Saturday, December 10, 2022

Nephi L. Morris on the Book of Mormon

  

From a strictly human standpoint the Book of Mormon may be regarded as perhaps the most presumptuous piece of literature that America has produced. In the minds of many unsympathetic critics it is unhesitatingly classed as a clumsy imposture, undeserving of serious consideration at the hands of intelligent people. Its publication may be regarded as a manifestation of the highest form of fanatical zealotry. On the other hand the simple story it tells concerning its own origin and the contents of the book itself are extremely humble in spirit and character. Still, its publication by Joseph Smith presents one of the boldest and most audacious things ever done in the field of literature. If the book is not an imposture and a hoax, its possession and translation by Joseph Smith can only be explained on the remarkable hypothesis of a divine revelation. (Nephi L. Morris, “Foreword,” in Josiah E. Hickman, The Romance of the Book of Mormon [Salt Lake City: The Deseret News Press, 1937], 11)