Difference between revisions of "Book of Mormon/Legal issues"

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|summary=You do not get very far into 1 Nephi before confronting a jarring ethical dilemma that has disturbed modern readers almost from the very beginning. Hugh Nibley pointed out, “If the Book of Mormon were a work of fiction, nothing would have been easier than to have Laban already dead when Nephi found him (killed perhaps in a drunken brawl) or simply to omit altogether an episode which obviously distressed the writer quite as much as it does the reader.”21 <ref>Hugh Nibley, ''An Approach to the Book of Mormon'', 115.</ref> Yet, the text of the narrative appears to reflect an intimate understanding of Israelite law, making a case for the legality of the act.
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|summary=You do not get very far into 1 Nephi before confronting a jarring ethical dilemma that has disturbed modern readers almost from the very beginning. Hugh Nibley pointed out, “If the Book of Mormon were a work of fiction, nothing would have been easier than to have Laban already dead when Nephi found him (killed perhaps in a drunken brawl) or simply to omit altogether an episode which obviously distressed the writer quite as much as it does the reader.<ref>Hugh Nibley, ''An Approach to the Book of Mormon'', 115.</ref> Yet, the text of the narrative appears to reflect an intimate understanding of Israelite law, making a case for the legality of the act.
 
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Latest revision as of 09:40, 28 August 2014

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PERSPECTIVES MEDIA QUESTIONS RESOURCES 2014 CONFERENCE

    Book of Mormon Legal Issues

Topics


Book of Mormon Legal Issues


  • The slaying of Laban by Nephi
    Brief Summary: You do not get very far into 1 Nephi before confronting a jarring ethical dilemma that has disturbed modern readers almost from the very beginning. Hugh Nibley pointed out, “If the Book of Mormon were a work of fiction, nothing would have been easier than to have Laban already dead when Nephi found him (killed perhaps in a drunken brawl) or simply to omit altogether an episode which obviously distressed the writer quite as much as it does the reader.” [1] Yet, the text of the narrative appears to reflect an intimate understanding of Israelite law, making a case for the legality of the act. (Click here for full article)
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Notes


  1. Hugh Nibley, An Approach to the Book of Mormon, 115.

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