducted no handwriting tests on it.
Anderson said the church has copies of early Book of Mormon editions, but it is not common to have celebrity-owned copies like this.
Alan Osmond told the Deseret News in an e-mail back in 2006 that he did receive the Elvis Book of Mormon from Cricket Butler.
"I interviewed her on cassette tape, had her sign a letter of authenticity and saw pictures of her with Elvis. She said Elvis had talked about the Osmonds and would have wanted us to have it. We had a private barbecue scheduled by Elvis at his house a couple of weeks after he died. We also knew him, met him, conversed with him and have had personal conversations with him."
Regarding the Book of Mormon's transfer to the church, Osmond said: "I did give the book to the LDS Church via my wife's cousin, Elder Rex Pinegar (now an emeritus member of the Seventy). This was for safety's sake, to protect Elvis' privacy, and to preserve the sacredness of this book! Several people that knew I had it were too anxious to see it and touch it. So I put it in a very safe place — The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (archives)."
(Alan's brother, Donny Osmond, told the Deseret News during a 2010 interview that he had personally inspected the "Elvis Book of Mormon" and also believed it to be genuine.)
Former Salt Lake City police forensics expert George Throckmorton said he understands there may actually be two separate "Elvis Books of Mormon" out there.
Elvis may have also received a Book of Mormon from the late Ed Parker, who was his karate instructor and bodyguard.
-So, the jury may always be out on this, but it is intriguing nevertheless.
(-Expanded/Updated from a Deseret News Article on Oct. 2, 2006 by Lynn Arave.)

NOTE: This article and all of the NighUntoKolob blog are NOT an official website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.