Kerry Muhlestein discusses models for evaluating the BOA and Joseph's interpretation of the facsimiles.

Date
2016
Type
Academic / Technical Report
Source
Kerry Muhlestein
LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Secondary
Reference

Kerry Muhlestein, "Joseph Smith and Egyptian Artifacts: A Model for Evaluating the Prophetic Nature of the Prophet's Ideas about the Ancient World," BYU Studies Quarterly 55, no. 3 (2016): 35–82

Scribe/Publisher
BYU Studies
People
Kerry Muhlestein
Audience
Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

Joseph Smith’s collection of Egyptian antiquities has been the point of much interest, both in his day and ours. Among those things that piqued great attention during the Prophet’s lifetime, and continue to do so today, are his explanations of the drawings (known as vignettes when referring to ancient Egyptian literature) on the papyri he possessed and the connections he made between the papyri, mummies, and biblical characters. While we have few statements directly from Joseph Smith himself, there are a number of accounts from people who heard either first- or secondhand the Prophet’s ideas about his collection of antiquities and the meaning of the vignettes on the papyri. Evaluating the pertinent accounts and what they tell us either about the contents of the papyri or Joseph Smith’s prophetic abilities, or both, can become a byzantine endeavor, with no clear-cut way of determining which statements are historically reliable and which are not.

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