Contradictions
Between the Book of Mormon and the Bible

Copyright © 1999 Institute
for Religious Research. All rights reserved.
There are many serious objections to the
claim of Joseph Smith and the LDS church that the Book of Mormon is divinely inspired
latter-day scripture supplemental to the Bible. However, none are more significant than
the numerous contradictions between Book of Mormon teaching and the Bible. This list is
illustrative only, not exhaustive.
1. The Book of Mormon
teaches that little children are not capable of sin because they do not have a sinful
nature (Moroni 8:8). In contrast, the Bible in Psalm 51:5 clearly teaches that we have
sinful nature from birth: "Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my
mother conceived me" (NIV). (This does not mean that those who die in infancy are
lost.*)
2. The Book of Mormon
teaches that the disobedience of Adam and Eve in eating the forbidden fruit was necessary
so that they could have children and bring joy to mankind (2 Nephi 2:23-25). In contrast,
the Bible specifically declares that Adams transgression was a sinful act of
rebellion that unleashed the power of sin and death in Gods perfect world (Romans
5:12; 8:20-21). There is no Biblical support for the view that Adam and Eve could only
fulfill the command to "be fruitful and multiply" (Genesis 1:28) by disobeying
Gods command regarding the forbidden fruit (Genesis 2:17). The Book of Mormon
teaching that these divine commands are contradictory, and that God expected Adam and Eve
to figure out that in reality He wanted them to break the latter command ("of the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it") in order to keep
the former ("be fruitful and multiply"), has no basis in logic or the Biblical
text, and attributes equivocation to God.
3. The Book of Mormon
teaches that black skin is a sign of Gods curse, so that white-skinned people are
considered morally and spiritually superior to black skinned people (2 Nephi 5:21). In
contrast, the Bible teaches that God "made of one blood all nations of men"
(Acts 17:26, KJV), that in Christ distinctions of ethnicity, gender and social class are
erased (Galatians 3:28), and that God condemns favoritism (James 2:1).
4. The Book of Mormon
teaches that, "it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do" (2
Nephi 25:23; see also Moroni 10:32). In contrast, the Bible teaches that apart from
Christ we are dead in sin (Ephesians 2:1,5) and unable to do anything to merit
forgiveness and eternal life. Salvation is wholly of grace (Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans
11:6; Titus 3:5-6), not by grace plus works. Good works are a result, not the basis,
of a right relationship with God (Ephesians 2:10).
5. According to the Book of
Mormon, about 600 years before Christ, a Nephite prophet predicted that "many plain
and precious parts" (1 Nephi 13:26-28) would be removed from the Bible. In contrast,
from the Bible it is clear that during His earthly ministry, Jesus himself constantly
quoted from the Old Testament Scriptures, and showed full confidence in their completeness
and accurate transmission as they had survived down to His time. Jesus declared that
"heaven and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass away" (Mark 13:31;
see also Matthew 5:18), and promised His disciples who were to pen the New
Testament that the Holy Ghost "shall teach you all things, and bring all things to
your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you" (John 14:26); Jesus further
promised the apostles that they would "bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should
remain" (John 15:16). These promises clearly imply that the fruit of the apostles
the New Testament Scriptures and the Christian church would endure.
6. According to a Book of
Mormon prophecy (Helaman 14:27), at the time of Christs crucifixion "darkness
should cover the face of the whole earth for the space of three days." In
contrast, the New Testament gospel accounts declare repeatedly that there was darkness for
only three hours while Jesus was on the cross (Matthew 27:45; Mark 15:33; Luke
23:24).
7. The Book of Mormon people
are said to have observed "all things according to the law of Moses (2 Nephi 5:10;
25:24). However, although they are supposed to have been Hebrews, they were descendents of
the tribe of Joseph (1 Nephi 5:17) or Manasseh (Alma 10:3), not the tribe of Levi and
family line of Aaron, as the Law of Moses dictates (Numbers 3:10; Exodus 29:9; Numbers
18:1-7), so they would not have had a legitimate priesthood.
8. According to the Book of
Mormon, there were many high priests serving at the same time (Mosiah 11:11; Alma 13:9-10;
46:6,38; Helaman 3:25) in the New World, among those it describes as Jewish immigrants
from ancient Israel who "kept the law of Moses" (e.g., 2 Nephi 25:10; Jacob 4:5;
Jarom 1:5). In contrast, it is clear from the Bible that only one individual at a time
occupied the office of high priest under the Old Testament dispensation (see, for
example Leviticus 21:10; Matthew 26:3; Hebrews 8:6-7). (The mention in Luke 3:2 of
"Annas and Caiaphas being the high priests" is not a real exception -- in
Christs time Israel was under the domination of the Romans, who intervened to change
the high priest at will. That is, this office became a kind of "political
football," rather than following the appointment process dictated in the Law of
Moses. See John 18:13, which describes Annas as "father-in-law to Caiaphas,
which was the high priest that same year.")
9. The people described in
the Book of Mormon operated multiple temples (Alma 16:13; 23:2; 26:29). This violates the
dictates of the Old Testament Scriptures on two counts: First, God commanded Israel to
build only one temple to reflect that fact that there is only one true God (Deuteronomy
12:5,13-14; 16:5-6). Second, the one legitimate temple was to be built in Jerusalem
(Zion), the location designated by God (The Old Testament is filled with explicit
references to God choosing Jerusalem [Zion] as the place where "His name would
dwell" in the temple: for example, 1 Kings 8:44,48; 11:13,32,36; 14:21; 2 Kings 21:7;
23:27; 1 Chronicles 28:4; 2 Chronicles 6:6; 7:12,16; Psalm 78:68-69; Isaiah 18:7.
10. The most common biblical
terms used to describe the Old Testament priesthood, temple and appointed feasts, are
entirely missing from the Book of Mormon. Here are 10 examples of such biblical terms with
their frequencies, that never appear once in the Book of Mormon:
- "laver" (13 times in Bible)
- "incense" (121 times in Bible)
- "ark of the covenant" (48 times in
Bible)
- "sons of Aaron" (97 times in Bible)
- "mercy seat" (23 in Bible)
- "day of atonement" (21 times in
Bible)
- "feast of tabernacles" (17 times in
Bible)
- "passover" (59 times in Bible)
- "house of the LORD" (627 in Bible)
- "Aaron" this name appears 48
times in the Book of Mormon, but never in reference to the biblical Aaron or the Aaronic
priesthood
Conclusion: The contradictions between
the Book of Mormon and the Bible constitute a most serious obstacle to accepting the Book
of Mormon as Latter-day scripture supplemental to the Bible. The Bible came first, not the
Book of Mormon. And whereas the Bible is organically linked to the earthly ministry of
Jesus Christ by extensive surviving manuscript evidence going back as far as A.D. 125-30,
the Book of Mormon is wholly lacking in any such evidences of ancient origin. Is it not
reasonable, therefore, to make the Bible the standard for judging the Book of Mormon, and
not the other way around? If we accept the Bible as our "measuring stick" for
spiritual truth, the Book of Mormon must be rejected.
Luke P. Wilson
*A free
article on infant salvation is available on request from the Institute
for Religious Research, 1340 Monroe Ave. N.W., Grand Rapids, MI, 49505, U.S.A. Please
include a stamped self-addressed envelope with your request.
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