FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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The following pages link to Main Page:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Question: Is the Bible without error? (← links)
- Biblical inerrancy (← links)
- Question: What evidence demonstrates that the Bible has been altered? (← links)
- Question: What did early Christians think about alterations to the scriptures? (← links)
- Question: Do Mormons believe that the Bible has less value because it contains errors? (← links)
- Question: Why does 2 Nephi 19:1 change the word "sea" in Isaiah 9 to "Red Sea"? (← links)
- Question: Did Joseph Smith plagiarize passages from Gilbert Hunt's book ''The Late War, between the United States and Great Britain, from June, 1812, to February, 1815''? (← links)
- Question: Does Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' talk of 2000 "striplings" who go to war? (← links)
- Question: Is Gilbert Hunt's phrase "the fourth day of this seventh month" in ''The Late War'' a source for the Book of Mormon phrase "the fourth day of this seventh month" in Alma 10:6? (← links)
- Question: Does the Book of Mormon phrase "curious workmanship" originate from Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Was the Book of Mormon description of a cataclysm at the time of Christ's death derived from a similar description in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Are there similarities between the description of forts in the Book of Mormon and Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Was the Book of Mormon description of the Liahona derived from Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Does the Book of Mormon mention "steel" of "fine workmanship" as described in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Does the Book of Mormon, like Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'', talk of "freemen who came to the defence of the city, built strong holds and forts, and raised up fortifications in abundance"? (← links)
- Question: Were the Three Nephites of the Book of Mormon based upon three of the "lying prophets among the savages" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Is there significance to the fact that both the Book of Mormon and Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' mention a "rod of iron"? (← links)
- Question: Do both the Book of Mormon and Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' talk about people maintaining a "standard of liberty"? (← links)
- Question: Could Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' have given Joseph Smith the idea of using brass plates as a way of recording information? (← links)
- Question: Was the Book of Mormon phrase "it came to pass" derived from Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War''? (← links)
- Question: Does Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' describe "Boats and barges built from trees after the fashion of the ark"? (← links)
- Question: Does Gilbert Hunt's book ''The Late War'' contain rare phrases that do not appear in other works but only appear in the Book of Mormon? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "a mock and a bye-word among all nations" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "he hearkened unto the counsel of the wicked one" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "it came to pass, that they gathered together" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Were the characters on the papyri written by Abraham himself? (← links)
- Question: Does the Joseph Smith papyri consist of Egyptian funerary documents? (← links)
- Question: Do we have all of the papyri that Joseph Smith had? (← links)
- Question: Do the Joseph Smith papyri date back to the time of Abraham? (← links)
- Question: Could Joseph Smith translate Egyptian? (← links)
- Doctrine and Covenants and Church History Study Guide: "These papyri contain authentic Egyptian writings, but they do not date to the time of Abraham, nor do they contain the actual personally handwritten account of Abraham" (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "and a part thereof" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "about twenty and four" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "and slew seven of" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "and wist not what" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "your women and your children" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "were compelled to flee before" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "to come out against" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "they were like unto" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "they were astonished beyond measure" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Question: Is the phrase "they humbled themselves and" in Gilbert Hunt's ''The Late War'' a "rare phrase"? (← links)
- Gospel Topics: "As Joseph grew to understand his prophetic calling, he learned that he could use this stone for the higher purpose of translating scripture" (← links)
- Question: Why would Joseph Smith use the same stone for translating the Book of Mormon that he used for "money digging"? (← links)
- Question: What role did Joseph fill in the community as a youth? (← links)
- Question: Didn't Joseph's 1826 Bainbridge appearance before a judge prove that he had previously been using his seer stone for nefarious purposes? (← links)
- Question: Why would Joseph Smith ''not'' continue to use the sacred interpreters provided with the Nephite record? (← links)
- Question: Did Joseph Smith use his seer stone to view the location of the gold plates in the Hill Cumorah? (← links)
- Question: Is the mention of "Ur of the Chaldees" in the Book of Abraham an anachronism? (← links)
- Paul Hoskisson (1991): "I will suggest an alternate location for the Ur of the Chaldees in the story of Abraham" (← links)
- John Gee: "If Oylum Hoyuk is Olishem, the Ur of the Chaldees should be one of the dozens of Middle Bronze II sites in the Kilis plain" (← links)