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.
Pages that link to "Template:Endnotes label"
The following pages link to Template:Endnotes label:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Book of Mormon/Warfare/Secret combinations (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Warren:Secret Combinations, Warfare, and Captive Sacrifice in Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon:The source of secret combinations in the Book of Mormon (transclusion) (← links)
- Book of Mormon/Warfare/Weapons (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Roper:Eyewitness Descriptions of Mesoamerican Swords:the Mesoamerican weapon the macuahuitl fits the criteria for the Book of Mormon "sword" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Should we expect to find ancient swords in either the Old World or the New World? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Are all swords mentioned in the Book of Mormon made of metal? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Did the use of metal swords mentioned in the Book of Mormon persist? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Did swords exist in Pre-Columbian America during the Book of Mormon time period? (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Hamblin and Merrill:Swords in the Book of Mormon:The Book of Mormon mentions the sword 156 times (transclusion) (← links)
- Book of Mormon/Warfare/Weapons/Bows and arrows (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Hamblin:The Bow and Arrow in the Book of Mormon:After the sword, the bow is the second most frequently mentioned weapon in the Book of Mormon (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What is known about battle tactics in Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What is known about strategy in Book of Mormon warfare? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Why did B.H. Roberts write ''Studies of the Book of Mormon''? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Does the term "familiar spirit" in the Book of Mormon refer to occult practices? (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Larsen and Rencher:Who Wrote the Book of Mormon? An Analysis of Wordprints:Our approach is sometimes referred to as the science of stylometry, which can be defined loosely as statistical analysis of style (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Roper et al:Joseph Smith, the ''Times and Seasons'', and Central American Ruins:have applied the latest iteration of computer analyses to the unsigned editorials that appear in 1842 in the Times and Seasons (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What do wordprint studies say about the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: How well does the geography of the Old World match the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Lehi's journey in the Old World (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What Old World sites match those on Lehi's journey as described in the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Old world geography in the Book of Mormon (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: How realistic is the name "Shazer" described in the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Does the Church authoritatively identify the location of the Hill Cumorah? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is there an "official" or revealed Book of Mormon geography? (transclusion) (← links)
- Church statements on Book of Mormon geography (transclusion) (← links)
- Evaluating Book of Mormon geography theories (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: How should a valid Book of Mormon geography be modeled? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What are the essential features of a valid Book of Mormon geography? (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Clark:A Key for Evaluating Nephite Geographies:This should be our second question, the first being whether the geography fits the facts of the Book of Mormon (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Does the Book of Mormon fit best in a geography located around the Great Lakes, between the United States and Canada? (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Norwood:Review of Vernal Holley, ''Book of Mormon Authorship: A Closer Look'':Vernal Holley's contribution to the issue is a plethora of parallels (transclusion) (← links)
- Mesoamerican Model of Book of Mormon geography (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What is the Heartland Model of Book of Mormon geography (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Wright:Heartland as Hinterland:The core locations and events detailed in the text of the Book of Mormon took place in Mesoamerica, but many Nephites and Lamanites migrated and established settlements far northward (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Are theories that do not agree with the Heartland model "apostate?" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Should we reject statements made by Joseph Smith regarding Book of Mormon geography? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Do references to "this continent" made by Joseph Smith refer to North America? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is there a revealed Book of Mormon geography? (transclusion) (← links)
- Observer and Telegraph (Nov 1830): "the Aborigines of America; who, as they affirm, are a part of the tribe of Manasseh, and whose ancestors landed on the coast of Chile" (transclusion) (← links)
- W. W. Phelps: Ruins in Central America "good testimony in favor of the Book of Mormon" (transclusion) (← links)
- American Revivalist (2 Feb 1833): "The Book of Mormon is a record of the forefathers of our western tribes of Indians" (transclusion) (← links)
- Evening and the Morning Star (March 1833): "The continent of America is a choice land above all others" (transclusion) (← links)
- Evening and the Morning Star (Jun 1833): "NO people that have lived on this continent, since the flood, understood many of the arts and sciences, better that the Jaredites and Nephites" (transclusion) (← links)
- Evening and the Morning Star (Jun 1833): "Lehi was guided by the matchless power of God to this continent" (transclusion) (← links)
- Joseph Smith (4 Jun 1834): "wandering over the plains of the Nephites" (transclusion) (← links)
- Eli Gilbert (24 Sep 1834): "was not the book of Mormon also written by men who were divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit, on the continent of America?" (transclusion) (← links)
- W.W. Phelps (Feb 1835): "The first one is where you sat day after day and wrote the history of the second race that inhabited this continent" (transclusion) (← links)
- Oliver Cowdery (Jul 1835): "A history of the inhabitants who peopled this continent, previous to its being discovered to Europeans by Columbus" (transclusion) (← links)
- W.W. Phelps (Oct 1835): "the Indians, whose history and doings, upon this western continent, it unfolds as plainly" (transclusion) (← links)