Monday, December 11, 2023

Nephi Lowell Morris (1899) on the Book of Mormon Witnesses

  

Were they, then, enthusiasts, practicing a fraud upon themselves by their own fevered imaginations? If perchance this could have been their mental condition in the beginning, surely after they had been disappointed in all their hopes, stripped of every vestige of an authority among their fellows, publicly humiliated and finally disfellowshipped and left to dwindle in the rear while the great cause rolled indifferently on; and finding their time, talent, possessions, and characters all spent in a cause which now seemingly forsakes them, we say, surely then their fevered fanaticism would have been chilled, their judgment in forty years of disappointment would have become cooled, and they would have seen their error. Then, if they were not honest enough to retract, they, like all victims of enthusiasm, upon being liberated, would have been more or less vindicative, and would have sought revenge on the men who had misled them and the system that they had wrought their downfall. This state of mind they never arrived at, though every condition in their history was favorable to it had they in the beginning been enthusiasts. Thence we find no sound premises upon which to charge them with over enthusiasm.

 

DELUDED? Is it in the power of man, young or old, learned or ignorant to bring angels down from heaven or escort men into the presence of heavenly beings? And then and there command those men in such a manner that throughout all their days they dare not go contrary to that command? Not even though a score of years have passed after the “magician’s” death? If this is a delusion you must ascribe to the boy prophet supernatural power—a power superior to all mankind and that would require more faith than to believe that he was a prophet.

 

The objector may observe that it was a hallucination of the mind that these three men experienced. It is indeed a most incredible thing that three men of different dispositions and in sound health should each have the same hallucination at the same time, and, under different conditions, each remain the same in relation thereto. To believe such would truly be a most overwhelming hallucination. However if this thing be a delusion the world is openly challenged to reveal the fraud, expose the cheat, and thereby enlighten and disenthrall the thousands of honest men and women gathered from nigh “every nation under heaven.” (Nephi Lowell Morris, The “Book of Mormon: The Story of Its Discovery—its Construction—the Testimony of the Witnesses—The Internal Evidences of its Truth [Salt Lake City: Desert News, 1899], 24-25)