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Question: Did the Three Witnesses each add their own signature to the original Book of Mormon manuscript?: Difference between revisions

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He replied, "I don't know."<ref>[https://archive.org/details/improvementera31unse "The Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon,"] Improvement Era, vol. 3, no. 1, (Nov. 1899), 61-65.</ref>
He replied, "I don't know."<ref>[https://archive.org/details/improvementera31unse "The Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon,"] Improvement Era, vol. 3, no. 1, (Nov. 1899), 61-65.</ref>
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===The original manuscript was placed in the cornerstone of the Nauvoo House, where it was mostly destroyed by water damage===
<blockquote>
Further facts in relation to the manuscript of the Book of Mormon. I saw the Prophet Joseph Smith, Jr., hide up the above manuscript unto the Lord in the south-east corner of the Nauvoo House, Illinois. I stood within eight or ten feet of him, heard and saw what he said and did, on that important occasion, which I freely testify to all the world.
[Signed]
FREDERICK KESSLER, SEN.,
Bishop of the Sixteenth Ward,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
October 12, 1878. <ref>[https://archive.org/details/improvementera31unse "The Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon,"] Improvement Era, vol. 3, no. 1, (Nov. 1899), 61-65.</ref>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>



Revision as of 21:33, 13 December 2014

Question: Did the Three Witnesses each add their own signature to the original Book of Mormon manuscript?

David Whitmer (1878): "Yes, we each signed his own name"

According to David Whitmer, each of the Three Witnesses added their signatures to the original Book of Mormon manuscript:

In September, 1878, in company with Apostle Orson Pratt, the writer visited David Whitmer, at Richmond, Ray County, Missouri. In the presence of David. C. Whitmer, the son of Jacob, Philander Page, David J. Whitmer, son of David Whitmer, George Scheweich, Col. James W. Black, J. R. B. Van Cleave and some others, Father David Whitmer was asked if the three witnesses signed their own names to their testimony to the Book of Mormon? Father Whitmer unhesitatingly replied with emphasis:

"Yes, we each signed his own name."

"Then," said the questioner, "how is it that the names of all the witnesses are found here, (in D. W's manuscript) written in the same hand writing?"

This question seemed to startle Father Whitmer, and, after examining the signatures he replied:

"Oliver must have copied them."

"Then, where are the original documents?" was asked.

He replied, "I don't know."[1]

The original manuscript was placed in the cornerstone of the Nauvoo House, where it was mostly destroyed by water damage

Further facts in relation to the manuscript of the Book of Mormon. I saw the Prophet Joseph Smith, Jr., hide up the above manuscript unto the Lord in the south-east corner of the Nauvoo House, Illinois. I stood within eight or ten feet of him, heard and saw what he said and did, on that important occasion, which I freely testify to all the world.

[Signed] FREDERICK KESSLER, SEN., Bishop of the Sixteenth Ward, Salt Lake City, Utah. October 12, 1878. [2]

The printer's manuscript was copied by Oliver Cowdery, including the witness statements

The printer's manuscript was created by Oliver Cowdery to carry to the printer so that the original manuscript would not be lost. This second manuscript is entirely in the handwriting of Oliver Cowdery.

Most critics who make the claim that none of the witnesses signed their testimonies fail to note that one of the witnesses signatures on the printer's manuscript is genuine: that of Oliver Cowdery himself.

Critics of the Church also fail to note that David Whitmer, in fact, made a point of affirming that his testimony was true just as it was printed in the Book of Mormon.


Notes

  1. "The Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon," Improvement Era, vol. 3, no. 1, (Nov. 1899), 61-65.
  2. "The Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon," Improvement Era, vol. 3, no. 1, (Nov. 1899), 61-65.