So many people have asked for a way to explain
Letter VII to their friends that I’m posting this summary which you can print
out and share with your friends and family.
Here is the link:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mDizAWGkFDBR26gc9FsWGNPdhmTub3sc/view?usp=sharing
You can also print it and put it inside your copy of my Letter VII book when you share it.
There are a lot of details beyond this brief summary, of course. That's why I wrote the book about it. I also have a lot of information on the Letter VII blog, which is here:
http://www.lettervii.com/
Thanks to the efforts of certain intellectuals, most people have never heard of Letter VII. At first, they may be skeptical that one letter can make a difference. But when you learn about it, you discover this was much more than just "a letter." This was a formal declaration of a series of facts, written by a member of the First Presidency (President Cowdery) and endorsed by the entire First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve at the time. In the ensuing 150 years, every member of those quorums who has addressed the issue has affirmed Letter VII; no member of those quorums has ever contradicted Letter VII.
This is the text of the file you can print from the above link:
Here is the link:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mDizAWGkFDBR26gc9FsWGNPdhmTub3sc/view?usp=sharing
You can also print it and put it inside your copy of my Letter VII book when you share it.
There are a lot of details beyond this brief summary, of course. That's why I wrote the book about it. I also have a lot of information on the Letter VII blog, which is here:
http://www.lettervii.com/
Thanks to the efforts of certain intellectuals, most people have never heard of Letter VII. At first, they may be skeptical that one letter can make a difference. But when you learn about it, you discover this was much more than just "a letter." This was a formal declaration of a series of facts, written by a member of the First Presidency (President Cowdery) and endorsed by the entire First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve at the time. In the ensuing 150 years, every member of those quorums who has addressed the issue has affirmed Letter VII; no member of those quorums has ever contradicted Letter VII.
This is the text of the file you can print from the above link:
_____
Most members of the Church believe the Hill
Cumorah is in New York. Church leaders have consistently taught this for over
150 years.
However, some intellectuals in the Church—including
faculty at BYU and CES—claim there are “two Cumorahs.” They rationalize that
New York is too far from Central America (Mesoamerica) for the hill in New York
to be the scene of the final battles of the Jaredites and the Nephites.
Because these intellectuals have trained
thousands of LDS students for decades, their ideas have permeated the Church.
The “two-Cumorahs” theory is being taught in Church media and at Church
visitors centers, but it has never been taught by a single member of the First
Presidency or Quorum of the Twelve.
The efforts of the intellectuals have caused
confusion among members and investigators.
Recent discoveries in Church history reaffirm the original teaching that there is one Cumorah and it is in New York. For example, there is a lot of information in the book titled Letter VII: Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery Explain the Hill Cumorah.
In response, the intellectuals are teaching their students that the prophets and apostles are wrong.
This summary of Church history will help members understand the issue so they can support the Brethren when confronted with arguments against the New York Cumorah.
In response, the intellectuals are teaching their students that the prophets and apostles are wrong.
This summary of Church history will help members understand the issue so they can support the Brethren when confronted with arguments against the New York Cumorah.
1. In 1834, Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery
decided to publish a series of letters about Church history in the Church
newspaper titled The Messenger and
Advocate. This was in response to anti-Mormon publications that were
disrupting the missionary effort.
2. Oliver wrote the letters with Joseph’s
assistance. They published eight letters between October 1834 and October 1835.
3. A section of Letter I is included as a
footnote in the Pearl of Great Price at the end of Joseph Smith—History.
4. In December 1834, Joseph ordained Oliver
Cowdery as Assistant President of the Church, explaining that this made him the
spokesman. Joseph later referred to these letters as “President Cowdery’s
letters.”
5. In Letter VII, published in July 1835, President
Cowdery described the Hill Cumorah in New York. He explained that “at about one
mile west rises another ridge of less height, running parallel with the former”
and declares it was a “fact that here, between these hills, the entire power
and national strength of both the Jaredites and Nephites were destroyed.” He
emphasized that “in this valley fell the remaining strength and price of a once
powerful people, the Nephites.” “This hill, by the Jaredites, was called Ramah;
by it, or around it, pitched the famous army of Coriantumr their tent… The
opposing army were to the west, and in this same valley, and near by.” He also
explained that Mormon’s depository of Nephite records (Mormon 6:6) was in the
same hill.
6. The entire First Presidency at the time
endorsed these letters. Joseph Smith had President Frederick G. Williams begin
the process of copying all eight letters into his history, which you can read
in the Joseph Smith Papers in History,
1834-1836. (go to www.josephsmithpapers.org
and search for “Letter VII.”) President Sidney Rigdon separately approved of them.
7. All members of the original Quorum of the
Twelve (they were called and ordained by President Cowdery and others in
February 1835) who ever mentioned Cumorah affirmed what Letter VII teaches,
including Parley and Orson Pratt, Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, and William
Smith.
8. Letter VII was originally published in the Messenger and Advocate (1835) and copied
into Joseph Smith, History, 1834-1835, shortly thereafter. It was republished
in the Millennial Star (1840), the Times and Seasons (1841), the Gospel Reflector (1841), a special
pamphlet in England (1844), The Prophet
(1844), and The Improvement Era.
Joseph referred to it in D&C 128:20, which was originally a letter published
in the Times and Seasons a year after
Letter VII was published in the same newspaper.
9. Over the years, multiple members of the
First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve, speaking in General Conference, have
affirmed the New York Cumorah. Elder James E. Talmage in Articles of Faith affirmed it, as have other apostles, including LeGrand
Richards in A Marvelous Work and a Wonder.
10. No member of the Twelve or First Presidency
has ever said the Hill Cumorah was anywhere else.
11. Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, Wilford
Woodruff and others explained that on multiple occasions, Oliver and Joseph had
actually visited Mormon’s depository of records in the Hill Cumorah, which
explains why President Cowdery wrote that it was a fact that Cumorah was in New
York.
12. The intellectuals nevertheless have framed
Letter VII as "Oliver Cowdery's opinion," characterizing it as a
false tradition that Joseph Smith passively accepted. They claim that all the
other prophets and apostles who have affirmed the New York Cumorah were
perpetuating this false tradition. They claim that Brigham Young, Heber C.
Kimball, Wilford Woodruff and others were mistaken because Oliver had merely
told them about a vision of a hill in Mexico.
13. The intellectuals have
rejected the New York Cumorah because they think it contradicts their preferred
theory that the Book of Mormon took place in Mesoamerica. To persuade their
students to agree with them, they have made a series of claims about archaeology,
anthropology, geology, and geography, and they have insisted on an
interpretation of the text that, they claim, makes the New York setting
impossible. Lately, BYU and CES have been teaching students about the Book of Mormon by using a video-game-like fantasy map that depicts Cumorah in a mythical setting.
14. Although the consistent,
repeated teachings of the prophets and apostles should be enough to settle this
matter, there is evidence from archaeology, anthropology, geology, and geography
that supports the New York Cumorah as the scene of the final battles of the
Jaredites and the Nephites. There are dozens of archaeological sites in western
New York, dating to Book of Mormon times, that contain artifacts from the Ohio
Hopewell civilization (the archaeological and anthropological term for the
people who correspond to the Nephites). Bushels of stone weapons have been
recovered from the vicinity of Cumorah. Research in the area is ongoing.
15. When the
Mesoamerica/two-Cumorahs theory began to be accepted by LDS intellectuals,
Joseph Fielding Smith, then Church Historian and a member of the Quorum of the
Twelve, released a statement that he later reiterated after he became President
of the Quorum of the Twelve. He wrote, “Because of this theory some members of
the Church have become confused and greatly disturbed in their faith in the
Book of Mormon.” His prophetic warning against the efforts of the intellectuals
remains as valid today as it was when he originally published it.
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