The Bible, the Church, and Its Scholars
May 4, 2018[…] record of the Jews, but still these books do not need to be identical with what we call today “the five books of Moses.” Perhaps they contain only the materials handed down from Moses […]
[…] record of the Jews, but still these books do not need to be identical with what we call today “the five books of Moses.” Perhaps they contain only the materials handed down from Moses […]
[…] when Utah’s institutions were not adequately prepared to assume the responsibility. Albeit adequate historical and university libraries now exist in Utah, Mormon manuscripts still have a tend ency to migrate out of the state. […]
[…] of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1975), 25 pp. Articles in Non-Professional Publications: “History Is Then and Now: A conversation with Leonard J. Arrington, Church Historian,” Ensign, V (July 1975), pp. 8-13. “The Looseness […]
[…] will go. I say turn to the House of Israel now.” Two days later he issued a call in general conference to two dozen individuals to serve as missionaries among the Indians in the […]
[…] the Quorum of Twelve. His relationship with Joseph appears to have been good, though one could not call it excellent. William had the habit of saying what was on his mind, and as a […]
[…] here to help me finish my mission, after this school year is over; maybe you’ll receive a call. . . . I don’t expect to be in Ipswich long as Pres. Grover wants me […]
<i>Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 39–60</i><br> Driggs shares what an early fundamentalist leader by the name of Leory S. Johnson taught about the church and polygamy.
[…] me that I was wasting my time. According to him, if the Lord had determined to “ call someone home” any efforts on my part or that of anyone else to repair a gate […]
[…] the university’s recent treatment of Gail Houston, Brian Evenson, and others have shown me that folks who call themselves both “Mormon” and “academic” hold few compatible assumptions about “Mormon-ness” and “Mormon Studies.” Some cannot […]
[…] we are going to stay here until they find it. Our total flight time was fifteen hours from Washington, D.C., to Moscow. Sister Akers, Elder Hadlock, and I slept most of the time to […]