Actually according to the Book of Mormon, it was a language called by the Nephites 'reformed Egyptian. The article to which you linked helpfully quotes them saying that ('the characters which are called among us the reformed Egyptian'), and then says they didn't mean it, they meant something else.
No, actually according to the Book of Mormon, it was not a language called "reformed Egyptian", it was a book written in "the characters which are called among us the reformed Egyptian". The characters were simply called reformed egyptian, it was not a spoken language. They did not speak egyptian, or any other form of it. It was merely a reformed or altered version of egyptian characters which they used to pen their words on the plates. There can be any number of versions of "reformed egyptian", becuase it depends on how you reform or alter it. The Nephites had their own unique style of egyptian characters, which they changed from the original, no matter how drastically, which they called "reformed egyptian".
That's great, so please show me examples of the 'reformed Egyptian' which is in the Book of Mormon, in writings other than the Book of Mormon. Epigraphical evidence, papyrological evidence, clay tablets, inscriptions on metal plates, whatever. I just want to see evidence that this was a real language used within the era that the Book of Mormon claims
We certainly have evidence of other versions of "reformed egyptian", where the egyptian characters were altered, but we may never know if it is the same reformed egyptian of the Nephites. It would a nice discovery though
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What the website I provided shows is a list of examples of "reformed egyptian", although they are probably not the same reformed egyptian of the Nephites. What they prove is that civilizations prior to a during the Nephites did in fact alter egyptian characters when devising their own writing system.
Quote:
The fact that modern linguists and philologists don't know of a script known as reformed Egyptian is irrelevant, since Mormon tells us that the script was called reformed Egyptian "by us," that is, by the Nephites; they may have been the only people to use that descriptive phrase.
For example, both the terms cuneiform and hieroglyphics are non-Egyptian terms for the scripts of ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt.[1] The Mesopotamians did not call their writing system cuneiform, nor did the Egyptians call their writing system hieroglyphics.[2]
Nevertheless, we would not insist that the Mesopotamians and Egyptians never existed because they did not call their writing systems by the same names used by modern historians, philologists, and archaeologists.
This is a very bad example. Sure, the Mesopotamians didn't call their writing system 'cuneiform', and the Egyptians didn't call their writing system 'hieroglphics', but the Nephites did call their writing system 'reformed Egyptian'.
Actually it is a good example in my opinion. Maybe you didnt understand his point. He is speaking to those who would like to oppose the Book of Mormon by insisting that no language exists today which is called "reformed egyptian". His point is that Mormon called his writing style "reformed egyptian", and so we may not be able to identify what language that was because it no longer carries that name.
If the ancient mesopotamians called their language "reformed vulcan", we would not know that, because today we call it cuneiform. Now, if Mormon had written, "the characters which were called among us "egyptian hieroglyphics", that might be a major problem. The name hieroglyphics was not applied to egyptian characters until much much later.
The argument which is made is that if the Nephites did indeed call their language 'reformed Egyptian', then we should find evidence that they did so, and we should also find evidence of their language actually existing in history. Until there is such evidence, it cannot be argued that the language really existed.
If the nephites did indeed call their language "reformed egyptian", there is a chance that we could find evidence for that, but not likely. We dont know very much about the languages spoken in ancient Central America. You are claiming that our argument for the "reformed egyptian" of the Book of Mormon is invalid because our only evidence for it is the Book of Mormon. I don't know that anyone would disagree with you.
The purpose is not to prove that the Nephites spoke reformed egyptian, or what type of reformed egyptian, but to prove that reformed egyptian in any existence is a real thing.
On the topic of reformed egyptian being used in Psalms 20, I googled it and found this:
http://farms.byu.edu/display.php?table=jbms&id=128
One of these is Papyrus Amherst 63, a document written in Egyptian demotic and dating to the second century B.C.13 The document had, like the Dead Sea Scrolls, been preserved in an earthen jar and was discovered in Thebes, Egypt, during the second half of the nineteenth century. For years, Egyptologists struggled with the text but could make no sense of it. The letters were clear, but they did not form intelligible words. In 1944, Raymond Bowman of the University of Chicago realized that, while the script is Egyptian, the underlying language is Aramaic.14 Bowman managed to translate portions of the text, but it did not become the object of serious study until the 1980s.15 Among the writings included in the religious text is a paganized version of Psalms 20:2—6. Here, then, we have a Bible passage, in its Aramaic translation, written in late Egyptian characters.
Maybe this makes it more clear.
On to tteows remarks.
First it is only modern Mormon scholarship that presents this evidence....no non-Mormon scholar thinks the Lehi group made any such journey.
What Non-Mormon scholar is going to place his career on the line by even caring to prove that the BoM is true? Were a non-Mormon scholar to think that the Lehi group made any such journey, he wouldn't be a very good non-Mormon.
I find your analogy to the John Doe case humorous, and a bit exaggerated. We know that there is not indisputable proof that the Nahom in the Boof of Mormon is NHM is southern arabia. We understand that there is still much to learn on this topic before we can consider it as proof. But we find many uncanny parallels, which cannot be ignored. There will always be critics, a fact of life when religion is involved.
We do not present the NHM evidence as proof of the BoM, and we do not include it in our missionary lessons. It is wholly unimportant to our salvation. But it is a topic that is fun to debate, because the fact is there is evidence for it, if not proof.
Please have a happy New Year.
Sargon
Let us not confuse what science reveals, with what we interpret science to reveal, and what we want science to reveal.