April 14, 2007

Book Review: By the Hand of Mormon: The American Scripture that Launched a New World Religion by Terryl L. Givens

Grade: A

"Though argument does not create conviction, lack of it destroys belief. What seems to be proved may not be embraced; but what no one shows the ability to defend is quickly abandoned. Rational argument does not create belief, but it maintains a climate in which belief may flourish." -Austin Ferrer

In By the Hand of Mormon, Terryl Givens examines why the Book of Mormon "has been taken seriously--for very different reasons--by generations of devoted believers and confirmed skeptics." Although his aim is not apologetics, by examining what the Book of Mormon "has meant, and might conceivably yet come to mean, to its various readerships," Givens maintains a climate in which belief may flourish. His work is a masterpiece.

I read By the Hand of Mormon as part of a book group formed by my good friend James Olsen. I recommend this book and James Olsen's book group without reservation. I'm thankful to the book group for renewing my belief that things are better understood when discussed with others. I'm thankful for Terryl Givens for strengthening my testimony of the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon through his careful, well-researched analysis.

This is an informative book. If your knowledge of the Book of Mormon is like mine--largely obtained by reading the Book itself and through a lifetime of Sunday school lessons, conference talks and discussion with members and non-members alike--then you will learn something by reading this book. Additionally, By the Hand of Mormon will increase your confidence that the Book is true. Given's careful examination of the facts reinforced my testimony and enhanced my ability to address my beliefs in academic terms.

Here is the description from the front flap: In By the Hand of Mormon "Givens examines the Book of Mormon's role as a divine testament of the Last Days and as a sacred sign of Joseph Smith's status as a modern-day prophet. He assesses its claim to be a history of the pre-Columbian peopling of the Western Hemisphere. . . . Givens explores how the Book of Mormon has been defined as a cultural product, the imaginative ravings of a rustic religion-maker more inspired by the winds of culture than the breath of God. He also investigates its status as a new American Bible . . . probes the Book's shifting relationship to Mormon doctrine and its changing reputation among theologians and scholars. Finally . . . Givens highlights the Book's role as the engine behind what may become the next world religion."

Here are a few nice excerpts on analyzing the Book of Mormon's theological merit: "Bruce R. McConkie gave canonical utterance to the logic of LDS testimony that continues to be a feature of member and missionary expression alike: "The Book of Mormon . . . stands as a witness to all the world that Joseph Smith was the Lord's anointed through whom the foundation was laid for the great latter-day work of restoration."

"As a result . . . the Book of Mormon was seldom presented --or received by the appreciative--in terms of its claims, arguments, or doctrine. Its a priori incarnation as sacred history inscribed in gold, together with the aura of supernatural origins always framed its mention, far overshadowed and even displaced whatever internal persuasiveness it might have had. And just as Joseph’s prophetic authority was guarantor of the text's sacred status, so the very presence of this voice speaking "out of the dust," predicted by scripture and verified by the voice of angels and human witnesses alike, was guarantor that Joseph was indeed a prophet of God."

Its status as authoritative text "polarizes the Book of Mormon's reception around the issue of authenticity rather than theological merit."

Givens borrows a framework for understanding this phenomenon from Russian critic Mikhail Bakhtin, who "argues that there are two modes of language by which we are influenced: authoritative discourse and internally persuasive discourse. The latter category is any language that makes its claim upon us on the basis of its logic, rhetorical appeal, compelling argument, or emotional sway. 'The authoritative word,' on the other hand, 'demands that we acknowledge it, that we make it our own; it binds us, quite independent of any power it might have to persuade us internally; we encounter it with its authority already fused to it.' Some language, in other words, is so wedded to an authoritative source that we find it difficult or impossible to assess the content as content. We cannot analyze, negotiate, critique, or selectively assimilate it."

4 comments:

Katie said...

Excellent review Jayme. I definately will read this book. Thanks.

Ian said...

Great review, Jayme. I've been meaning to pick this up, but I haven't talked to anyone who has actually read it. Now I'll really have to get it.

Katie @SwimBikeQuilt said...

By the Hand of Mormon sounds like a really interesting book, one that I would like to read. I think I'm finally far enough removed from grad school that I can pick up a book like that again.

In his book My Life With the Saints, James Martin (I know, I know, I need to get up to speed on Demons) introduces a plethora of catholic saints. In this spiritual memoir, Martin discusses our need for the saints [substitue Latter-day Saint if you wish)

"I began to see [the saints] as models of holiness relevant to contemporary believers, and to understand the remarkable way that God works in the lives of individuals. Each saint was holy in his or her unique way, revealing how God celebrates individuality" (6)

"Moreover, I found companions among the saints--friends to turn to when I needed a helping hand... of course some might argue (and some do) that all you need is Jesus. And that's true: Jesus is everything... But God in his wisdom has also given us these companions of Jesus to accompany us along the way, so why not accept the gift of their friendship and encouragment?"

This made me really want to seek out "companions of Jesus," as Martin puts it, and to be more worthy to be described as such. It helped on a day when I was really hating 3pm church, at least.

Mike Blakesley said...

Jayme, great review and insightful comments. I am excited to get By the Hand of Mormon soon.

I was interested to see that you cited Bahktin. In our comedy and satire class we talked about his a bit, but in a different way. I guess that Bahktin was also quite interested in the carnival lifestyle. He studied carnivals and identified a few social factors that motivated the production and success of carnivals. For example, in a carnival the social heirarchy is inverted (think of the Bishop or King being the one in the dunking tank). The carnival clown, or perhaps the village idiot, as part of the inversion, is sometimes paraded around as the mock-king for a day.

Using Bahktin was effective when we watched certain films that had carnivalesque qualities. I think of School of Rock as one example (Jack Black, the social loser, is put in charge of the social elite). Let me know if you want to know more about it or not!

Sorry that this has nothing to do with the Book of Mormon...