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The Mormon Point of View: A Short-Lived Periodical
by
Davis Bitton
One
hundred years ago, in 1904, a new periodical appeared.
It was called The Mormon Point of View. Its editor
was N. L. Nelson, a BYU English professor. After only
four issues the periodical fizzled and died. It is an
instructive study of the frustrations and hazards of such
projects.
I
remember the sense of discovery when I first stumbled
upon The Mormon Point of View. In the UCLA Research
Library where I was exploring Renaissance-Reformation
subjects, I took a short break to browse through the stacks
to see what was available on Mormonism. There it was,
a single volume, neatly bound with its title, The Mormon
Point of View, on the spine.
In 1898, Nels Lars Nelson had published Preaching and
Public Speaking, an effort to provide useful advice
and raise the level of preaching in the church. In 1904,
he also published Scientific Aspects of Mormonism.
Brother Nelson, usually known by his initials N. L., was
obviously possessed of a lively, inquiring mind. Besides,
he had a vigorous, compelling style of writing.
Nelson did not believe the Saints had nothing to learn
from the world. In fact, he insisted, “we need to borrow
in most directions, rather than to give.” This was in
a letter to President Joseph F. Smith. What Mormonism
provided, he continued, was an orientation that could
synthesize the multifarious and confusing facets of worldly
knowledge. “It is in this particular, then, that Mormonism
can best help the world,” Nelson wrote; “it can contribute
a point of view that shall unify and marshal into one
grand, eternal perspective, all the fragmentary truths
which now serve mainly to distract mankind.”
Nelson also thought the old missionary approach was not
working very well. Quoting scriptural passages in support
of the restored gospel might convince some people. But
what about the growing class of people whose assumptions
about life were different? He described them as “hard-headed
thinkers, trained in the exact methods of modern schools;
doubting Thomases of art, science, mechanics, and business,
who value unsupported authority as nothing, even though
it be Biblical.” “It is pretty evident,” he continued,
“that the world has, during the last half century, veered
almost completely around from the Nathaniel to the Thomas
type of mind.” What would he say of today’s “post-Christian”
world?
During
its brief lifetime, The Mormon Point of View published
nine articles, stories, or poems, including:
• “The Ministers and
the Mormons.” The attacks by ministers of other faiths
were especially vehement during the Reed Smoot hearings.
Nelson went toe to toe with the attackers, who were trying
to keep Apostle Smoot from serving his term in the U.S.
Senate. He accused them of religious bigotry.
• “The
Dictionary of Slander.” This was a long, critical review
of W. A. Linn, The Story of the Mormons. Nelson’s
comment still describes many anti-Mormon works: “If Mr.
Linn ever saw a good quality in a Mormon or in Mormonism,
he does not betray the fact by a single line, nor by a
single epithet.”
• “Human Side of the
Book of Mormon.” Here Nelson explored the textual “changes,”
mostly grammatical, in subsequent editions after 1830.
Inevitably, he also addressed the nature of the “translation”
and the presence of Bible passages in the Book of Mormon.
Not the last word, this article is nevertheless provocative
and worth reading.
• “Learning to Read
Up Hill.” Someone complained that the new magazine was
too difficult. Editor Nelson was unsympathetic. “I cannot
and will not reduce the whole thing down to thin soup
once more, to suit his watery mental digestion,” he wrote.
I wonder what he would say about the non-readers among
us a century later, those whose intake of ideas comes
from movies and television.
• “The
Spiritual Life.” Analyzing several metaphors employed
by Jesus, Nelson went on for 78 pages.
• “The
Harris-Anthon Episode.” Martin Harris and Charles Anthon
both told about the famous interview. Since Anthon contradicted
himself, Nelson said, Harris is the more reliable. He
was sufficiently satisfied after meeting to invest a sizeable
sum of money in the publication of the Book of Mormon.
• “The
Mormon Family.” Although plural marriage is briefly mentioned,
the main point of this article is to praise the “fruitfulness”
of Mormon families. A century later, when fertility in
many countries is below the 2.1 required for replacement,
we are awed as Nelson describes families of five to twelve
children for each mother.
A poem by Joaquin Miller, “A Roundelay of Salt Lake,”
and a short story by a young woman in one of Nelson’s
classes rounded out the contents of the periodical’s first
and only volume.
Nelson
had hoped to sell two thousand copies, which would have
returned a modest profit to him as editor. Although we
don’t know the exact number sold, he did not come even
close to his goal. Each issue put him deeper into the
hole.
N. L. Nelson had built up a sufficient reputation for
loyalty that the First Presidency gave his project their
endorsement. But in their letter we notice a recognition
of the financial risks. “As far as we are concerned,
we should very much like to see a magazine published such
as you have outlined; it would undoubtedly be a credit
both to you as its publisher and to our community. But
will it pay financially, and can it be done without financial
injury to yourself and family? . . . To be frank with
you, we are afraid it will not pay.”
They
were right. After the fourth issue, completing the first
volume, The Mormon Point of View folded.
Already serving the needs of the Latter-day Saints were
other periodicals, such as Woman’s Exponent and
Young Woman’s Journal. In addition, the Improvement
Era, sponsored by the Young Men’s Mutual Improvement
Association and later the flagship publication of the
church, was publishing a variety of vigorous articles.
In fact, in its opening years the Era established
a remarkable record for variety, interest, and quality.
Nelson was having to compete with these publications,
and his project fell on its face.
A hundred years later ambitious new publishing ventures
are launched. Some do not make it over the hump of that
first year or two. Uncorrelated articles and speeches
can be found in several magazines and in symposia. Conferences
and education weeks provide a forum for talks on a variety
of subjects. Church magazines are translated into many
languages. In an earlier column I attempted to convey
the rich content of BYU Studies. And taking the
dissemination of news, articles, columns, and photographs
to an exciting new level are Internet publications like
Meridian Magazine.
It is a colorful, bounteous smorgasbord. But now, as
in 1904, you and I, unable to do everything, are faced
with the necessity of choosing that which best nourishes
mind and spirit.
–See
Davis Bitton, “N. L. Nelson and The Mormon Point of View,” BYU
Studies 13 (Winter 1973), 157-71.
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