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  • Format: ePub

In this penetrating exposé, David Liscum delivers a chapter-by-chapter takedown of 2 Nephi , one of the foundational books of the Book of Mormon. With razor-sharp discernment and the boldness of a street preacher confronting a false prophet, this work unmasks the theological, historical, and moral failures embedded deep in the text that Mormons hold sacred.
The claims are not just false-they are absurd.
Joseph Smith, the self-proclaimed prophet of the Restoration, boldly declared himself to be a direct descendant of Joseph of Egypt. Yet DNA evidence debunks this outright. His bloodline
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Produktbeschreibung
In this penetrating exposé, David Liscum delivers a chapter-by-chapter takedown of 2 Nephi, one of the foundational books of the Book of Mormon. With razor-sharp discernment and the boldness of a street preacher confronting a false prophet, this work unmasks the theological, historical, and moral failures embedded deep in the text that Mormons hold sacred.

The claims are not just false-they are absurd.

Joseph Smith, the self-proclaimed prophet of the Restoration, boldly declared himself to be a direct descendant of Joseph of Egypt. Yet DNA evidence debunks this outright. His bloodline traces to Europe, not the Middle East. The Book of Mormon's own internal claims collapse under the weight of science and common sense. This alone should disqualify the Book of Mormon from being received as divine revelation. But it doesn't stop there.

Smith plagiarizes entire chapters of Isaiah-word for word-from the King James Version, errors and all, throwing them haphazardly into his narrative whenever he seems to run out of ideas. Rather than divine prophecy, this reads like a man padding his manuscript. Whole chapters of Isaiah are stuffed into 2 Nephi without context, without transition, and without any relevance to the alleged Nephite people in the Americas. Isaiah spoke to Judah and Jerusalem, not to some unknown civilization thousands of miles away.

Worse still, 2 Nephi presents a bizarre and blasphemous theology. From the "infinite atonement" (a term never used in Scripture) to the universal resurrection of the wicked unto eternal glory, this book warps the gospel into something unrecognizable. The substitutionary atonement, the justice and wrath of God, and the doctrine of eternal judgment are either misrepresented or entirely absent. Joseph Smith's strange doctrine includes:

  • Denial of eternal punishment
  • The belief that "Adam fell that men might be"-a corruption of Genesis 3
  • The teaching that God cannot be God without evil, contradicting the holiness of God (Habakkuk 1:13)
  • The assertion that a seer is greater than Jesus (2 Nephi 3), an offense reminiscent of Islamic exaltation of Muhammad
  • Operation without a Levitical priesthood while claiming Mosaic obedience
  • Use of divination tools like the Liahona-strictly forbidden in Deuteronomy 18


And if all that weren't enough, 2 Nephi 5:21 stumbles into one of the most openly racist doctrines in American religious history: "a skin of blackness" as a divine curse. Later changed by the LDS Church to appear more palatable, the damage is already done. The 1830 version of the Book of Mormon says what it says.

There are anachronisms and historical blunders throughout-steel weapons in 600 BC, the phrase "born at Jerusalem" (Luke 2:4-7 clearly says Bethlehem), and misplaced Mosaic theology in a New World context.


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