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.
The Late War
Revision as of 12:49, 2 January 2015 by RogerNicholson (talk | contribs)
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Contents
- 1 Questions and Answers
- 1.1 Question: Does the Book of Mormon phrase "curious workmanship" originate from Gilbert Hunt's The Late War?
- 1.2 Question: Does Gilbert Hunt's The Late War talk of 2000 "striplings" who go to war?
- 1.3 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?
- 1.4 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?
- 1.5 Question: Are there similarities between the description of forts in the Book of Mormon and Gilbert Hunt's The Late War?
- 1.6 Question: Does the Book of Mormon mention "steel" of "fine workmanship" as described in Gilbert Hunt's The Late War?
- 1.7 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"?
- 1.8 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?
- 1.9 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"?
- 1.10 Question: Do both the Book of Mormon and Gilbert Hunt's The Late War talk about people maintaining a "standard of liberty"?
- 1.11 Question: Could Gilbert Hunt's The Late War have given Joseph Smith the idea of using brass plates as a way of recording information?