Mormon Scholar Predicts His Expulsion
SALT LAKE CITY - An Edmonds Community College instructor with Mormon
family roots says he will probably be excommunicated next week for articles he
has written questioning the validity of the Book of Mormon.
Thomas W.
Murphy, 35, published an article in the May Signature Books anthology "American
Apocrypha," which uses genetic data to discredit the Book of Mormon claim that
American Indians are heathen descendants of ancient Israel. The conclusion also
is the thesis of his doctoral dissertation at the University of
Washington.
"We're told to tell the truth, but not if the truth
contradicts church doctrine. I would prefer to tell the truth," Murphy
said.
Murphy, chairman of the anthropology department at Edmonds
Community College in Lynnwood, will face a church disciplinary council Dec. 8.
There, he will be allowed to make a statement, and council members may try to
change his mind about the Book of Mormon.
Church spokesman Dale Bills
declined to comment specifically on Murphy's case.
"Matters of church
discipline are handled on a confidential basis between church members and their
local leaders. Local church leaders determine what, if any, disciplinary action
is appropriate," Bills said.
Lavina Fielding Anderson, a historian who
was excommunicated in 1993, said Murphy is one of at least three scholars
excommunicated or threatened with expulsion in the past three months, raising
concerns about renewed efforts to purge dissident church members.
In an
e-mail sent Tuesday to Signature Books, Anderson said the two other scholars
were hoping to avoid public exposure. "Such ecclesiastical actions are deeply
distressing," she wrote.
Anderson was excommunicated after she presented
a history of troubles between church leaders, scholars and feminists at a 1992
conference.
The next year, Elder Boyd Packer, a member of the Quorum of
the Twelve Apostles, declared feminists, homosexuals and "so-called
intellectuals" dangers to the church. A series of excommunications followed,
though high-profile cases have waned.
Murphy said he has made it his
quest to expose racism in the Scriptures, starting with the teaching that
American Indians are descendants of Middle Easterners known as Lamanites, the
heathen antagonists in the Book of Mormon.
Mormons believe the Book of
Mormon is a history of the Americas beginning in 600 B.C. Scripture teaches that
a group of Lamanites who decided to forgo violence and war became Christians; and white.
"That's racist," Murphy said.
He also
objects to teachings that dark skin is a curse from God. Murphy said he also
questioned the lack of minority representation in church leadership, the
church's political campaigns against women's and gay rights and "excommunicating
scholars who honestly confront problems with church history and
doctrines."
Trent Stevens, a professor of anatomy and embryology at
Idaho State University, agreed with Murphy's genetics data that link the current
Indian population with native Siberians. But he disagreed with Murphy's
conclusions.
The Book of Mormon, Stevens said, makes no claim that
every American Indian descended from the original displaced Israelites, though
that is the traditional view every Mormon grows up with.
The Seattle Times November 30, 2002
Mormon Dissidents Rally Behind Scholar
A small article in an obscure book that could lead to the excommunication of a
local anthropology instructor from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints has turned into a national cause célèbre among some disaffected Mormons.
Thomas Murphy, 35, published an article in May in an anthology,
"American Apocrypha," in which he used genetic data to challenge the Book of
Mormon claim that Native Americans are descendants of a heathen tribe of ancient
Israel.
For that, Murphy, chairman of the anthropology department at
Edmonds Community College in Lynnwood and a graduate student at the University
of Washington, is being accused of apostasy. He will appear tomorrow evening
before a disciplinary council of local church officials who will decide whether
to excommunicate him.
A candlelight vigil, organized by some of Murphy's
students, will be held at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow at the headquarters of the Lynnwood
stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly referred to
as the Mormon church.
Vigils in support of Murphy also are planned in
several other cities tomorrow including Salt Lake City; Los Angeles; Washington,
D.C.; and Mesa, Ariz.
Steven Clark, of Park City, Utah, who is
organizing some of the vigils, says he is backing Murphy because the church,
"rather than altering the myth to fit reality, would rather excommunicate
scientists and intellectual people who are thinking through the issue."
Clark, who resigned from the Mormon church in 1996 and heads a group
fostering more open study of Mormon history, also objects to passages in the
Book of Mormon that he considers racist. These include passages that mention
"Lamanites," a Middle Eastern tribe that Mormons teach were the ancestors of
Native Americans.
The Book of Mormon considers dark skin to be cursed,
Clark said, and originally stated that when Lamanites convert to Christianity,
which to Mormons meant Mormonism, they would become "white and delightsome." In
1981, the church changed the phrase from "white and delightsome" to "pure and
delightsome."
Murphy says his goal is not to discredit the Book of
Mormon but to have it be regarded as scripture rather than history.
"There's a group of Mormon scholars, which includes me, that believe
that the scientific and historical evidence against the historical claims in the
Book of Mormon is so overwhelming that it's time to openly discuss the
possibility of viewing the Book of Mormon as fiction, but inspired fiction,"
Murphy said.
That view cuts to the very foundation of the faith.
Behind the Book
According to church orthodoxy, Joseph
Smith, the first Mormon prophet, had a vision that led him to golden plates that
were said to have told of some Hebrew families who came to the Western
Hemisphere around 600 B.C. In 1830, the Book of Mormon was published as a
translation of those golden plates, which, according to most church teachings,
were then taken up to heaven.
To dispute the Book of Mormon's claim that
Native Americans are the descendants of ancient Israel is to call into question
all the historical claims in the Book of Mormon, Murphy and his supporters
believe.
This is not the first time the historical truth of the Book of
Mormon has been questioned.
Ever since it was published, some have taken
issue with everything from its naming of animals that shouldn't have existed in
America during ancient times to the lack of any archaeological sites that can be
tied to the book.
What's relatively new is the use of DNA evidence to
challenge some of its claims.
But some scholars take issue with Murphy's
conclusions.
Although most Mormons believe the Book of Mormon covers the
history of all Native Americans, the book actually never says it does, said
Daniel Peterson, professor of Asian and Near Eastern Languages at Brigham Young
University in Provo, Utah.
So genetic evidence that says some Native
Americans were not descended from ancient Hebrews doesn't mean that other Native
Americans aren't, he said.
Clark, of Park City, says at least two other
Mormons in the U.S. are facing expulsion over similar issues. He and others
worry it's part of a movement by the national church to expel dissident
scholars, as happened about 10 years ago when six scholars were expelled from
the church in rapid succession.
Expulsion campaign denied
Kim Farah, a spokeswoman with the Mormon church in Salt Lake
City, says the church is "not at all" attempting to expel academic dissidents.
She said that "Mr. Murphy has publicly stated his dissatisfaction with
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on numerous occasions. His
complaints against the church go well beyond his current area of research, which
is refutable by other scholars."
Matthew Latimer, president of the
Lynnwood stake and the man who will ultimately decide whether to expel Murphy,
said "there's been no direction from Salt Lake on this. This is a purely local
matter." Latimer declined to discuss the case further, citing church
confidentiality.
Some experts say protecting the integrity of the book
is of increasing importance to the church.
"It used to be that you knew
a Mormon because they didn't smoke, drink alcohol or drink coffee," said Jan
Shipps, professor emeritus of history and religious studies at Indiana
University-Purdue University in Indianapolis. "Now anyone with good sense
doesn't smoke, and they know coffee makes cholesterol go higher."
Belief
in the Book of Mormon is one of two remaining things; the other being
participating in rituals at Mormon temples; that makes Mormonism
distinctive, Shipps said.
The religion does allow individuals to hold
differing interpretations of the Book of Mormon, Shipps said. "But once you
begin to publish and your interpretation differs from not only the Book of
Mormon but doctrinal positions generally, then you are flirting with
disfellowship, or apostasy."
Murphy, who is a direct descendant of one
of the first Mormon families, says he knows many Mormons disagree with him. He
expects to be excommunicated tomorrow.
"I wish the church would provide
open space for discussion on the Book of Mormon," he said. "But I'm not
optimistic that that's going to happen."
The Seattle Times December 7, 2002
Mormons Postpone Council; Leader to Meet with Edmonds Teacher
The Lynnwood stake of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has decided to postpone indefinitely
a disciplinary council that could have led to the excommunication of a local
Mormon scholar who challenged a central tenet of the faith.
Thomas
Murphy, Edmonds Community College anthropology department chairman and a
University of Washington graduate student, published an article earlier this
year using genetic evidence to challenge the Book of Mormon claim that Native
Americans were descended from a heathen tribe of ancient Israel.
Murphy
was accused of apostasy and became a cause célèbre among disaffected Mormons
nationwide. Vigils in his support had been planned in several cities for
tonight, when the disciplinary council was to be held.
Matthew Latimer,
president of the Lynnwood stake, said in a written statement: "Decisions
relating to spiritual welfare are a private matter between each member and his
or her local Church leader. Unfortunately, this matter has received significant
media attention, and Mr. Murphy himself has stated publicly that my decision to
hold a disciplinary council is emotionally very difficult for him. In light of
these considerations, I think it is best not to proceed at this
time."
Latimer also said in the statement that he hoped to discuss
matters with Murphy in confidence, "in the hope that his relationship to the
Church can be strengthened."
Further action on Murphy's case likely will
not be taken until after Latimer and Murphy have had a chance to talk, said
Bruce Merrell, a spokesman for Latimer.
Murphy said last night that he
would be willing to meet with Latimer and that he was "relieved" and "hopeful"
the church would be willing to consider his views.
The Seattle Times December 8, 2002
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