O LITTLE TOWN OF JERUSALEM
By Timothy Oliver
"And Behold, he shall be born of Mary, at Jerusalem which is the
land of our forefathers, she being a virgin, a precious and chosen vessel,
who shall be overshadowed and conceive by the power of the Holy Ghost,
and bring forth a son, yea, even the Son of God" - Alma 7:10.
The passage from the Book of Mormon, above, is one of the more obvious
errors found therein. It clearly contradicts the Bible, yet Mormons would
have the world believe that the same Holy Spirit that inspired the Bible
also inspired the Book of Mormon and the prophecy at Alma 7:10. So clear
a contradiction cannot be left unexplained.
Since Christ was born at Bethlehem, some Mormons have argued that the
words "at Jerusalem which is the land of our forefathers" refer not to
the city itself, but to the general territory surrounding it, inclusive
of Bethlehem, some six miles distant. Such imprecision was justified, according
to this argument, because more than 500 years after leaving Palestine,
the Nephites did not know of Bethlehem, and therefore Jerusalem was the
closest thing they would know of in that general vicinity.
This whole argument is specious. First, "Jerusalem which is the land
of our forefathers" is clearly not a reference to the land around
Jerusalem. The text specifies Jerusalem itself. And it does not say that
Jerusalem was in the land of their forefathers, but that Jerusalem is
the land of their forefathers. Their forefathers, Lehi and Nephi, did not
live in the surrounding territory. They lived in Jerusalem. They
were from Jerusalem. Jerusalem, therefore, not Bethlehem, was their
land. And Bethlehem, therefore, was not the land of the Nephites' forefathers;
Jerusalem was, just as the text declares. Thus the reference is not to
the surrounding territory.
A Mormon, however, might want to press Alma's words "our forefathers"
to mean more than their Book of Mormon forefathers, Lehi and Nephi. He
must assume (on no specific warrant) that Lehi and Nephi had ancestors
who were not from Jerusalem, as they were. Then, perhaps, "the land of
our forefathers" could be pressed to qualify "Jerusalem" to mean a wider
area than Jerusalem the city.
Again, it is a specious argument. Had Alma intended to avoid mention
of Bethlehem, as a place unknown to the Nephites, even while having it
in mind as part of the general vicinity included in "the land of our forefathers,"
he could have done so without inaccurately referring to it as Jerusalem.
Alma easily, simply, could have prophesied, "he shall be born in the land
of our forefathers, near Jerusalem."
Such a statement would have allowed for "the land of our forefathers"
to include the unnamed Bethlehem. It also would have conveyed the general
locale of Christ's birthplace in terms relevant to Nephites ignorant of
Bethlehem, without inaccurately referring to Bethlehem as Jerusalem. In
short, it would have been both understandable and accurate.
It might be noted in passing that the text of the Book of Mormon was
not written for the people whose history it describes. It was written,
"sealed up," and immediately hidden for later revelation to the people
of the "last days,"1 among whom Bethlehem
is widely known.
However, even granting that the original prophecy was not written, but
spoken to people living about 83 b.c., the idea that Alma had to specify
"Jerusalem," because his people had no knowledge of Bethlehem and could
form no idea of its location, is simply untrue (see below).
THE BRASS PLATES
When the prophet Lehi took his family and left Jerusalem he forgot one
important item-the Scriptures. They were recorded on brass plates, which
were in the custody of a relative named Laban. Later, the Lord reminded
Lehi, and he sent his sons back to retrieve the plates.
After their first attempt misfired the elder brothers, Laman, Lemuel,
and Sam, wanted to return to their father without accomplishing their mission.
The youngest son, Nephi, had to urge them to finish the task. He reminded
them the records were essential to preserving for their own children "the
words which have been spoken by the mouth of all the holy prophets, which
have been delivered unto them by the Spirit and power of God, since
the world began, even down to this present time."2
Jerusalem During the Second Temple Period. Source:
ArtToday.
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Later, when they had retrieved the plates and returned to their father
in the wilderness, Lehi examined the plates' contents. His examination
confirmed Nephi's earlier statement. Among other things the plates contained
"the prophecies of the holy prophets, from the beginning, even down to
the commencement of the reign of Zedekiah."3
Zedekiah reigned from 597 to 586 b.c.
The prophet Micah prophesied probably between 735 and 715 b.c., during
the reigns of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. His prophecy, then, was recorded
on the brass plates Lehi took from Jerusalem. Micah prophesied of the coming
of Christ: "But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the
thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is
to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting."4
The Nephites thus had an accurate prophecy of Christ's Bethlehem birthplace
recorded in their Scriptures on the brass plates. |
These brass plates were preserved among the Nephites down to the reign
of king Benjamin, who put them in the charge of his son, king Mosiah, about
124 b.c. (Mosiah 1:3-5, 16). King Mosiah conferred them upon Alma about
92 b.c. (Mosiah 28:20), who likewise turned them over to his son Helaman
about 73 b.c. (Alma 37:1-20, 47). These brass plates, then, were in
the possession of Alma himself at the time he made his false prophecy
(Alma 7:10, above), at about 83 b.c.
ALMA AND HIS PEOPLE
Alma was speaking to church members, believers. He testifies of them in
the same chapter, vv. 19-20, that they were "in the paths of righteousness,"
and that they had "the testimony of his word," that is, God's Word, guiding
them. If God's Word was guiding them, they had to have been familiar with
it, in which case they would have known of Micah's prophecy of Christ's
birthplace in Bethlehem. Any true prophet among them (and Alma particularly,
since he actually had the brass plates), being familiar with their Scriptures,
would have prophesied correctly, in accordance with Micah's prophecy, that
Christ would be born at Bethlehem.
Even if somehow Alma and his listeners had all been completely
ignorant of Bethlehem or its location (actually a very unlikely possibility
under the circumstances), the Holy Spirit knew, and could have informed
them all. Alma claimed his message was from the Spirit (vv. 8-9), and that
"the Spirit knoweth all things" (v. 13). The Spirit could easily
have directed Alma to say that Christ "shall be born at Bethlehem, near
Jerusalem which is [or, is in] the land of our forefathers." Either
expression would have been precise, as well as accurate and non-confusing
to his audience, both ancient and modern.
SUMMATION
The Nephites, and Alma in particular, already had in their Scriptures an
accurate prophecy identifying Bethlehem as Christ's birthplace, when Alma
made his false prophecy. But even if they had lacked such a record, Alma's
prophecy could not be excused on such grounds. Perhaps the most damning
aspect of the whole Mormon argument against Alma 7:10 being a false prophecy
is its assumption that "the Spirit," of whom Alma testified that He "knoweth
all things," evidently did not know how to mention Bethlehem in a way to
make it relevant to the Nephites. As stated, Alma's prophecy either wrongly
refers to Jerusalem instead of Bethlehem, or, it inaccurately refers to
Bethlehem as Jerusalem. As seen above, even mere men can formulate any
number of ways to have stated the prophecy, whether Bethlehem is mentioned
or not, that would have avoided both errors, and remained both accurate
and understandable. There is simply no excuse for Alma's misidentification
of the Savior's birthplace, other than Joseph Smith's own ignorance at
the time he authored the Book of Mormon.
1 Introductory information in the front of the Book
of Mormon-the title page, and "A Brief Explanation About The Book of Mormon."
2 1 Nephi 3:20; emphasis added.
3 1 Nephi 5:13 (10-14).
4 Micah 5:2.
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by R. Philip Roberts
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