LDS scholars revising doctrine in light of DNA research
Apologists' tactics: An Australian scientist says the DNA data are
forcing BYU intellectuals to reinterpret the Book of Mormon
By Patty Henetz The Associated Press
Plant geneticist
Simon Southerton was a Mormon bishop in Brisbane, Australia, when he woke
up the morning of. 3, 1998, to the shattering
conclusion that his knowledge of science made it impossible for him to
believe any longer in the Book of Mormon.
Two years later he started writing Losing a Lost
Tribe: Native Americans, DNA and the Mormon Church, published by Signature
Books and due in stores next month. Along the way, he found a world of
scholarship that has led him to conclude The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints belief is changing, but not through prophesy and
revelation.
Rather, Southerton sees a behind-the-scenes revolution
led by a small group of Brigham Young University scholars and their critics
who are reinterpreting fundamental teachings of the Book of Mormon
in light of DNA research findings. Along the way, he says, these apologist
scholars, with the apparent blessing of church leadership, are contradicting
church teachings about the origins ofAmerican Indians and Polynesians. ''You've got Mormon apologists in their own publications
rejecting what prophets have been sayingfor decades. This
becomes very troubling for ordinary members of the church,'' Southerton
said.
And while the work of the BYU apologists - the term
means those who speak or write in defense of something - remains confined
largely to intellectual circles, some church members
who have always understood
themselves in light of Mormon teachings about the people known as Lamanites
are suffering identity crises.
''It's very difficult. It is almost traumatizing,''
said Jose Aloayza, a Midvale attorney who likened facing this new reality
to staring into a spiritual abyss.
''It's that serious, that real,'' said Aloayza, a Peruvian
native born into the church and still a member. ''I'm almost here feeling
I need an apology. Our prophets should have known better. That's the feeling
I get.'' Southerton, now a senior researcher with the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization in Canberra,
Australia, has concluded along with many other scientists studying
mitochondrial DNA lines that American Indians and Polynesians are of Asian
extraction. For a century or so, scientists have theorized Asians
migrated to the Americas across a land bridge at least 14,000 years ago.
But Mormons have been taught to believe the Book of Mormon - the
faith's keystone text - is a literal record of God's dealings with the
ancient inhabitants of the Americas who descended fromthe Israelite
patriarch Lehi, who sailed to the New World around 600 B.C. The book's
narrative continues through about 400 A.D.
The church teaches that Joseph Smith translated this
record from gold plates found on a hillside in upstate New York in 1820....
The Book of Mormon was first published in 1830.
In Mormon theology, Lamanites are understood as chosen
and cursed: Christ visited them, yet their unrighteousness left them cursed
with dark skin. The Book of Mormon says Lamanites will one day be
restored to greatness through the fullness of the gospel. (The original
1830 version of the Book of Mormon said they would become ''white and
delightsome;'' in 1981, the passage waschanged to''pure
and delightsome.'') Though not mentioned specifically in the Book
of Mormon, Polynesians have been taught they are a branch of the House
of Israel descended from Lehi.
Traditionally, Mormons have understood the Book of
Mormon to cover all of the Americas inwhat is known as the hemispheric
model. At a Bolivian temple dedication in 2000, church prophet and
President Gordon B. Hinckley prayed, ''We remember before Thee the
sons and daughters of Father Lehi.'' And in 1982, the church's then-President
Spencer Kimball told Samoans,Maoris, Tahitians and Hawaiians that
the ''Lord calls you Lamanites.''
Southerton's book details how these teachings have helped
Latter-day Saints' efforts to convertnew members, especially
among Indians in Latin America and Maoris in New Zealand. He also
offers primers on Mormon history and American race relations, quick tutorials
on DNA research and syntheses of Mormon-related genetic research and DNA
scholarship.
But in light of BYU scholars' recent opinion that the
Book of Mormon's events could only have occurred in parts of Mexico and
Guatemala - that is, Mesoamerica - the final third of the book is dedicated
to examining the work of LDS scholars at the Foundation for Ancient Research
and Mormon Studies, or FARMS, established 25 years ago and housed at BYU.
FARMS findings on Mesoamerica are based on the Book
of Mormon's ''internal geography,'' that is, descriptions of how long
it took the ancient peoples to get from one place to another. The apologists
now believe the events occurred only hundreds of miles from each other,
not thousands - provoking new questions including how the Americas could
have been so rapidly populated with people speaking so many languages
without the presence of vast numbers of people who never appear in the
narrative.
In a telephone interview from his Canberra office, Southerton
said that keeping up with the rapidly growing body of work in genetic
research made it difficult for him to finish the book while alsokeeping it up to date with critics and apologists and those in between
all seeking to reframe the Book of Mormon in light of DNA research.
In particular, he's tried to keep up with FARMS articles,
which he said are ''completely atloggerheads with what the church
leaders are teaching.''
On its Web site, under the ''Mistakes in the News''
heading, the church declares, ''Recent attacks on the veracity
of the Book of Mormon based on DNA evidence are ill-considered. Nothing
in the Book of Mormon precludes migration into the Americas by peoples
of Asiatic origin. The scientific issues relating to DNA, however, are
numerous and complex.''
The site then offers Web links to five articles, four
of which were published last year in the Journal of Book of Mormon
Studies, a FARMS publication.
Aloayza believes that is tacit approval of what FARMS
is saying. ''There is such a huge divide between what the scholarly
elite with the LDS church knowsand will discuss andwhat
the ordinary member knows,'' Aloayza said. ''The burden of proof is
on the people who are advancing the Book of Mormon as the word of God.''
BYU political science professor and FARMS director Noel
Reynolds said FARMS research and writings are not aimed at proving or
disproving the Book of Mormon. ''We understand the difficulties of that.
We get dragged into these discussions repeatedly because of books like
Southerton's or ordinary anti-Mormon questions,'' he said.
The work of FARMS shouldn't be considered counter to
church doctrine because the geography of the Book of Mormon has ''never
been a matter of official church pronouncement,'' Reynolds said.
While believing in a hemispheric model might be considered
''naive,'' he said, ''it's also fair to say that the majority of LDS
over a period of time have accepted a hemispheric view, including
churchleaders.''
Added FARMS founder and BYU law professor John Welch,
''We don't speak officially for thechurch in any way. These
are our opinions, and we hope they're helpful.'' Southerton, who no longer is a member of the church,
said given the state of DNA research and increasing lay awareness of it,
church leaders ought just to own up to the problems that continued literal
teachings about the Book of Mormon present for American Indians and Polynesians. ''They should come out and say, 'There's no evidence
to support your Israelite ancestry,' '' Southerton said. ''I don't
have any problem with anyone believing what's in the Book of Mormon. Just
don't make it look like science is backing it all up.''
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