Modèle:FeaturedArticles : Différence entre versions

m (Don't need interwiki links between templates)
 
Ligne 8 : Ligne 8 :
 
**'''[[Book of Mormon/Authorship theories/View of the Hebrews|Book of Mormon Authorship theories—Ethan Smith and View of the Hebrews]]'''
 
**'''[[Book of Mormon/Authorship theories/View of the Hebrews|Book of Mormon Authorship theories—Ethan Smith and View of the Hebrews]]'''
 
**'''[[Book of Mormon/Authorship theories/Spalding manuscript|Book of Mormon Authorship theories&mdash;Solomon Spalding's  manuscript]]'''<noinclude>
 
**'''[[Book of Mormon/Authorship theories/Spalding manuscript|Book of Mormon Authorship theories&mdash;Solomon Spalding's  manuscript]]'''<noinclude>
[[en:Template:FeaturedArticles]]
 
 
</noinclude>
 
</noinclude>

Version actuelle datée du 6 juin 2017 à 13:30

   
Template:FeaturedArticles
Current Features
  • Elder Holland's General Conference Talk (Oct. 4, 2009)

For 179 years this book has been examined and attacked, denied and deconstructed, targeted and torn apart like perhaps no other book in modern religious history—perhaps like no other book in any religious history. And still it stands. Failed theories about its origins have been born and parroted and have died—from Ethan Smith to Solomon Spaulding to deranged paranoid to cunning genius. None of these frankly pathetic answers for this book has ever withstood examination because there is no other answer than the one Joseph gave as its young unlearned translator. In this I stand with my own great-grandfather, who said simply enough, “No wicked man could write such a book as this; and no good man would write it, unless it were true and he were commanded of God to do so.”
—Jeffrey R. Holland, “Safety for the Soul,” Ensign, Nov 2009, 88–90