From The Truth, The Way, and the Life: The Truth About the Way B.H. Roberts Viewed the Book of Mormon at the End of His Life

Critics
often claim that a famous LDS General Authority, intellectual, and
prolific defender of the faith, B.H. Roberts, lost his testimony of the
Book of Mormon after investigating its weaknesses, including evidence
that it was a modern creation based on other works available in Joseph
Smith’s day. This conclusion is based on writings from the early 1920s in which
he explored the arguments that critics might make. Though incisively
written and developed at length, he clearly explained that this was a
case of playing devil’s advocate to help the Church prepare for future
challenges and did not reflect his personal beliefs:

Let me say once and for all, so as to avoid what might otherwise
call for repeated explanation, that what is herein set forth does not
represent any conclusions of mine. This report herewith
submitted is what it purports to be, namely a ‘study of Book of Mormon
origins’ for the information of those who ought to know everything about
it pro et con, as well as that which has been produced against it, and
that which may be produced against it. I am taking the position that
our faith is not only unshaken but unshakable in the Book of Mormon,
and therefore we can look without fear upon all that can be said against
it
.  (Letter to President Heber J. Grant dated March 15, 1922, as cited by McKay V. Jones, “Evasive Ignorance: Anti-Mormon Claims that B.H. Roberts Lost His Testimony,” FAIRMormon.org, emphasis by M.V. Jones.)

His personal beliefs after that exercise can most accurately be gauged by his magnum opus, The Truth, The Way, the Life,
a book which he spent many years preparing and which summarized his
lifetime of learning and experience in matters of faith and theology.
This book was unpublished at his death because he refused to tone down
some sections related to evolution (the existence of “pre-Adamites”)
that worried other leaders in the Church.

Now that the book has
been published, though, we can evaluate where he stood on the Book
of Mormon, and the result is unquestionable and undeniable: he firmly
believed it was an ancient record of a real people in the ancient
Americas, preserved on gold plates, delivered to Joseph Smith through
the ministry of an angel, and translated by the power of God by a true
and living prophet. The Book of Mormon in his view was a powerful
witness of the reality of Jesus Christ and contained a powerful,
“thrilling” account of his visit to the ancient Americas. Those who
claim B.H. Roberts secretly lost his testimony do not know B.H. Roberts
and have ignored his statements about his devil’s advocate Studies of the
Book of Mormon
, and more importantly, have ignored his subsequent magnum opus. To perpetuate the claim that he lost his testimony is now inexcusable.

Here are some excerpts from Robert’s crowning work, The Truth, The Way, The Life: An Elementary Treatise on Theology,
ed. John W. Welch, 2nd ed. (Provo, UT: BYU Studies, 1996). From my
perch here in China, I only have access to the Kindle edition and so my
reference to page numbers is problematic. Where page numbers are given, I
have found statements from others citing the passages; please let me
know if any are in error.

Excerpts from B.H. Roberts, The Truth, The Way, The Life

In
Chapter 47, “Renewal of ‘The Way,” Roberts examines various witnesses,
ancient and modern, of the Restoration. He treats the Book of Mormon as a
genuine witness from an ancient people, with no hint of a decayed
testimony. (On Kindle, this section begins about 64% through the book;
p. 469 ff.)

The second vision of the New Dispensation: The Book of Mormon revealed.
Three years after this first revelation an angel of God named Moroni
was sent to the Prophet to reveal the existence of an ancient volume of
scripture known as the Book of Mormon, a book which gives an account of
the hand-dealings of God with the people whom he brought to the
continents of America from what we now call the “Old World.”

(a) The Jaredites.
The first colony came from the tower of Babel at the time of the
dispersion of the people from the Euphrates Valley; they were called
Jaredites, after their leader, named Jared. They occupied the land
located in the southern part of Central America and founded a nation
which existed for about sixteen centuries, and then were overwhelmed at
last in a series of wars which ended in their complete destruction, on
account of their great wickedness. This about 600 b.c.

(b) The Nephite colony.
It was about the time of the destruction of the Jaredites that a small
colony was led from Jerusalem, under divine guidance, to the western
continents, where they too developed into a great people and into
national life. This colony was made up of Israelites of the tribes of
Ephraim and Manasseh, and later augmented by a second small colony made
up of Jews. They continued in occupancy of the land—chiefly in North
America—until about 400 a.d. Then came their destruction because of
their rebellion and wickedness against God. They lost touch with faith
and righteousness until their civilization was overthrown, and they
survived only in the tribal relations such as existed at the advent of
the Europeans.

(c) Summary of the book and its translation.
This record discloses the hand-dealings of God with these ancient
people through the prophets and teachers God sent unto them, and also
gives the account of the visits of the risen Christ to them, the
introduction of the fulness of the gospel by his ministry, which
established a true church of Christ in the western world, with all the
principles and the ordinances of the gospel necessary to salvation.
Therefore it contains the fulness of the gospel. In this record God has
brought forth a new witness to the truth of the things whereof the
Hebrew scriptures, the Old Testament and the New also bear witness. Thus
an angel came bringing the everlasting gospel which is to be preached
to every nation, kindred, tongue, and people. This American volume of
scripture, God’s new witness to the old truths of the everlasting
gospel, Joseph Smith was commanded to translate, and was given the power
and means by which he could translate the unknown language of these
ancient American peoples. The “means” provided was a “Urim and Thummim.”
This consisted of two transparent stones set in the rim of a bow, a
divine instrument used in ancient times for obtaining knowledge from
God. This instrument for translation was found with the gold plates on
which the above record was engraven. Joseph Smith translated the Book of
Mormon, and through a century now, it has been published to the world.
In It is translated into fifteen of the world’s languages.

Here
Roberts is unequivocal. There is no struggle to find faithful words to
spin something he doesn’t believe in. There is no trace of vague
statements about what Joseph “felt” or “imagined” his writings might
reflect, no suggestion that he applied his imagination to craft
inspiring stories, no equivocation about finding uplifting power in
inspired fiction. Joseph was visited by a real angel, was given a
genuine record from an ancient people, and was given divine power to
translate. The result is scripture, authentic ancient scripture from
ancient prophets and a powerful witness of Christ.

Earlier in the
text, Roberts has this to say about the Book of Mormon’s witness of
Christ (about 54% through, according to Kindle; p. 395):

The testimony of the Book of Mormon.
Also in the Book of Mormon is given a most dramatic and soul-thrilling
testimony to the resurrection of the Christ by the appearance of the
risen Redeemer to a multitude of people in America, shortly after the
resurrection of the Christ; for to the people of America, no less than
to the people of the Eastern hemisphere, did God give assurances through
their ancient prophets from time to time of the existence of his gospel
and of its power unto salvation; and lastly the risen Christ came to
them to assure them of the verities of the plan of salvation and
especially of this feature of it, the resurrection from the dead, by his
own glorious appearance among them, and his quite extended ministry
among them. Here the resurrected Christ according to the Nephite record,
descended out of heaven and appeared to the multitude, proclaiming
himself to be the Son of God, the Redeemer of the world; and the
multitude blessed the name of “the Most High God,” “And they did fall
down at the feet of Jesus, and did worship him” (3 Ne. 11:17).

Assurance of the resurrection.
No incident in the gospel history is more emphatically proven than this
great truth, the resurrection of the Son of God, and the promise of the
resurrection of all men.

The Nephite record is part
of the evidence that makes the resurrection of Christ one of the most
“emphatically proven” truths in the scriptures. This is not the thing
that a closet doubter would write, especially a frank and strong-willed
man like B.H. Roberts.

Other statements from Roberts again support
his appreciation of the Book of Mormon. For example, regarding the
sacrament prayers in the Book of Mormon, he writes (53% through the
book):

These prayers of consecration, are the most perfect forms
of sacred literature to be found. So perfect they are that one may not
add to them or take ought from them without marring them.

He then
explores at length the meaning and the power of the sacrament prayers.
Clearly, he finds the literary value of these items in the Book of
Mormon to be extraordinary. His previous ramblings about the weak-minded
author of the poorly crafter Book of Mormon fraud have no place in his
personal beliefs. This is a man who finds intellectually satisfying
beauty in the Book of Mormon, a man who shows no doubt when he declares:
“More consistent is it with right reason –which is but intelligence in
action–to accept the light-giving and inspiring thought of the ancient
American Scripture–the Book of Mormon…” (23% through; p. 165).

Further insights can be found in the editor’s remarks from John W. Welch (emphasis mine):

Indeed, not knowing what we as editors would encounter in the manuscripts of TWL [The Truth, the Way, the Life], I was surprised to find that TWL
pointedly and repeatedly asserts the antiquity of the Book of Mormon.
While such affirmative statements may seem unremarkable, it is precisely
their routine orthodoxy that makes them so notable. Coming from one of
the great intellects of the Church, whose views about the Book of Mormon
supposedly became more intellectually sophisticated in his last years, these unequivocal statements will disappoint anyone who has imagined Roberts as a closet doubter or late-in-life skeptic.
TWL especially reveals how Roberts felt about the Book of Mormon after
he wrote his “Book of Mormon Study” in 1922. That work identified
several Book of Mormon problems and called urgently for further study.
Some have seen “Book of Mormon Study” as evidence that Roberts had
changed his views on the historicity of the Book of Mormon, but readers
can now determine that Roberts did not waver in his belief because of
that study. In TWL, Roberts describes the miraculous coming forth of the
Book of Mormon in strong, straightforward, traditional terms. For
example, he says:

Three years after this first revelation an angel
of God named Moroni was sent to the prophet to reveal the existence of
an ancient volume of scripture known as the Book of Mormon, a book which
gives an account of the hand-dealings of God with the people whom he
brought to the continents of America from what we now call the “Old
World.” (469)

In addition Roberts affirms that “Joseph Smith was
commanded to translate, and was given the power and means by which he
could translate the unknown language of these ancient American peoples”
(470). TWL contains several statements that necessarily assume the antiquity and literal truthfulness of this ancient American scripture.
For example, Roberts speaks literally of the words that the resurrected
Jesus spoke “to the assembled Nephites to whom he appeared on the
Western Continent” (482–83; compare 388, 389). Indeed, Roberts believed
that “no incident in the gospel history is more emphatically proven than
this great truth, the resurrection of the Son of God” (395), and he
used as his key witness the appearance of the resurrected Christ to the
Nephites (395).

TWL often identifies Book of Mormon prophets by
the centuries in which they lived. Lehi, Roberts says, lived “before the
birth of Christ, early in the fifth [sic] century, b.c.” (401). Roberts
identifies a prophecy in the book of Alma as “one written near the
close of the second century b.c.” (401). Moreover, Roberts goes out of
his way to describe the book’s authors as “ancient.” He calls Lehi “an
ancient American Prophet” (75). He cites “revelations of God to the
ancient inhabitants of America” (275). He calls the book “the American
volume of Scripture,” written by “the old prophets of the ancient
American race” (259; see also 21, 152, 263, 275, 427, 445). He also
treats many Book of Mormon passages as the unique, authoritative source
of revealed knowledge on important topics. He takes joy in drawing
attention to doctrines “derived almost wholly from the teachings of the
Book of Mormon” (444). He extols it as a masterful work. Of a Book of
Mormon reading he exclaims, “how beautifully clear this principle of
purity in thought is set forth” (501).

There is more to say about the relevance of Ethan Smith as a modern source for the Book of Mormon and the other arguments that Roberts considered, but there is one thing we can say with confidence: he did not lose his testimony of the Restoration and the Book of Mormon through his brief investigation into areas of potential weakness in the test.

However, in 1933, Wesley P. Lloyd met with B.H. Roberts, who was Lloyd’s former mission president, and then wrote a lengthy journal entry that critics use to argue that Roberts felt the Book of Mormon was not historic and that the plates were just a “subjective” creation of Joseph Smith. The critics’ use of this journal entry is unjustified, as McKay V. Jones explains in detail in “Evasive Ignorance: Anti-Mormon Claims that B.H. Roberts Lost His Testimony,” FAIRMormon.org.

The Wesley Lloyd Journal entry appears to be summarizing what Roberts had argued in playing devil’s advocate, calling attention to weaknesses in need of more buttressing. Roberts had
expressly rejected the subjective theory before and there is no evidence that he had now been swayed by it. If Roberts actually
mentioned it in that conversation, it would have been in the context of
restating the challenges yet to be faced in defending the Book of Mormon–and his position was clearly and long had been that of one that believed in Joseph
Smith as a prophet.

Lloyd shows no indication then or later of worrying that Roberts had lost his testimony. Roberts, like many of us apologists, recognized that
there are weaknesses and points of attack that demand attention and defense. Calling for further research, analysis, and even revelation to resolve a current apparent problem is not the same as abandoning faith. Roberts certainly did not abandon the Book of Mormon, and turned to it as an authentic ancient record translated by a real prophet of God when he prepared his great final work on theology, The Truth, the Way, the Life.

Author: Jeff Lindsay

7 thoughts on “From The Truth, The Way, and the Life: The Truth About the Way B.H. Roberts Viewed the Book of Mormon at the End of His Life

  1. OK, I'm convinced that, even in the face of all the contrary evidence he detailed in his Studies, Roberts believed in the historicity of the Book of Mormon. I thought he was better than that, but apparently not.

  2. I googled B.H. Roberts a bit, and was a bit dismayed to learn that he had three wives simultaneously, yet was a prominent figure in the 1920s. Ew.

    Anyway, Google turns up a couple of quotes from Studies of the Book of Mormon. One of the quotes says that the several successive Nephite 'Anti-Christs' are so similar that they really seem more like inventions of an unimaginative author than like historical figures from different centuries. The other quote describes the Book of Mormon's narration as childishly unrealistic — pretty much in so many words.

    I don't know what the surrounding contexts of those quotes were, in Roberts's book. Unless they had some real humdinger counter-arguments, though, I'd say these are pretty harsh critiques. Even if Roberts was just outlining how things might look from a critical perspective, rather than stating his own view, that's a tough view to contemplate, and then just walk away. Isn't it?

    Roberts may well nonetheless have decided to believe in the inspiration of the Book of Mormon. I'm a bit curious as to how he managed that, though.

  3. Romans 3:21 says, "But now a righteousness from God, apart from law, has been made known, to which the Law and the Prophets testify."

    One of the signs of a prophet of God is that he testifies about a righteousness that does not originate with us, but with God. Joseph Smith, Bringham Young and Mormon teachings today do not testify of this.

  4. Downtown Dave, you might be interested in the following quotes from Joseph Smith and Brigham Young:

    Smith: "There is one thing under the sun which I have learned, and that is that the righteousness of man is sin because it exacteth over much; nevertheless, the righteousness of God is just, because it exacteth nothing at all, but sendeth the rain on the just and the unjust, seed time and harvest, for all of which man is ungrateful." (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 317)

    Young: "We are too much disposed to believe and act like the world, not rendering that submission and humble obedience to the righteousness of God which would justly accord with our high profession." (Journal of Discourses, v. 11, p. 254)

    As for "Mormon teachings today," I recommend that you become a bit more conversant with the teachings of Neal A. Maxwell and Bruce R. McConkie before concluding that Mormons don't teach a righteousness that originates with God. (That's not the only sense of the word that we teach, of course — but it's not the only one that the New Testament teaches, either.)

  5. Anonymous.

    Joseph Smith was so confused about what he believed at any given moment, you can find him all over the Christian map. As for Brigham Young, I think he knew exactly what he believed. And I don't say that kindly.

    You can talk about "righteousness that originates with God" all day long. But many people know that whenever a Mormon says or hears the word "God," he/she also says and thinks the word "Church."

  6. Hi everythingbeforeus,

    I have to disagree with your first comment but I have no idea to what you are referencing since the comment is a bit obtuse.

    As for your second comment, I also disagree for the simple fact that my relationship with God is much different than the relationship I have with the Church (of which I am in good standing too). And I know of several people in the church with similar feelings as mine about their relationship with the Church and with God. In fact, your comment reminds me of other religious people trying to tell me what I believe. I believe in keeping the commandments, I believe in being saved by grace, I believe that Jesus is the Son of God who came down and died for our sins and that God wants us to be happy, not in a worldly sense but in a Godly sense.

    Steve

  7. Hello Mr. Lindsay,
    Off topic but relates to church critics.

    If you see this how about considering a post about "blood atonement" in the church, past and present.

    Did early church leaders teach that Christ's Atonement was not enough, therefore people must have their blood spilt for certain sins, like murder? Do members today still believe this?

    Example: an anti Mormon site did a post about how the church still teaches and believes blood atonement. The example given was the father of forger and murderer Mark Hoffman. Hoffman's father said his son needed the firing squad to atone for the murders so Mark could be with the family in the Celestial Kingdom, because Christ's Atonement was not enough.
    Seriously?!
    Thank you.

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