Difference between revisions of "Brass Plates 2"
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Revision as of 12:55, 9 September 2013
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (often inadvertently referred to as the Mormon Church) has scripture in addition to the Bible, The Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon is a record of the ancient people living in the Americas from about 600 BC to 400 AD. This record was found by Joseph Smith (as directed by an angel) on gold alloy plates. The golden plates are often confused with the brass plates, which while important to the Book of Mormon, are not the same thing. The plates that Joseph Smith received were the golden plates, the official record and history abridgement that was translated into what was published as the Book of Mormon. The brass plates are different: we know about the brass plates from Nephi, one of the first Book of Mormon prophets.
The brass plates contain the genealogy of the family that left Jerusalem to sail to the Americas as recorded in the beginning of the Book of Mormon. After fleeing Jerusalem to escape the city’s imminent destruction, Lehi, the head of this family and a prophet of God, asked his sons to go back to Jerusalem to retrieve the brass plates. After a few tries, Nephi, the son most prominent in the Book of Mormon, recovered the plates and brought them with the family throughout their voyages.
The brass plates are important because they contained Lehi’s family history. When Nephi brought the plates back from Jerusalem, Lehi reread them and spent a great deal of time studying them:
- And he beheld that they did contain the five books of Moses, which gave an account of the creation of the world, and also of Adam and Eve, who were our first parents; And also a record of the Jews from the beginning, . . . And also the prophecies of the holy prophets, from the beginning (1 Nephi 5:11-13).
Lehi and his family regarded the brass plates as scripture and found them important enough to risk their lives to retrieve before continuing on their journey. The brass plates were passed down from prophet to prophet for centuries, and in addition to genealogy contained many ancient prophecies and sermons, some of which are also located in the Bible (for instance, they included prophecies by Isaiah). We know about the content of the brass plates, because in the Book of Mormon, Nephi quotes directly from them several times. The official record that became the Book of Mormon was etched onto the golden plates, which Joseph Smith later translated. Joseph never had possession of the brass plates. [1]
The brass plates are important because they were scripture for Book of Mormon prophets. What we know of the content of the brass plates corresponds directly to content published in the Bible. This correlation supports the Book of Mormon story because it shows that Book of Mormon prophets shared scripture and prophets with civilizations recorded in the Bible. While latter-day prophets of The Church of Jesus Christ have never had possession of the brass plates, the brass plates certainly played a big role in the formation of the record that eventually became the Book of Mormon, one of the key books of scripture for The Church of Jesus Christ.
References
- ↑ “Plates and Records in the Book of Mormon,” Grant R. Hardy and Robert E. Parsons, To All the World: