| Quotes By: Hugh Nibley |
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"Beauty is whatever gives joy."
| Wikipedia: Hugh Nibley |
| Hugh Winder Nibley | |
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| Born | March 27, 1910 Portland, Oregon |
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| Died | February 24, 2005 (aged 94) |
| Cause of death | Natural causes |
| Nationality | American |
| Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles University of California, Berkeley |
| Occupation | Scholar, historian, author, professor |
| Home town | Portland, Oregon |
| Religious beliefs | The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |
| Spouse(s) | Phyllis Nibley |
| Children | 8 |
Hugh Winder Nibley (March 27, 1910 – February 24, 2005) was a professor at Brigham Young University and an apologist for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. While occupying no official position of religious authority, his works—which were mainly concerned with finding archaeological, linguistic, and historical evidence that the (primarily scriptural) claims of Joseph Smith, Jr. are not contradicted outright by supposedly scientific evidence—are highly regarded within the LDS community.
A prolific author and professor of Biblical and Mormon scripture at BYU, he was fluent in numerous languages,[1] including Classical Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Egyptian, Coptic, Arabic, German, French, English, Italian, and Spanish. He also studied Dutch and Russian during World War II. He also studied Old Bulgarian and Old English, and his fluency in Old Norse was reportedly sufficient to enable him to read an entire encyclopedia in Norwegian.
Nibley wrote and lectured on LDS scripture and doctrinal topics, publishing many articles in LDS Church magazines. His An Approach to the Book of Mormon was adopted in 1957 as a religious lesson manual by the LDS Church. Although LDS members commonly regard his work as lending scientific authority to the more controversial historical and archaeological claims of Mormonism, Nibley's scholarship is largely ignored by the wider academic and scientific community because of his primary commitment to Mormon apologetics.
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Hugh Nibley was born in Portland, Oregon a son of Alexander Nibley and his wife Agnes Sloan.[2] Alexander Nibley was the son of Charles W. Nibley and his wife Rebecca Neibaur. Alexander served from 1906-1907 as president of the Netherlands Mission of the LDS Church.[3] Rebecca was the daughter of Alexander Neibaur a Jewish native of Alsace who had moved to England and converted to Christianity. She later joined the LDS church and emigrated to America.[4] Nibley married Phyllis Draper in September 1946 and the couple had eight children.
At age seventeen, Nibley became as a LDS missionary in the Swiss-German Mission, and served for two-and-a-half years, from 1927[5] to 1930.[6] During World War II he was a Master Sergeant working in military intelligence for the 101st Airborne Division of the United States Army. He drove the first jeep ashore on Utah Beach during the D-Day invasion, landed by glider at Eindhoven as part of Operation Market Garden, and witnessed the aftermath of Nazi concentration camps.
Nibley began his studies at University of California, Los Angeles, graduating summa cum laude, and earned a doctorate as a University Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley. One anecdote of him claims that while at Berkeley he reportedly perused all of the library shelves, beginning on the first floor and moving up. When a book's title struck his fancy, he would then read the book.
At the request of Apostle John A. Widtsoe he became a professor at Brigham Young University in 1946, teaching history, languages, and religion. Nibley served as a faculty member at the LDS Church owned school until his official retirement in 1975, but he continued teaching until 1994. During his final years as a professor emeritus, and prior to his last illness, Nibley maintained a small office in the Harold B. Lee Library at BYU, where he worked on his magnum opus titled One Eternal Round, which focuses on the hypocephalus ("Facsimile 2") in the Book of Abraham. He turned over the materials for his last book to FARMS in the late months of 2002. It is expected to be published by March 2010 in commemoration of his 100th anniversary of his birth.[7] Never one for the spotlight, Hugh gave authorization to have his biography written only late in his life, and it was published just two years before his death.
Nibley died February 24, 2005.[8] He had been confined to bed by illness for over two years before his death.
Nibley's viewpoints marked him as atypical of Mormon stereotypes. He was an active Democrat and an ardent conservationist, and often criticized Republican policies. He was strongly opposed to the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War during an era "when it was very unpopular in LDS culture to do so."[9] He authored "Approaching Zion", an indictment of capitalism and endorsement of communalism.
Nibley was also bothered by what he saw as the unthinking, sometimes almost dogmatic application of some portions of BYU's honor code. Nibley had no objection to requirements of chastity or obeying the Word of Wisdom, but he thought the often intense scrutiny directed at grooming (hairstyles and clothing) was misguided. In 1973, he said, "The worst sinners, according to Jesus, are not the harlots and publicans, but the religious leaders with their insistence on proper dress and grooming, their careful observance of all the rules, their precious concern for status symbols, their strict legality, their pious patriotism... the haircut becomes the test of virtue in a world where Satan deceives and rules by appearances."[10]
Nibley further criticized LDS culture for what he saw as its acceptance of folksy kitsch art over good art; favoring trade-journal jingles over doctrine in sermons; and tearing down pioneer structures in favor of trendy new buildings.[11]
In early 2005, after his death, one of Nibley's daughters, Martha Beck, published Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith, a memoir in which she alleges that her father subjected her to ritualistic sexual abuse between the ages of five and eight. Since the book's publication, Martha Beck's siblings, and some friends of the family, have vigorously denied the abuse allegations. Some of her siblings have suggested that Martha Beck used techniques such as hypnosis and self-hypnosis in the recovery of her memories of the abuse, a controversial technique. Martha Beck herself asserts that though she did seek psychotherapeutic help during the experience, she did not engage in any form of hypnosis to "recover" the memories.[12] Family members have also pointed out the impossibility of activities such as Beck described being carried out in the tiny Nibley home, where there was little or no privacy and multiple children shared every bedroom. Some members of Nibley's surviving family also challenge Beck's allegations by pointing out inconsistencies in her descriptions of events to various media sources.[13]
Nibley, along with B. H. Roberts is one of the most influential apologists within Mormonism, but his work is virtually unknown outside the Mormon community due to its specific goal to reinforce LDS historical and archaeological claims that are not held by non-Mormons. Any recognition of his work in the larger community generally recognizes him as a religious apologist rather than an academic scholar. He was praised by Evangelical scholars Mosser and Owen for his ability to draw upon historical sources to provide evidence for Latter-day Saint beliefs. Nibley's research ranges from Egyptian, to Hebrew and early Christian histories, and he often took his notes in a mix of Gregg shorthand, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, and Egyptian. Nibley "insisted on reading the relevant primary and secondary sources in the original and could read Arabic, Coptic, Dutch, Egyptian, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Latin, Old Norse, Russian and other languages at sight." In a perceptive critique, William J. Hamblin, a colleague of Nibley's at BYU, remarked that "Nibley's methodology consists more of comparative literature than history."[14] Douglas F. Salmon has examined in depth Nibley's comparative method, focusing on the latter's work on Enoch.[15]
Among other topics Nibley wrote about were LDS Temples, the historical Enoch, and similarities between Christian Gnostic and Latter-day Saint beliefs, and what he believed were anti-Mormon works. He wrote a brief somewhat emotional response to Fawn M. Brodie's No Man Knows My History, which was titled No Ma'am, That's Not History. Nibley also published scholarly articles in peer-reviewed journals on topics without direct reference to Mormonism. One such article that is still cited in works in the field of Roman Studies was on sparsiones.[16] His Berkeley dissertation was on Roman Festival Games. He published in such journals as Classical Journal, Western Political Quarterly, Western Speech, Jewish Quarterly Review, Church History, Revue de Qumran, Vigililae Christianae, The Historian, The American Political Science Review, and the Encyclopedia Judaica. His essay, "The Passing of the Church: Forty Variations on an Unpopular Theme," which was published in the peer-reviewed journal Church History, touched off a short but furious debate within the journal's pages in 1961.[17]
He turned away from scholarly publications in favor of LDS publications in the mid-nineteen sixties. Significantly his Mormon publications often drew more attention than many of his peer-reviewed works, for example a lengthy discussion in the pages of Catholic Biblical Quarterly that ran in 1950-51 about his Improvement Era article, "Baptism for the Dead in Ancient Times." Nibley has also received praise from non-LDS scholars such as Jacob Neusner, James Charlesworth, Cyrus Gordon, Raphael Patai and Jacob Milgrom.
Nibley proposed new translations of some important words.
Very little non-Mormon criticism exists of Nibley's work as hardly any of it has ever drawn negative attention among non-Mormon scholars. Many of his texts and articles were published by the LDS Church,
Nibley's methodology has drawn criticism from LDS scholars like Kent P. Jackson.[19] Among the criticisms is the contention that Nibley's use of evidence drawn from widely disparate cultures and time periods without proper qualification can be misleading.[20]
In addition, Douglas F. Salmon accuses Nibley of "parallelomania" (defined as "overuse or improper use of parallels in the exposition of a text") In a Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought article. Salmon alleges that Nibley's work in drawing parallels between the Book of Mormon and other sources fits this classification.[21] Salmon notes:
The number of parallels that Nibley has been able to uncover from amazingly disparate and arcane sources is truly staggering. Unfortunately, there seems to be a neglect of any methodological reflection or articulation in this endeavor.[22]
Nibley's methodology draws inspiration from the work of the Myth and Ritual School centered at Cambridge University, most notably represented by J. G. Frazer in his famous work The Golden Bough. He also took inspiration from the work of University of Chicago professor Mircea Eliade, who likewise allegedly expressed approval of Nibley's ability. He was at the same time critical of the work of Joseph Campbell, although the latter was arguably a kindred spirit of sorts. As most of these other scholars date from the early 20th century, Nibley's methodology is thus arguably dated, although like the works of the Myth and Ritual School, his work continues to be a source of inspiration to younger generations of LDS scholars for its breadth and depth of learning, insights, and poetic imagination.
Students influenced by Nibley include:
There have been 18 volumes released so far, all published through Deseret Book:
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| Kefa | |
| No, Ma'am, That's Not History | |
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