| A Tale of Two Stones |
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The term Urim and Thummim is a reference to sacred stones from the Old Testament, but is not a term applied to the objects within the Book of Mormon itself. Obviously the two stones Joseph refers to as the Urim and Thummim are stones of Book of Mormon origin. Tracing their history in the Book of Mormon provides a small conundrum, with only a speculative answer. The earliest time period for which the two stones are known is during the Jaredite era. Ether directly comments on the two stones and their function:
The stones are clearly designed to be interpreters, and apparently are designed to be used to interpret the writings which Ether is sealing up. The writings of Ether came to the Book of Mormon record through the 24 plates which a search party from Limhi's colony found. At this point, a little historical clarification is required to elucidate the historical conundrum. Limhi's colony left Zarahemla to return to the land of first inheritance. Therefore, the expedition which recovered the 24 plates postdated the merging of the Mulekites and the Nephites. Limhi's expedition was on a search for the Nephites, but did not find them. Instead they found the ruins of the Jaredite civilization, and the 24 plates were part of the information they brought back to Limhi. All of this occurs outside of the knowledge of the Nephites at Zarahemla, and these events are not known to the Nephites until two generations after Limhi (during Zeniff's reign, after Noah's). In the text we get the following information:
To this point we are fine. We have the 24 plates from Ether, and they cannot be read by the people who have received them. Thus far we are square with the prophecy of the Lord to Ether. Now we need the two stones to interpret them. Note the next verse:
Certainly in the language of Joseph Smith, interpreters and two stones must be the same thing. In fact, they are so precisely described that there is little doubt that Mosiah posesses the two stones which eventually are interred with the gold plates:
This fits with the prophecy, in that the two stones (the interpreters) would be used to translate the 24 plates. The question is, where did Mosiah get them? If the plates themselves were discovered by Limhi, where were the stones? They are certainly not mentioned among the inventory of the items brought back from the land of the Jaredites, and they are clearly *already* in the possession of Mosiah. The best possibility for the transmission path of the two stones from Ether to Mosiah goes through Coriantumr and the Mulekites. Coriantumr must have had possession of, or knowledge of, the interpreters, and was able to pass them on to the Mulekites as one of the last acts of his dying civilization. If that were true, then Mosiah received the stones as part of the ritual items during the merger of the Mulekites and Nephites. While this is certainly possible, it does create an interesting case of non-mention of the stones. When Benjamin invests his son as the next king, he formally transfers ritual paraphernalia:
The short catalogue of important items consists of the brass plates, the plates of Nephi, the sword of Laban, and the Liahona. While Benjamin must have been in possession of the two stones, they are curiously not mentioned in this inventory. It is possible that they were not yet seen as of equal importance, since we have no record of their use prior to the time the 24 plates were translated. They may have only gained their ritual importance after they were used, and since the investiture of Mosiah occurs prior to that time, there is a logical reason for not mentioning them. |
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| by Brant Gardner. Copyright 1998 |
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