Topical Guide/Book of Mormon/Archaeology and the Book of Mormon/DNA and the Book of Mormon
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DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Relationship of Amerindians to "Lamanites"—
Who are the Lamanites? When asked about the Church’s official position on this matter by a writer, a Church spokesman said: "As to whether these were the first inhabitants…we don't have a position on that. Our scripture does not try to account for any other people who may have lived in the New World before, during or after the days of the Jaredites and the Nephites, and we don't have any official doctrine about who the descendants of the Nephites and the Jaredites are. Many Mormons believe that American Indians are descendants of the Lamanites [a division of the Nephites], but that's not in the scripture."[1] Note that this reply pre-dates any publication of DNA criticism. (Link)- Statements—A collection of various statements from Church leaders about Amerindian origins/identity (Link)
- Are the Maya and the Olmec the Lamanites and the Jaredites?—A common criticism is that LDS associate the Nephites and/or Lamanites with the Maya, and the Jaredite civilization with the Olmec. It is easy, based upon typical artistic representations used by the Church, to see why LDS typically associate the Nephites or Lamanites with the Maya. The assumption by critics that LDS associate the Nephites and the Lamanites with "the Maya" is an oversimplification of the facts. Most Church members view "the Maya" as a single, homogeneous group of people whom they associate with the magnificent ruins of the Classic Mayan civilization found in Mesoamerica. However, the Classic period occurs after Book of Mormon times. LDS research has focused on identifying the characteristics of the Preclassic Mayan culture, which does indeed cover the time period addressed by the Book of Mormon. (Link)
- Statements by Church leaders related to the identity of the Lamanites—A collection of all known statements made by Church leaders regarding the identity of the Lamanites (Link)
- 19th century statements—A collection of statements made by 19th-century Church leaders regarding the identity of the Lamanites. (Link)
- 20th century statements—A collection of statements made by 20th-century Church leaders regarding the identity of the Lamanites. (Link)
- 21st century statements—A collection of statements made by 21st-century Church leaders regarding the identity of the Lamanites. (Link)
- Is Lehi the exclusive ancestor or among the ancestors of Amerindians?—LDS leaders have expressed a variety of opinions regarding whether or not all Amerindians are literal descendants of Lehi. Population genetics indicate that Lehi can likely be counted among the ancestors of all native Americans—a position that the Church has reinforced by changing the 1981 Book of Mormon introduction from "principal ancestors" to "among the ancestors." (Link)
- Relationship to Polynesians (Link)
- Statements—A collection of various statements from Church leaders about Polynesian origins/identity (Link)
- Geography issues—
A variety of geographic models have been suggested for the Book of Mormon. Some geographic models introduce other difficulties for the DNA attacks. (Link)- Haplogroup X2a—Some have tried to use a genetic group called haplotype X2a as proof of the Book of Mormon, but the science at present cannot support this. (Link)
- Are all Amerindians "Lamanites"?—
Critics have claimed that DNA tests mean that all Amerindians cannot be "Lamanites," and even some Church authors have conceded this point too readily. (Link) - What is Lehi's ancestry?—
Genetic attacks on the Book of Mormon focus on the fact that Amerindian DNA seems closest to Asian DNA, and not DNA from "the Middle East" or "Jewish" DNA. However, this attack ignores several key points, among which is the fact that the Book of Mormon states that Lehi and his family are clearly not Jews. (Link) - How does one identify "Jewish" or "Middle Eastern" DNA?—
Identifying DNA criteria for Manasseh and Ephraim may always be beyond our reach. But, even identifying markers for Jews—a group that has remained relatively cohesive and refrained from intermarriage with others more than most groups—is an extraordinarily difficult undertaking. (Link)- Lemba and Cohen modal haplotype—Some critics use the "Lemba" as an example of a group proven to be Jewish via DNA testing as proof that such a testing should be possible for Book of Mormon people. But, this example is misleading. The Lemba were identified as Jewish because of a marker called the "Cohen modal haplotype." This marker is carried by about half of those who claim descent from Aaron, Moses' brother, and only 2-3% of other Jews. But, the Book of Mormon does not suggest—and in fact seems to exclude—the idea that Levites (the priestly family of Aaron) were among the Lehi party. (Link)
- What methods of DNA tests are available?—
DNA issues can be complex for the non-specialist (especially those who were in high school more than twenty years ago, before much of the modern understanding of DNA was available). In this article we review the methods of DNA testing that are available, along with their strengths and their limitations. (Link) - New World death rate after European contact—
Approximately ninety percent of the Amerindian population died out following contact with the Europeans; most of this was due to infectious disease against which they had no defense.[2] Since different genes likely provide different resistances to infectious disease, it may be that eliminating 90% of the pre-contact gene pool has significantly distorted the true genetic picture of Lehi's descendants. (Link) - Jaredite influence—
Critics often over-look the Jaredites, and assume (as in the hemispheric models that the Jaredites can have contributed nothing of consequence to the Lehite DNA picture. But, it is not clear that this must be the case. Some LDS have believed in a total eradication of the Jaredites, others have argued that Jaredite remnants survived and mixed with the Lehites. Bruce R. McConkie, while believing that the majority of Amerindian descent was from Israel (i.e. Lehi, Ishmael, and Mulek) nevertheless wrote: "The American Indians, however, as Columbus found them also had other blood than that of Israel in their veins. It is possible that isolated remnants of the Jaredites may have lived through the period of destruction in which millions of their fellows perished." (Link) - Fundamentalist "suicide bombing"—
It should be remembered too that many sectarian critics use DNA science in a sort of "suicide bombing" attack on the Church.[3] The fundamentalist Christian critics are happy to use DNA as a stick to beat the Book of Mormon, but do not tell their readers that there is much stronger DNA evidence for concepts which fundamentalist Christian readers might not accept, such as evolutionary change in species, or human descent from other primates. (Link) - Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church
FAIR Articles
- FAIR Topical Guide: DNA and the Book of Mormon FAIR link
Videos
| The Book of Mormon and New World DNA, FAIR Video, (Link to all FAIR Videos) |
- Part 1: The Book of Mormon and New World DNA
- Part 2: The Book of Mormon and New World DNA
- Part 3: The Book of Mormon and New World DNA
| The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon, D. Jeffrey Meldrum and Trent D. Stephens, 2003 FAIR Conference |
- Part 1: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Part 2: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Part 3: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Part 4: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Part 5: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
- Part 6: The Children of Lehi: DNA and the Book of Mormon
| DNA & the Book of Mormon as Examined by a Molecular Biologist, Ryan Parr, 2005 FAIR Conference, (Link to all FAIR Videos) |
- Part 1: DNA and The Book of Mormon
- Part 2: DNA and The Book of Mormon
- Part 3: DNA and The Book of Mormon
- Part 4: DNA and The Book of Mormon
- Part 5: DNA and The Book of Mormon
| DNA and the Book of Mormon, Dr. David Stewart, 2006 FAIR Conference |