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Aaron [see also Priesthood]
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Angels, Heavenly Beings, and Messengers
A FARMS symposium at BYU on Saturday, 26 January, highlighted findings from a years-long effort to collect, translate, and publish ancient accounts of the early life of the patriarch Abraham. Titled “Traditions about the Early Life of Abraham,” the free public event featured presentations by John Tvedtnes, Brian Hauglid, and John Gee, compilers and editors of a new book of the same title published by the Institute under the FARMS imprint.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
“Now for this cause I know that man is nothing, which thing I never had supposed.” So lamented Moses in utter humility after seeing in vision the complexities of the planet Earth and her countless inhabitants. Shortly thereafter Moses was to see once again the earth and her. Imagine, however, his profound astonishment when, in answer to his plea for an explanation, the Lord revealed himself to Moses and told him of even more wondrous creations. “And worlds without number have I created. . . . For behold, there are many worlds that have passed away by the word of my power.” Other heavens and earths had already expired. New heavens, star systems with inhabitable planets, would be born in the distant future. Moses would surely have felt even more insignificant had not the Lord reassured him with his presence and the counsel that “all things are numbered unto me.”
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Astronomy
Map with explanation
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Chart
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Review of John A. Tvedtnes, Brian M. Hauglid, and John Gee, comps. and eds. Traditions about the Early Life of Abraham.
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
RSC Topics > A — C > Adversity
RSC Topics > Q — S > Sacrifice
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
RSC Topics > A — C > Book of Abraham
Idrimi of Alalakh lived in Syria about a century after Abraham and left an autobiographical inscription that is the only such item uncovered archaeologically from Middle Bronze Age Syro-Palestine. The inscription of Idrimi and the Book of Abraham share a number of parallel features and motifs. Some of the parallels are a result of similar experiences in their lives and some are a result of coming from a similar culture and time.
The plausibility of the attempted offering of Abraham by a priest of pharaoh and the existence of human sacrifice in ancient Egypt have been questioned and debated. This paper presents strong evidence that ritual slaying did exist among ancient Egyptians, with a particular focus on its existence in the Middle Kingdom. It details three individual evidences of human sacrifice found in ancient Egypt. Four different aspects of the attempted offering of Abraham are compared to these Egyptian evidences to illustrate how the story of Abraham fits with the picture of ritual slaying in Middle Kingdom Egypt.
Since 1989, the Review of Books on the Book of Mormon has published review essays to help serious readers make informed choices and judgments about books and other publications on topics related to the Latter-day Saint religious tradition. It has also published substantial freestanding essays that made further contributions to the field of Mormon studies. In 1996, the journal changed its name to the FARMS Review with Volume 8, No 1. In 2011, the journal was renamed Mormon Studies Review.
Review of Hugh Nibley. Abraham in Egypt.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham
Review of E. Douglas Clark. The Blessing of Abraham: Becoming a Zion People.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
RSC Topics > A — C > Book of Abraham
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
A travel journal of many Bible lands
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
No abstract available.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Republished in 2000 in a second edition with new materials and illustrations as Abraham in Egypt, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 14.
Nibley examines the Book of Abraham’s striking connections with ancient texts and Egyptian religion and culture.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Chapters > Abraham 1
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Chapters > Abraham 2
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Considered by many to be a classic in LDS literature, this new edition of Abraham in Egypt [published in association with the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS)] contains all the material from the first edition as well as additions from Nibley’s 1968–70 Improvement Era series “A New Look at the Pearl of Great Price.”
In 1968–70, Hugh Nibley wrote a series of articles for the Improvement Era titled “A New Look at the Pearl of Great Price.” Brother Nibley asked that some of these articles be made into chapters to be added to Abraham in Egypt. These new chapters are what constitutes the new edition; no changes were made to the original chapters. For the articles, Nibley drew from many Jewish and rabbinical sources, while his work in the first edition was based on Egyptian material.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
The Book of Abraham, one of the canonized works of Latter-day Saint scripture brought forth by the Prophet Joseph Smith, has been attacked by critics since its publication in 1842. In Abraham in Egypt, LDS scholar Hugh Nibley draws on his erudition in ancient languages, literature, and history to defend the book on historical and doctrinal grounds. Nibley examines the Book of Abraham’s striking connections with ancient texts and Egyptian religion and culture. He discusses the book’s many nonbiblical themes that are found in apocryphal literature not known or available in Smith’s day. In opening up many other lines of inquiry, Nibley lays an essential foundation for further research on the biblical patriarch Abraham. This enlarged, second edition of Nibley’s classic 1981 work of the same title updates the endnotes, includes many illustrations, and adds several chapters taken from a series of articles in the Improvement Era entitled “A Look at the Pearl of Great Price,” which Nibley wrote between 1968 and 1970.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
The Book of Abraham, one of the canonized works of Latter-day Saint scripture brought forth by the Prophet Joseph Smith, has been attacked by critics since its publication in 1842. In Abraham in Egypt, LDS scholar Hugh Nibley draws on his erudition in ancient languages, literature, and history to defend the book on historical and doctrinal grounds. Nibley examines the Book of Abraham’s striking connections with ancient texts and Egyptian religion and culture. He discusses the book’s many nonbiblical themes that are found in apocryphal literature not known or available in Smith’s day. In opening up many other lines of inquiry, Nibley lays an essential foundation for further research on the biblical patriarch Abraham. This enlarged, second edition of Nibley’s classic 1981 work of the same title updates the endnotes, includes many illustrations, and adds several chapters taken from a series of articles in the Improvement Era entitled “A Look at the Pearl of Great Price,” which Nibley wrote between 1968 and 1970.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
The Book of Abraham, one of the canonized works of Latter-day Saint scripture brought forth by the Prophet Joseph Smith, has been attacked by critics since its publication in 1842. In Abraham in Egypt, LDS scholar Hugh Nibley draws on his erudition in ancient languages, literature, and history to defend the book on historical and doctrinal grounds. Nibley examines the Book of Abraham’s striking connections with ancient texts and Egyptian religion and culture. He discusses the book’s many nonbiblical themes that are found in apocryphal literature not known or available in Smith’s day. In opening up many other lines of inquiry, Nibley lays an essential foundation for further research on the biblical patriarch Abraham. This enlarged, second edition of Nibley’s classic 1981 work of the same title updates the endnotes, includes many illustrations, and adds several chapters taken from a series of articles in the Improvement Era entitled “A Look at the Pearl of Great Price,” which Nibley wrote between 1968 and 1970.
A study of the story of how Sarah ended up at the royal palace
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
The volume “An Approach to the Book of Abraham” contains diverse essays, including his three-year series of lengthy articles from Improvement Era, “A New Look at the Pearl of Great Price.” According to Nibley, “Until now, no one has done much more than play around with the bedizening treasury of the Pearl of Great Price. They would not, we could not make of the Book of Abraham an object of serious study. The time has come to change all that.”
Discusses Abraham’s dealings with men as a missionary.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Blake Ostler examines what relationship exists between the papyri of the ancient Egyptian Book of Breathings possessed by Joseph Smith and the Book of Abraham. Ostler finds that Joseph Smith, in associating vignettes of the Book of the Dead to explain Abraham’s experiences, was actually duplicating an ancient practice about which he could not have known from secular sources available in his day.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Hugh W. Nibley (1910–2005) was arguably the most brilliant Latter-day Saint scholar of the 20th century, with wide-ranging interests in scripture, history, and social issues. The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley comprise nineteen weighty volumes. But he was also one of the most enigmatic observers of the Church. In this volume readers will discover that the personal stories and perspectives behind the scholarship are sometimes even more captivating than his brilliant and witty intellectual breakthroughs. This comprehensive three-part collection of essays sheds fascinating new light on Hugh Nibley as a scholar and a man. Part 1, entitled “Portraits,” contains the first collection of observations—a “spiritual” portrait of Hugh Nibley by his close friend and colleague John W. “Jack” Welch, a description of the physical portrait by Rebecca Everett hanging in the Hugh Nibley Ancient Studies room at Brigham Young University, and a biographical portrait by Hugh himself. Part 2, “Nibley, the Scholar,” contains expanded and updated versions of the almost forgotten audio and video recordings of the BYU Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship lecture series celebrating the centennial of Nibley’s birth in 2010. An additional set of chapters on Nibley’s scholarship rounds out this collection. Part 3, “Nibley, the Man,” includes tributes given by family members and others at Nibley’s funeral service. A series of entertaining personal stories, reminiscences, and folklore accounts concludes the volume.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Egyptian Studies
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Abraham’s test
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Abraham’s obedience
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Plural Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Discourse by Apostle Erastus Snow, delivered in the Salt Lake Assembly Hall, Sunday Afternoon, February 26, 1882. Reported By: Geo. F. Gibbs.
Discourse by Apostle Erastus Snow, delivered in the Tabernacle, Provo, Sunday Morning, May 31 (Quarterly Conference), 1885. Reported By: John Irvine.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Discourse by Elder John Taylor, delivered in the New Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, July 29, 1877. Reported By: Rudger Clawson.
Discourse by President John Taylor, delivered at Parowan, Sunday Morning, June 24, 1883. Reported By: John Irvine.
Discourse by Apostle Moses Thatcher, delivered in the Tabernacle, Logan, Cache County, Semi-Annual Conference, Thursday Afternoon, October 8, 1885. Reported By: John Irvine.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Stories about Abraham circulated in ancient times and were continued into the medieval period. Many of these accounts were then lost and have come to light only recently. John Tvedtnes examines several such stories— ranging from creation accounts to the attempted sacrifice of Abraham— and shows how they support the Book of Abraham.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Sacrifice
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Insights from the Old Testament to help strengthen the resolve for an eternal marriage
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
The Standard Works, the Masoretic text, and the JST arranged in columns with commentary to teach about Adam, Enoch, and Noah
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
The teachings of Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
LDS teachings about Adam
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
How men and women can become one in heart and mind
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Fall
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Atonement
The Eden account is both literal and figurative
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Reprinted in Old Testament and Related Studies, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 1.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
Originally presented as a talk given on 1 April 1980 at Brigham Young University.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Perspectives on Science and the Book of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Adam and Eve — Secondary Sources
How the statements cursing Eve in the garden were symbolic
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
The purposes for the Fall of Adam
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
An explanation of the Hebrew root behind “replenish” in Genesis 1:28
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
An explanation of what Adam and Eve did and why
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Adversity [see also Job, in canonical categories]
Old Testament Topics > Adversity [see also Job, in canonical categories]
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Angels, Heavenly Beings, and Messengers
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Angels, Heavenly Beings, and Messengers
The scriptural purpose of angels and references to angels in the standard works
Old Testament Topics > Angels, Heavenly Beings, and Messengers
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Old Testament Topics > History
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Non-English Resources
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Non-English Resources
Abstract: This article highlights the striking resemblances between Moses 1 and a corresponding account from the Apocalypse of Abraham (ApAb), one of the earliest and most important Jewish texts describing heavenly ascent. Careful comparative analysis demonstrates a sustained sequence of detailed affinities in narrative structure that go beyond what Joseph Smith could have created out of whole cloth from his environment and his imagination. The article also highlights important implications for the study of the Book of Moses as a temple text. Previous studies have suggested that the story of Enoch found in the Pearl of Great Price might be understood as the culminating episode of a temple text woven throughout chapters 2–8 of the Book of Moses. The current article is a conceptual bookend to these earlier studies, demonstrating that the account of heavenly ascent in Moses 1 provides a compelling prelude to a narrative outlining laws and liturgy akin to what could have been used anciently as part of ritual ascent within earthly temples.
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2020)
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2021)
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Historicity and Ancient Threads — General Issues
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 1 — Visions of Moses
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2020)
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2021)
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Historicity and Ancient Threads — General Issues
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 1 — Visions of Moses
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2020)
“Moses 1 and the Apocalypse of Abraham: Twin Sons of Different Mothers?” (2020)
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Historicity and Ancient Threads — General Issues
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 1 — Visions of Moses
Concludes that Jasher is a medieval work and not the one mentioned in the Old Testament
Review of LDS Perspectives on the Dead Sea Scrolls (1997), edited by Donald W. Parry and Dana M. Pike
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 4–6:12 — Grand Council in Heaven, Adam and Eve
Book of Moses Topics > Temple Themes in the Book of Moses and Related Scripture
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 4–6:12 — Grand Council in Heaven, Adam and Eve
Book of Moses Topics > Temple Themes in the Book of Moses and Related Scripture
An extensive bibliography of writings related to the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > General Collections and Key Texts
Old Testament Topics > History
The Lord has told us that many things in the Apocrypha are true and many false. The fascination that apocryphal writings generally hold for Latter-day Saints was recognized in a 1983 BYU symposium on this topic addressed by fifteen scholars representing a wide range of expertise. Those addresses are collected in this book.
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Surveys and Perspectives on Ancient Sources from Outside the Bible
RSC Topics > A — C > Bible
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
RSC Topics > A — C > Bible
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Primary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Primary Sources
How the scriptures were made more available through the translation of the Old Testament to Greek three hundred years before Christ
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Abstract: Latter-day Saints are often aware that the Apocrypha contains valuable sacred material along with some “interpolations of men,” but few know how to approach those ancient texts and what they could learn from them. A new book by Jared W. Ludlow provides a helpful tool to guide LDS readers in appreciating the Apocrypha and exploring the material in these highly diverse sacred documents.
Review of Jared W. Ludlow, Exploring the Apocrypha from a Latter-day Saint Perspective (Springville, Utah: CFI, 2018). 234 pp. $16.99. Never repeat a conversation, and you will lose nothing at all. With friend or foe do not report it, and unless it would be a sin for you, do not reveal it; for someone may have heard you and watched you, and in time will hate you. Have you heard something? Let it die with you. Be brave, it will not make you burst! Having heard something, the fool suffers birth pangs like a woman in labor with a child. Like an arrow stuck in a person’s thigh, so is gossip inside a fool.
— Ecclesiasticus, aka The Wisdom of Jesus Ben Sira,
aka Sirach 19:7–12. .
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
When I was invited to participate in this symposium on the subject of apocryphal literature, my first inclination was to decline. This was a conference for experts trained in the biblical languages. But after some reflection, I changed my mind because I think there is a place for variety, and there might even be an advantage in having a paper from a nonlinguistic point of view. And so, although I do not know Greek or Hebrew, I have had considerable exposure to Church history, and I am familiar with the formation of several books of scripture and non-scripture. This is especially true as pertaining to the books that are used by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (hereinafter labeled the LDS Church) and the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (hereinafter called the RLDS Church). And I think there are some parallels between the development of books in the Church anciently and development of books in the Church in modern times.
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Surveys and Perspectives on Ancient Sources from Outside the Bible
RSC Topics > D — F > Doctrine and Covenants
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In Temple, the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, Cosmos, he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
Hugh Nibley draws parallels between language and traditions found in the Apocrypha to the culture of the people in the Book of Mormon. In the second half of his lecture, Hugh Nibley compares the linguistics and culture of the Book of Mormon to that found in the Apocrypha. The imagery and practices found in the Book of Mormon are compared with certain phrases and material concerns found in Jewish and Christian apocryphal writings.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In Temple, the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, Cosmos, he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Dead Sea Scrolls
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Ordinances
Originally presented on 5 July 1962 to the Seminary and Institute faculty assembled at BYU.
Hugh Nibley answers some questions about the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Reprinted from Qumran and the Companions of the Cave.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Dead Sea Scrolls
Later published in Temple and Cosmos: Beyond This Ignorant Present.
In the second half of his lecture, Hugh Nibley compares the linguistics and culture of the Book of Mormon to that found in the Apocrypha.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
Cf. “Unrolling the Scrolls: Some Forgotten Witnesses,” in Old Testament and Related Studies, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 1. 115–70.
Hugh Nibley draws parallels between language and traditions found in the Apocrypha to the culture of the people in the Book of Mormon. In the second half of his lecture, Hugh Nibley compares the linguistics and culture of the Book of Mormon to that found in the Apocrypha. The imagery and practices found in the Book of Mormon are compared with certain phrases and material concerns found in Jewish and Christian apocryphal writings.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
Also circulated as “Teachings from the Dead Sea Scrolls.”
A survey of teachings in a large number of apocryphal, pseudepigraphal, and patristic writings.
“Unrolling the Scrolls—Some Forgotten Witnesses” (1967)
“Unrolling the Scrolls—Some Forgotten Witnesses” (1986)
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
In this work the Book of Mormon is seen in a new perspective; we see it in a world setting, not in a mere local one. It takes its place naturally alongside the Bible and other great works of antiquity and becomes one of them.
In the light of the Dead Sea Scrolls, all the Apocryphal writings must be read again with a new respect. Today the correctness of the 91st Section of the Doctrine and Covenants as an evaluation of the Apocrypha is vindicated with the acceptance of an identical view by scholars of every persuasion, though a hundred years ago, the proposition set forth in the Doctrine and Covenants seemed preposterous. What all the apocryphal writings have in common with each other and with the scriptures is the Apocalyptic or eschatological theme. This theme is nowhere more fully and clearly set forth than in the Book of Mormon. Fundamental to this theme is the belief in a single prophetic tradition handed down from the beginning of the world in a series of dispensations but hidden from the world in general and often confined to certain holy writings. Central to the doctrine is the Divine Plan behind the creation of the world that is expressed in all history and revealed to holy prophets from time to time. History unfolds in repeating cycles in order to provide all men with a fair and equal test in the time of their probation. Every dispensation, or “Visitation,” it was taught, is followed by an apostasy and a widespread destruction of the wicked, and ultimately by a refreshing or a new visitation.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
An edited version of an incomplete typescript.
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
The Book of Abraham, one of the canonized works of Latter-day Saint scripture brought forth by the Prophet Joseph Smith, has been attacked by critics since its publication in 1842. In Abraham in Egypt, LDS scholar Hugh Nibley draws on his erudition in ancient languages, literature, and history to defend the book on historical and doctrinal grounds. Nibley examines the Book of Abraham’s striking connections with ancient texts and Egyptian religion and culture. He discusses the book’s many nonbiblical themes that are found in apocryphal literature not known or available in Smith’s day. In opening up many other lines of inquiry, Nibley lays an essential foundation for further research on the biblical patriarch Abraham. This enlarged, second edition of Nibley’s classic 1981 work of the same title updates the endnotes, includes many illustrations, and adds several chapters taken from a series of articles in the Improvement Era entitled “A Look at the Pearl of Great Price,” which Nibley wrote between 1968 and 1970.
A stimulating comparison and analysis of the Apocalypse of Abraham and the Testament of Abraham, presenting the two traditions and offering others that have specif relevance to the Book of Abraham.
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Joseph Smith Papyri, Book of Breathings, Book of the Dead, Facsimiles, Egyptology, Hypocephalus
Some brief references to the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Dead Sea Scrolls
Some brief references to the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Dead Sea Scrolls
Dead Sea Scroll evidence witnesses that the text of the Bible has not been so much altered as mutilated by the removal of material from the original
As evidenced by the Dead Sea Scrolls, Isaiah was subject to the same abridging as the Book of Mormon prophets
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
As evidenced by the Dead Sea Scrolls, Isaiah was subject to the same abridging as the Book of Mormon prophets
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Reprinted as “Treasures in the Heavens” in Nibley on the Timely and the Timeless (1978), 49–84; (2004), 53–93; and in Old Testament and Related Studies, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 1:171–214.
A complex and rich study of the cosmology of the Christian world, which is compared to other similar sources. — Midgley
“Treasures in the Heavens” (1986)
“Treasures in the Heavens” (2004)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Cosmology, Creation, Treasures in the Heavens
As evidenced by the Dead Sea Scrolls, Isaiah was subject to the same abridging as the Book of Mormon prophets
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
As evidenced by the Dead Sea Scrolls, Isaiah was subject to the same abridging as the Book of Mormon prophets
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Reprinted as “Treasures in the Heavens” in Old Testament and Related Studies, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 1, Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and FARMS, 171–214.
A complex and rich study of the cosmology of the Christian world, which is compared to other similar sources. — Midgley. As Christianity has been deeschatologized and demythologized in our own day; so in the fourth century it was thoroughly dematerialized, and ever since then, anything smacking of “cosmism” that is, tending to associate religion with the physical universe in any way has been instantly condemned by Christian and Jewish clergy alike as paganism and blasphemy. Joseph Smith was taken to task for the crude literalism of his religion not only talking with angels like regular people but giving God the aspect attributed to Him by the primitive prophets of Israe, and, strangest of all, unhesitatingly bringing other worlds and universes into the picture. Well, some of the early Christian and Jewish writers did the same thing; this weakness in them has been explained away as a Gnostic aberration, and yet today there is a marked tendency in all the churches to support the usual bloodless abstractions and stereotyped moral sermons with a touch of apocalyptic realism, which indeed now supplies the main appeal of some of the most sensationally successful evangelists. Over a century ago, J.-P. Migne argued that the medieval legends of the Saints were far less prone to mislead the faithful than those scientifically oriented apocrypha of the Early Church, since the former were the transparent inventions of popular fantasy that could never lead thinking people astray, while the latter, by their air of factual reporting and claims to scientific plausibility, led the early Christians into all manner of extravagant speculation, drawing the faithful astray in many directions. To appreciate the strength of their own position, Latter-day Saints should not be without some knowledge of both these traditions. Since the “cosmist” doctrines have been almost completely neglected, here we offer a look at some of them.
“Treasures in the Heavens: Some Early Christian Insights into the Organizing of Worlds” (1974)
“Treasures in the Heavens” (1986)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Cosmology, Creation, Treasures in the Heavens
As Christianity has been deeschatologized and demythologized in our own day; so in the fourth century it was thoroughly dematerialized, and ever since then anything smacking of “ cosmism“ that is, tending to associate religion with the physical universe in any way has been instantly condemned by Christian and Jewish clergy alike as paganism and blasphemy. Joseph Smith was taken to task for the crude literalism of his religion not only talking with angels like regular people, but giving God the aspect attributed to Him by the primitive prophets of Israel, and, strangest of all, unhesitatingly bringing other worlds and universes into the picture. Well, some of the early Christian and Jewish writers did the same thing; this weakness in them has been explained away as a Gnostic aberration, and yet today there is a marked tendency in all the churches to support the usual bloodless abstractions and stereotyped moral sermons with a touch of apocalyptic realism, which indeed now supplies the main appeal of some of the most sensationally successful evangelists. Over a century ago, J.-P. Migne argued that the medieval legends of the Saints were far less prone to mislead the faithful than those scientifically oriented apocrypha of the Early Church, since the former were the transparent inventions of popular fantasy which could never lead thinking people astray, while the latter by their air of factual reporting and claims to scientific plausibility led the early Christians into all manner of extravagant speculation, drawing the faithful astray in many directions. To appreciate the strength of their own position, Latter-day Saints should not be without some knowledge of both these traditions. Since the “cosmist“ doctrines have been almost completely neglected, here we offer a look at some of them.
“Treasures in the Heavens: Some Early Christian Insights into the Organizing of Worlds” (1974)
“Treasures in the Heavens” (2004)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Cosmology, Creation, Treasures in the Heavens
An address originally given on 5 July 1962 to the Seminary and Institute faculty assembled at BYU.
Hugh Nibley answers some questions about the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Dead Sea Scrolls
“Apocryphal Writings” (1967)
“Unrolling the Scrolls—Some Forgotten Witnesses” (1986)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Language > Records, Writing
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Cosmology, Creation, Treasures in the Heavens
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Ordinances
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Prayer Circles
“Unrolling the Scrolls—Some Forgotten Witnesses” (1967)
“Apocryphal Writings” (1967)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Language > Records, Writing
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Secondary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Secondary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Secondary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Surveys and Perspectives on Ancient Sources from Outside the Bible
The Apocalypse of Abraham, a pseudepigraphon only extant in a fourteenth century Old Church Slavonic manuscript, has not received much attention from scholars of Ancient Judaism, due in part to a lack of readily available information regarding the history and transmission of the Slavonic Pseudepigrapha. This dissertation examines the historical context of these works with the aim of assessing the probability that they contain ancient Jewish material. The rest of the dissertation is focused on the Apocalypse of Abraham specifically, discussing its date and provenance, original language, probability that it comes from Essene circles, textual unity, and Christian interpolations. This includes treatments of the issue of free will, determinism, and predestination in the Apocalypse of Abraham as well as the methodological complexities in trying to distinguish between early Jewish and Christian works. It also provides an in-depth comparison of the Apocalypse of Abraham with 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch and takes up the question of the social setting for these texts based on relevant precedents set by recent scholars of midrash who seek to probe the “socio-cultural and historical situatedness” of midrashic texts. This discussion includes a survey of parallels between the content of the Apocalypse of Abraham and rabbinic literature to support the argument that a sharp distinction between apocalyptic ideas and what later became rabbinic tradition did not exist in the time between 70 and 135 C.E. Overall, this dissertation argues that the Apocalypse of Abraham is an early Jewish document written during the decades following the destruction of the Second Temple. While seeking to warn its readers of the dangers of idolatry in light of the apocalyptic judgment still to come, it also provides sustained exegesis of Genesis 15, which gives cohesion to the entire document.
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Secondary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
In this paper I intend to deal primarily with the element of deception in the production and employment of apocryphal literature, particularly as it is revealed by the devices of pseudonymity and pseudepigraphy. I am defining pseudonymity here as an author’s intentional adoption of another persona, not merely as a pen name but as an assumed identity. Thus the Testament of Solomon is pseudonymous because the author has clearly adopted the persona of Solomon and speaks, as Solomon, in the first person. On the other hand, Huckleberry Finn would not be pseudonymous by my definition even though Samuel Clemens used the nom de plume Mark Twain, because Clemens did not adopt a persona other than his own; that is, we may assume that Clemens did not return royalty checks made out to Mark Twain, but rather cashed them unashamedly. Sam Clemens was Mark Twain, and there was no real possibility of confusing one person for the other.
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Surveys and Perspectives on Ancient Sources from Outside the Bible
In most forms of Gnosticism secret oral tradition is often associated with accounts of the creation of the world, the experiences of Adam and Eve in the Garden, and the fall of man. It is usually in this creation setting or in a temple or on a mountaintop that Gnosticism places the revelation of the esoteric mysteries and the knowledge needed to thwart the archontic powers and return to God.
Gnosticism is primarily concerned with the questions, Who am I? Where am I from? and What is my destiny? That the answers to these questions are often associated with the creation, the Garden, and the fall of man is probably due to the Gnostic presupposition that the end of all things is to be found in their beginning. Of those documents which manifest this concern, the Nag Hammadi Apocalypse of Adam is perhaps the prime example.
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Adam and Eve — Secondary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Primary Sources
Book of Moses Topics > Selection of Ancient Sources > Apocalypse of Abraham — Primary Sources
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
Review of ?Joseph Smith's Use of the Apocrypha? (1995), by Jerald and Sandra Tanner
Adam, Moses, Abraham, and Noah in apocryphal writings and traditions
The apocryphal book Susanna.
Review of Robert M. Price. The Pre-Nicene New Testament: Fifty-four Formative Texts.
Several approaches to interpreting Joseph Smith’s use of the so-called Jewish and Christian apocryphal literature have been employed both by critics of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (hereafter LDS), and by those professing faith in the Church and whose interests may be classified as apologetic. These approaches span the range of being probative of Joseph Smith’s restoration of lost texts and scripture and being dismissive of Mormonism generally, because its sacred religious texts are founded on flagrant plagiarism of apocryphal literature.[1] Before one can answer the most important historical question at hand, how Joseph Smith used the Apocrypha and what relationship that body of literature had to early Mormon writings, it seems prudent to first of all establish some controls on the discussion. This is necessary because previous discussions have largely contented themselves with drawing out parallels between apocryphal writings and early Mormon publications without any discussion of whether or not Joseph Smith had access to the texts under discussion. Moreover, a wide variety of modern translations of ancient apocryphal texts are often employed when there is no possible way that someone living in the early nineteenth century could have known them. This is particularly important when citing phrases or words that Joseph Smith might have incorporated into the language of his revelations.
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Surveys and Perspectives on Ancient Sources from Outside the Bible
RSC Topics > A — C > Bible
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Similarities between LDS doctrines and the Dead Sea Scrolls do not prove that Qumran had the gospel
Archaeology
An article reprinted from Leslie’s Weekly maintains that the excavation of Giza supports the truthfulness of the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Archeological evidence. Reprinted from the Deseret News.
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Archaeology
This is the manuscript of an essay submitted to the Instructor, rejected, and circulated with two letters, both dated 16 September 1965, one addressed to “Dear Brother” (1 page) and the other addressed to “Mr. W.” (5 pages).
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Archaeology
An edited version of the manuscript of an essay submitted to the Instructor, rejected, and circulated with two letters, both dated 16 September 1965, one addressed to “Dear Brother” (1 page) and the other addressed to “Mr. W.” (5 pages).
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Archaeology
Archaeological evidence incorrectly used as proof of scriptural accounts
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
The 1938–39 study manual for MIA
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Armageddon
The fulfillment of the prophecy of Armageddon will depend on the faith of the Saints and there will be no nuclear or conventional war
Astronomy
“Now for this cause I know that man is nothing, which thing I never had supposed.” So lamented Moses in utter humility after seeing in vision the complexities of the planet Earth and her countless inhabitants. Shortly thereafter Moses was to see once again the earth and her. Imagine, however, his profound astonishment when, in answer to his plea for an explanation, the Lord revealed himself to Moses and told him of even more wondrous creations. “And worlds without number have I created. . . . For behold, there are many worlds that have passed away by the word of my power.” Other heavens and earths had already expired. New heavens, star systems with inhabitable planets, would be born in the distant future. Moses would surely have felt even more insignificant had not the Lord reassured him with his presence and the counsel that “all things are numbered unto me.”
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Astronomy
Old Testament Topics > Astronomy
Atonement
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Atonement
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Atonement
Old Testament Topics > Fall
Baptism
Old Testament Topics > Baptism
Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Translation
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
The latter-day restoration of the gospel included the restoration of much significant truth to the Bible. It brought about the restoration of biblical history that had been lost and the restoration of biblical texts that had been changed or omitted or were in need of clarification. More important, it included the restoration of biblical doctrine that had been either removed, distorted, or simply misinterpreted by a world that did not enjoy the fulness of the gospel.
Shortly after the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint was organized, the Prophet Joseph Smith was instructed by the Lord to undertake a careful reading of the Bible to revise and make corrections in accordance with the inspiration that he would receive. The result was a work of profound significance for the Church that included the revelation of many important truths and the restoration of many of the “precious things” that the Book of Mormon prophet Nephi had foretold would be taken from the Bible (1 Ne. 13:23–29). In June 1830 the first revealed addition to the Bible was set to writing. Over the next three years, the Prophet made changes, additions, and corrections as were given him by divine inspiration while he filled his calling to provide a more correct translation for the Church. Collectively, these are called the Joseph Smith Translation (JST), a name first applied in the 1970s, or the New Translation, as Joseph Smith and others in his day referred to it.
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Joseph Smith Translation (JST), Primary Manuscripts and Parallel Editions
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Adversity [see also Job, in canonical categories]
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Priesthood
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Doctrines and Teachings
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
RSC Topics > D — F > Devil
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
This book is a study of the text of Selections from the Book of Moses, an excerpt of Genesis from the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible. Commonly called the Book of Moses, it is the first section in the Pearl of Great Price, one of the standard works of scripture of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We now have access to the revealed text itself, which we did not have before, and we can examine the words as they were recorded when they first came from the inspired lips of the Prophet. We are in a new day, a day of closer access to one of the great fruits of the Restoration—an important branch of Joseph Smith’s calling, as he designated his inspired work on the Bible. With our ability now to examine the original documents closely, we can express our thanks to a loving God who has provided that “righteousness and truth.”
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Secondary Manuscripts and Published Editions
Old Testament Topics > Moses
In 1828, the H. and E. Phinney Company in Cooperstown, New York, published a quarto-size edition of the King James Bible. This is the version that Joseph Smith, founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, used in his work when he created a new translation of the Bible. Here the author examines Joseph Smith’s marked-up copy of the Phinney Bible as an artifact important to Mormonism’some of Smith’s corrections and additions appear in footnotes of the Bible that Mormons use today. The author notes that the Phinney Bible’s updated language is more modern than the version of the Bible Latter-day Saints officially use (the King James), and the modernization may or may not have influenced Joseph Smith’s word choice in creating his translation. The author also gives biographical information on the Phinneys, describes how their Bible may have made its way into Joseph Smith’s hands, briefly traces the history of the English Bible in America, and describes the printing process employed by the Phinneys.
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > History
The book of Moses, Noah and the covenant, Melchizedek, tokens and priesthood ordinances, Lot in Sodom, Jacob’s prophecies of Joseph, and Moses and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > History
Robert Matthews presents this survey of biblical textual criticism with the suggestion that omissions to the Bible text of today are more extensive and more intentional than most textual critics have realized. He sums up the history of biblical translations and discusses the church situation in June 1830, when Joseph Smith received the first revelation associated with an inspired translation of the Bible.
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
This article will attempt to look at the Church in the early 1830s and, so far as it is possible, will trace the introduction of several important doctrinal concepts into the Church during that time. In this context we will discuss the role of new translation of the Bible in the restoration of the gospel in this dispensation. When speaking of the “development” of the Church doctrine, we do not mean particularly to dwell on an evolutionary phenomena but rather simply to emphasize that all of the doctrines were not revealed at once and that there has been a developmental increase of doctrine from continuing revelation. It is in the spirit of this principle that we trace the historical relationship that exists between Joseph Smith’s new translation of the Bible and the increase of doctrine during the Kirtland period.
Robert J. Matthew’s first article in the Autumn 1968 issue of BYU Studies dealt primarily with the making of the Inspired Version of the Bible. It considered two major aspects: (1) the preparation of the manuscript notes by the Prophet Joseph Smith and his scribes, and (2) the publication of the printed editions by The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS). This article will discuss a number of passages that are unique to the Inspired Version and also some of the implications in the text that are frequently overlooked. There are at least three levels at which one may read the Inspired Version. The first and simplest level is to compare it with the King James Version to find the variant readings. The second and perhaps the most informative level is to analyze each variant to determine the actual change in meaning that resulted from the Inspired Version rendition. The third and most difficult level is to examine the Inspired Version not only for content but also for style. This level is not limited to what is said but also involves an analysis of how it is said. The third level is particularly important because it deals with the question of whether the Inspired Version is a restoration of the original text of the Bible. Although not all of the variants in the Inspired Version are suitable for this kind of critical examination, a number of passages are thus suited, and these are highly interesting and even provocative when analyzed. Such passages have characteristics about them which strongly suggest inspiration and even restoration of the original text in some instances.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
This article examines the Inspired Version of the Bible translated by Joseph Smith, the first president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Matthews compares Joseph’s Inspired Version with the Bernhisel Manuscript, which has never been published. He also illustrates how Joseph Smith’s revision of the Bible was significant to the establishment of the church.
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
RSC Topics > T — Z > Testimony
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS edition
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
Old Testament Scriptures > Psalms/Proverbs/Ecclesiastes/Song of Solomon
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Papers presented at the BYU Symposium ‘As Translated Correctly’: Joseph Smith’s Translations of the Bible, January 13–14, 1995
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
Ten prominent Church scholars presented at the symposium on the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible. Their in-depth study of the Joseph Smith Translation and related scriptures clarifies the Bible from Genesis to Revelation and show how Joseph Smith restored many plain and precious truths to that holy book. This volume brings together those addresses, illuminating this inspired translation as perhaps no other book had done.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > History
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
A study of different renditions of the JST
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
In 1828, the H. and E. Phinney Company in Cooperstown, New York, published a quarto-size edition of the King James Bible. This is the version that Joseph Smith, founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, used in his work when he created a new translation of the Bible. Here the author examines Joseph Smith’s marked-up copy of the Phinney Bible as an artifact important to Mormonism’some of Smith’s corrections and additions appear in footnotes of the Bible that Mormons use today. The author notes that the Phinney Bible’s updated language is more modern than the version of the Bible Latter-day Saints officially use (the King James), and the modernization may or may not have influenced Joseph Smith’s word choice in creating his translation. The author also gives biographical information on the Phinneys, describes how their Bible may have made its way into Joseph Smith’s hands, briefly traces the history of the English Bible in America, and describes the printing process employed by the Phinneys.
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > History
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Bible: LDS edition
Tabs as inexpensive aids to scripture study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS edition
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Bible: LDS Interpretation
Letter to the editor that criticizes Melodie Moench Charles’s article “The Mormon Christianizing of the Old Testament, which appeared in Sunstone.
Philip L. Barlow offers an in-depth analysis of the approaches taken to the Bible by major Mormon leaders, from its beginnings to the present. He shows that Mormon attitudes toward the Bible comprise an extraordinary mix of conservative, liberal, and radical ingredients: an almost fundamentalist adherence to the King James Version co-exists with belief in the possibility of new revelation and surprising ideas about the limits of human language. Barlow’s exploration takes important steps toward unraveling the mystery of this quintessential American religious phenomenon. This updated edition of Mormons and the Bible includes an extended bibliography and a new preface, casting Joseph Smith’s mission into a new frame and treating evolutions in Mormonism’s biblical usage in recent decades.
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Latter-day Saint Edition of the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Bennion’s response to Melodie Moench Charles’s “The Mormon Christianizing of the Old Testament, which appeared in Sunstone.
Criticism of the way Mormons interpret the Old Testament to support their views
Pre-Adamites, the location and return of the Ten Tribes, and the forbidden fruit
Early Mormon attitudes towards Jews differed from those of other Christians
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
A challenge to Anthony Hutchinson’s article “LDS Approaches to the Holy Bible,” published in Dialogue.
The implications of ancient Hebrew psychology including the divine origin of man and the responsibility for one’s actions
A letter to the editor agreeing with Melodie Moench Charles’s article “The Mormon Christianizing of the Old Testament,” which also appeared in Sunstone.
The Pearl of Great Price documents are not ancient documents but later interpretations like the Jewish tradition of Midrash
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Hutchinson defends his article “LDS Approaches to the Holy Bible,” (also in Dialogue) from a challenge by James E. Faulconer
One does not long study Mormon beginnings without realizing that the Bible held a special place in the hearts of the early Saints. Latter-day Saints use of its accounts and teachings greatly influenced the formulation of Mormon theology, and, in addition, helped the Saints find their personal and group identity in God’s Kingdom. The deep commitment of early Mormon intellectuals to the ancient scriptures is suggested by the frequency and nature of biblical references in their writings. Three Church periodicals published between 1832 and 1838, The Evening and the Morning Star (Independence, Missouri, 1832–33, and Kirtland, Ohio, 1833–34), the Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate (Kirtland, 1834–47), and the Elders’ Journal (Kirtland, 1837, and Far West, Missouri, 1838) are the most important representative samples of the written expression of early Mormon thought, and serve in this investigation as indicators of the attitudes of the Saints towards the Bible, and their uses of its contents. Let us begin by identifying two leading assumptions which governed Mormon biblical interpretation.
Bibliographical references and excerpts from Joseph Smith’s discourses on the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Reprinted in The Prophetic Book of Mormon.
Writing on tally sticks is related to Ezekiel 37 and the meaning of the prophecy that two sticks shall become one. Extensive commentary on the traditional interpretations given to Ezekiel 37.
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Ezekiel
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Criticisms and Apologetics
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Mormon views of the Bible
Part a roundtable discussion. The status of the Bible in the Church; different ways of studying the Bible with a specific look at Nahum and the Revelation of John
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Early LDS interpretations of the Bible
Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
How the scriptures were made more available through the translation of the Old Testament to Greek three hundred years before Christ
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
The development of different versions of the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
A critique of the New English Bible
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
RSC Topics > A — C > Bible
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Biblical Criticism
An article reprinted from Leslie’s Weekly maintains that the excavation of Giza supports the truthfulness of the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Archeological evidence. Reprinted from the Deseret News.
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Scriptures > Joshua
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Most scholars who reject the one-man authorship of Isaiah do so because they reject prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
No abstract available.
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
The need for examination of the Bible
Arguments supporting the theory of a single author of the book of Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Bible: King James Version
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
The reality of prophecy is disputed by scholars but is ultimately a matter of faith
Conclusion that the opponent is either Esau or God
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Originally presented as an address given on 19 June 1956 to the seminary and institute faculty at Brigham Young University.
Solving the problem of historicity of the Bible: how it came around, and what to do about it.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
How Book of Mormon evidence contradicts biblical scholarship, especially the theory of multiple authorship of Isaiah
How Book of Mormon evidence contradicts biblical scholarship, especially the theory of multiple authorship of Isaiah
Biblical criticism and how the brass plates shed light on the multiple strand theory of the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
The Sunday School Supplement on the Mosaic Hypothesis of authorship
Biblical criticism’s contribution to increased learning
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Bibliography
An extensive bibliography of writings related to the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Extensive bibliography
A study of different renditions of the JST
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Old Testament Topics > Bibliography
Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
How the Book of Mormon is the stick of Ephraim, even though Lehi was from Manassah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Lehi’s exodus to the promised land is only the first of a series of exoduses occurring throughout the Book of Mormon. Indeed, Lehi’s exodus becomes mere precedent for later flights into the wilderness by Nephi, Mosiah, Alma1, Limhi, and the Anti-Nephi-Lehies. For the Nephites, continuing exodus is not merely historical fact. Understanding the biblical exodus as a type and shadow, the Nephites come to see their wandering as a metaphor of their spiritual condition. Thus, even centuries after Lehi’s arrival in the promised land, Nephite prophets recognize their status as “wanderers in a strange land” (Alma 13:23). As did Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the Nephites also looked beyond their temporal land of promise “for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God” (Hebrews 11:10).
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
**Only a selection of these chapters are available for online reading. An introduction to several key literary, cultural, linguistic, and religious connections between the Book of Mormon and the Old Testament. Since 1830, millions of people have read the Book of Mormon and studied its claims for ties with the ancient world. The Book of Mormon begins with references to Jerusalem and the Hebrew Bible. Readers often wonder to what extent the Book of Mormon reflects the literary, cultural, and religious world of ancient Israel. In the book Testaments, these and other issues are carefully addressed in a reader-friendly style. The authors, David E. Bokovoy and John A. Tvedtnes illustrate that the Book of Mormon shares much in common with the Old Testament. These exciting links provide clear evidence that the Book of Mormon and the Hebrew Bible serve as related testaments of the Savior Jesus Christ and his restored gospel.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
A correlation of the Book of Mormon and the history of Old Testament events
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Third Nephi 22 (quoting Isaiah 54) addresses a desolate woman who will be redeemed in the latter days. The desolate woman represents Zion, which itself signifies the city of Enoch in ancient times, the hill where the temple was built in Jerusalem, the celestial city of God, the kingdom of God on earth, and a covenant community of temple-worthy Saints. The Lord promises to relieve the desolation of Zion felt through barrenness, lack of a permanent home, and being forsaken and persecuted. The destiny of Zion parallels the pattern of Noah—both remain faithful to their covenants and witness a cleansing of the earth. The Savior serves as Zion’s husband. The servants of the Lord are equated with Zion—the Lord will not allow oppressors to be successful against Zion. The Lord promises to redeem Zion as he sings a song of redeeming love.
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
A linguistic analysis of the symbol of a barren woman associated with Zion, the earth, and the Lord’s servants
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
The Book of Mormon theme “Inasmuch as ye shall keep my commandments ye shall prosper in the land” evidenced in the Bible
The Book of Mormon fulfills prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Oaths
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
When the prophet Abinadi preached repentance to the Nephites, the people were upset and turned him over to King Noah. While in the king’s presence, Abinadi explained to the king and to the priests the meaning of Isaiah’s messianic prophecies. Although they did not heed Abinadi’s teaching, modern readers of the Book of Mormon are now able to better understand the life of Jesus Christ and the key principles of the atonement through Abinadi’s teachings.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Ancient Texts > Lachish Letters
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
In this work the Book of Mormon is seen in a new perspective; we see it in a world setting, not in a mere local one. It takes its place naturally alongside the Bible and other great works of antiquity and becomes one of them.
The Latter-day Saint claim that Ezekiel’s account of the Stick of Joseph and the Stick of Judah is a clear reference to the Book of Mormon has, of course, been challenged. There is no agreement among scholars today as to what the prophet was talking about, and so no competing explanation carries very great authority. The ancient commentators certainly believed that Ezekiel was talking about books of scripture, which they also identify with a staff or rod. As scepters and rods of identification the Two Sticks refer to Judah and Israel or else to the Old Testament and the New. But in this lesson, we present the obvious objections to such an argument. The only alternative is that the Stick of Joseph is something like the Book of Mormon. But did the ancient Jews know about the Lord’s people in this hemisphere? The Book of Mormon says they did not, but in so doing specifies that it was the wicked from whom that knowledge was withheld. Hence it is quite possible that it was had secretly among the righteous, and there is actually some evidence that this was so.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Originally published as a lesson in An Approach to the Book of Mormon (1957).
The Latter-day Saint claim that Ezekiel’s account of the Stick of Joseph and the Stick of Judah is a clear reference to the Book of Mormon has, of course, been challenged. There is no agreement among scholars today as to what the prophet was talking about, and so no competing explanation carries very great authority. The ancient commentators certainly believed that Ezekiel was talking about books of scripture, which they also identify with a staff or rod. As scepters and rods of identification the Two Sticks refer to Judah and Israel or else to the Old Testament and the New. But in this lesson we present the obvious objections to such an argument. The only alternative is that the Stick of Joseph is something like the Book of Mormon. But did the ancient Jews know about the Lord’s people in this hemisphere? The Book of Mormon says they did not, but in so doing specifies that it was the wicked from whom that knowledge was withheld. Hence it is quite possible that it was had secretly among the righteous, and there is actually some evidence that this was so.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Ezekiel
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Criticisms and Apologetics
Reprinted as “The Lachish Letters,” in The Prophetic Book of Mormon, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 8. 380–406.
Suggests connections between the Lachish letters written at the time Jerusalem was destroyed by the Babylonians and events associated with Lehi’s departure. Includes political pressures on prophets, types of proper names, and a possible identification of Mulek.
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Plan of Salvation
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
A glossary of archaic words
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
The essays in this book, written by some of the finest LDS scholars, take a variety of approaches to help readers make the most of the Isaiah passages in the Book of Mormon. These scholars use the prophets of the Book of Mormon as knowledgeable guides, examining how and why those ancient writers used and interpreted Isaiah in order to clarify for modern readers what the Isaiah sections in the Book of Mormon are all about.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Customs, Culture, and Ritual
This second of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the authors have learned from Nibley. Nearly every major subject that Dr. Nibley has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the sacrament covenant in Third Nephi, the Lamanite view of Book of Mormon history, external evidences of the Book of Mormon, proper names in the Book of Mormon, the brass plates version of Genesis, the composition of Lehi’s family, ancient burials of metal documents in stone boxes, repentance as rethinking, Mormon history’s encounter with secular modernity, and Judaism in the 20th century.
Are there indirect evidences of distinctive contents of the brass plates? Can we learn anything about the plates and their contents through an examination of indirect textual evidence in the Book of Mormon?
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 4–6:12 — Grand Council in Heaven, Adam and Eve
Book of Moses Topics > Source Criticism and the Documentary Hypothesis
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Books > Genesis
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses
Abstract: The Book of Mormon peoples repeatedly indicated that they were descendants of Joseph, the son of Jacob who was sold into Egypt by his brothers. The plates of brass that they took with them from Jerusalem c. 600 bce provided them with a version of many Old Testament books and others not included in our Hebrew Bible. Sometime after publishing his translation of the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith undertook an inspired revision of the Bible. The opening chapters of his version of Genesis contain a lot of material not included in the Hebrew Bible. But intriguingly, distinctive phraseology in those chapters, as now published in Joseph Smith’s Book of Moses, also show up in the Book of Mormon text. This paper presents a systematic examination of those repeated phrases and finds strong evidence for the conclusion that the version of Genesis used by the Nephite prophets must have been closely similar to Joseph Smith’s Book of Moses.
[Editor’s Note: This paper appeared first in the 1990 festschrift published to honor Hugh W. Nibley.
It is reprinted here as a convenience for current scholars who are interested in intertextual issues regarding the Book of Mormon. It should be noted that Interpreter has published another paper that picks up this same insight and develops considerable additional evidence supporting the conclusions of the original paper.
This reprint uses footnotes instead of endnotes, and there are two more footnotes in this reprint than there are endnotes in the original paper.].
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 4–6:12 — Grand Council in Heaven, Adam and Eve
Book of Moses Topics > Source Criticism and the Documentary Hypothesis
Book of Mormon Topics > Ancient Texts > Brass Plates
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Compares the Book of Mormon and the View of the Hebrews. The parallels have also been studied by B. H. Roberts and Hugh Nibley, who say that any connections that may be made are also found in the Bible. The emphasis of this paper is on passages from Isaiah that are common to all three books.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Biblical criticism and how the brass plates shed light on the multiple strand theory of the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Support for the single authorship theory of Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Defines simple, compound, and complex chiasmus, surveys the use of chiasmus in Ugaritic epics, the Old Testament, Homer, and later Greek and Latin authors, and compares the appearance of chiasmus in those literatures with chiasmus in the Book of Mormon. The degree of use of chiasmus in the Book of Mormon is similar to that in the Old Testament.
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
The chronology of the use of plant imagery
Old Testament Scriptures > Psalms/Proverbs/Ecclesiastes/Song of Solomon
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Church in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Chart
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Covenant-making and breaking in the Old Testament
An outline of time from Abraham to the birth of the United States written by W. J. Cameron and pedigree charts written by James H. Anderson showing the relationship of Mormonism to the past and the future of the covenant
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
In the text of the Old Testament Yahweh is described as the Redeemer of Israel. A redeemer in Israelite society was a close family member who was responsible to help his enslaved kinsmen by buying them out of bondage. A comparable family relationship is created between the Lord and individuals by the making of covenants and the giving of a new name. The adoptive covenant becomes the basis for the Lord’s acts of redemption. This pattern of adoptive redemption can be seen in both the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon identifies Yahweh, the God and Redeemer of the Old Testament, with Jesus Christ. It further explains that redemption from spiritual bondage comes through the ransom price of his blood and is available to those who enter into adoptive covenants, which create a familial relationship and allow the Lord to act as their redeemer.
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Kinship redemption
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Ordinances
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Discusses temples in relation to the patriarchal promise given to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Scriptures
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
RSC Topics > L — P > Missionary Work
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
The revival of scholarly interest in Abraham in recent decades provides a timely opportunity to explore the contemporary findings of biblical scholars from a Latter-day Saint perspective. This review leads to an in-depth exploration of how the Lord’s covenants with Abraham were understood by the Nephite prophets in the Book of Mormon, how their perspectives compare with contemporary biblical scholarship, and how the Nephite perspective may modify or expand standard Latter-day Saint approaches to understanding the Abrahamic covenant. This article identifies three interrelated streams of covenant discourse in the Book of Mormon—each defined by its respective focus on the (1) Lehite covenant, (2) Abrahamic covenant, or (3) gospel covenant. Though these three streams of covenant discourse are closely related, each is distinct in purpose. Nephite prophets integrated these three in unique ways to develop one larger understanding of God’s use of covenants to bring salvation to the world.
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
RSC Topics > Q — S > Scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
RSC Topics > G — K > Heaven
Covenant making and personal revelation
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Discourse by Apostle Erastus Snow, delivered at the Quarterly Conference, Parowan, Sunday Afternoon, June 24, 1883. Reported By: John Irvine.
Insights from the Old Testament that can help today’s children
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Discourse by President John Taylor, delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday Afternoon (Annual Conference), April 8, 1883. Reported By: Gibbs and Irvine.
A description of the Abrahamic covenant and who its heirs are
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The timing and the materials of the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Seven scriptural accounts of the Creation arranged in parallel columns
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The different scriptural accounts of the Creation and theories on the meaning of article eternity from a scientific perspective
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Grand as it is, planet Earth is part of something even grander—that great plan of God. Simply summarized, the earth was created that families might be.
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Reprinted in Old Testament and Related Studies, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 1.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
Originally presented as a talk given on 1 April 1980 at Brigham Young University.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Perspectives on Science and the Book of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
Biblical criticism and the Creation accounts
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Discourse by Elder Charles W. Penrose, delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday, June 4, 1882. Reported By: Geo. F. Gibbs.
Discourse by Elder Orson Pratt, delivered in the Tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Sunday Morning, August 1, 1880. Reported By: John Irvine.
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The Creation from a scriptural and a scientific viewpoint
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Argument as to when man was created, reconciling the apparent discrepancies in Genesis 1 and 2 and the Pearl of Great Price
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The anthropomorphism of God and origin of man
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Discourse by Elder Erastus Snow, delivered at the Fourteenth Ward Assembly Rooms, Sunday Afternoon, Jan. 20, 1878. Reported By: Geo. F. Gibbs.
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
LDS scholars on the Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The Creation, premortality, and evolution
Old Testament Topics > Creation
The Creation, premortality, and evolution
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Customs, Culture, and Ritual
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
A Jewish custom of blessing God after eating one’s fill at a meal is reflected in passing in Amulek’s household and when the resurrected Christ blesses the sacrament for the Nephites and thereafter instructs them to pray. They “gave glory to Jesus” on this occasion.
Old Testament Topics > Customs, Culture, and Ritual
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
This first of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the contributors have learned from Dr. Nibley. Nearly every major subject that he has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the influence of Nibley, Copts and the Bible, the Seventy in scripture, the great apostasy, the book of Daniel in early Mormon thought, an early Christian initiation ritual, John’s Apocalypse, ancient Jewish seafaring, Native American rites of passage, Sinai as sanctuary and mountain of God, the Qurʾan and creation ex nihilo, and the sacred handclasp and embrace.
This paper presents data, culled primarily from talmudic and midrashic sources, pertaining to the commercial and religious laws that governed Jewish seafaring up to ca. AD 500.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Book of Mormon
Old Testament Topics > Customs, Culture, and Ritual
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
David
Old Testament Topics > David
Dispensations
Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Translated Beings
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
RSC Topics > D — F > Family History
RSC Topics > L — P > Ordinances
RSC Topics > L — P > Priesthood
Howard W. Hunter - May the spirit of Elijah burn deep into our hearts and turn us toward the temples.
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
A Sermon by Elder Orson Pratt, Delivered in the Tabernacle, Great Salt Lake City, August 28, 1859. Reported By: G. D. Watt.
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
A brief note in the History of the Church under the date of Sunday, 3 April 1836, records the appearance of the Lord, Moses, Elias, and Elijah to Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery in the Kirtland Temple. Subsequent writers have noted that this date corresponds to the Jewish Passover, during which the arrival of Elijah is traditionally awaited. A parenthetical note in the Missionary Training Manual: For Use in the Jewish Proselyting Program states the correlation of the two events emphatically. There we are informed that Elijah appeared in the Kirtland Temple “at about the same hour that the Jewish families in that time zone would have been preparing to begin their feast of the Passover.” These statements, although correct in their identification of the Jewish Passover with the ritual expectation of Elijah and in their connecting the time of the appearance of Elijah in the Kirtland Temple with the Passover season, warrant further elucidation and modest chronological correction.
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Discourse by President John Taylor, delivered at Malad, Oneida County, Idaho, Wednesday Morning, October 20, 1881. Reported By: Geo. F. Gibbs.
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Enoch
A speculative description of the city of Enoch and its inhabitants
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Zion
Reprinted in Enoch the Prophet, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 2.
Discusses the book of Enoch and its relationship with the Pearl of Great Price.
“Enoch the Prophet” (1975)
“Enoch the Prophet” (1986)
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
In the Book of Moses, part of the Latter-day Saint scriptural canon known as the Pearl of Great Price, are what the Prophet Joseph Smith entitled “extracts from the prophecy of Enoch.” These scriptures, says the eminent Latter-day Saint scholar Hugh Nibley, “supply us with the most valuable control yet on the bona fides of the Prophet. . . . We are to test. . . . ‘How does it compare with records known to be authentic?’ The excerpts offer the nearest thing to a perfectly foolproof test—neat, clear-cut, and decisive—of Joseph Smith’s claim to inspiration.”
In Enoch the Prophet, Dr. Nibley examines and defends that claim by examining Joseph Smith’s translations in the context of recently discovered apocryphal sources.
This book contains a collection of various comparisons of the Enoch materials in the Book of Moses with the Slavonic and Ethiopic Enoch texts and other related materials and lore from antiquity, showing the possibility that Joseph Smith’s book of Enoch could be authentic ancient text.
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
Reprinted in Enoch the Prophet, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 2.
Discusses the book of Enoch and its relationship with the Pearl of Great Price.
“Enoch the Prophet” (1976)
“Enoch the Prophet” (1986)
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
Originally presented as a lecture given 22 November 1975 for the Pearl of Great Price Symposium at Brigham Young University.
Discusses the book of Enoch and its relationship with the Pearl of Great Price.
“Enoch the Prophet” (1975)
“Enoch the Prophet” (1976)
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
Reprinted from a series of articles in the Ensign.
A discussion on the lost book of Enoch and how it would provide an accurate test of authenticity for the Book of Moses.
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
Reprinted in Enoch the Prophet, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 2. 91–301.
A discussion of the worldview and scenario of the Hopis. Editor’s note: With the October 1975 issue, the Ensign began a series on the book of Enoch authored by Hugh Nibley. As Part 1 recounts, early Christian writers knew and respected the book of Enoch, but biblical scholars neglected it in scorn after the excitement of the Reformation was over. However, James Bruce, exploring the sources of the Nile in 1773, brought back three copies. Part 2 describes the critical response—or lack of it—to these documents and then turns to examining the four versions of the book of Enoch against which Joseph Smith’s writing must be judged.
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
With the October 1975 issue, the Ensign began a series on the book of Enoch, authored by Hugh Nibley.
Part 2 describes the critical response—or lack of it—to copies of the book of Enoch found in Egypt, and then turns to examining the four versions of the book of Enoch against which Joseph Smith’s writing must be judged.
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
There is a striking example of a “narrative” type call in the prophetic commission of Enoch in Moses 6:23–36. This study considers the elements of the narrative call pattern; those elements of this form found in the prophetic commission of Enoch are examined and compared with the biblical narrative call passages.
The report of the prophetic vocation of Enoch in the book of Moses accords with impressive consistency with the call narratives in the Bible. All of the elements of the prophetic call pattern isolated and examined by Habel in the calls of Moses, Gideon, and Jeremiah are also found in the Enoch passage; with one minor exception, the order of the elements in the vocation of Enoch is the same as in the call accounts recorded in the Bible. This additional authenticating detail places Enoch more securely in the tradition of the prophets and the book of Moses more firmly in the form and tradition of the prophetic literature.
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
A brief history of the lineage of Ephraim including Joseph Smith’s lineage
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Genealogy and Lineage [see also Covenant, Israel]
Old Testament Topics > Ephraim
Faith
How faith gives strength to avoid the natural fight or flight syndrome
The Exodus was a means by which the Israelites developed faith
Old Testament Topics > Faith
Old Testament Topics > Faith
Fall
The conditions in the premortal life including a description of the war in heaven, an account of the Fall, and what has been gained from it
Old Testament Topics > Fall
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Fall
The earth’s cleansing, death, and resurrection
Old Testament Topics > Fall
N. Eldon Tanner - We are all like Adam in that when we partake of “forbidden fruits” or do the things we are commanded not to do, we are ashamed, and we draw away from the Church and from God and hide ourselves, and if we continue in sin, the Spirit of God withdraws from us. There is no happiness in disobedience or sin.
Old Testament Topics > Fall
Old Testament Topics > Atonement
Old Testament Topics > Fall
Fasting
RSC Topics > D — F > Fasting
RSC Topics > L — P > Prayer
Flood
Symbolic meanings of the terms
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
The historicity of the flood and speculations concerning ways to reconcile scientific findings with the biblical account
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Some of the Andean Indians also have versions of the Flood story
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Includes Noah’s ministry as the angel Gabriel
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Flora and Fauna
Plant imagery used to teach man’s relationship to God, the need to repent, and Israel’s future in God’s plan
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Plant imagery used to teach man’s relationship to God, the need to repent, and Israel’s future in God’s plan
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
A list of biblical trees and their symbolic usage
When a group of LDS scholars collaborated in 1994 under the auspices of the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies to publish a book on the allegory of the olive tree in Jacob 5, few substantial works on olive production in the ancient world existed. Now, two new archaeological books add a wealth of information to our understanding of the importance of the olive in ancient life. The first mention of the olive in the Book of Mormon is found in Lehi’s prediction of the Babylonian captivity and the coming of the Lamb of God. Lehi compared the house of Israel to an olive tree whose branches would be broken off and scattered upon all the face of the earth (1 Ne. 10:12). After being scattered,the house of Israel would be gathered and the natural branches of the olive tree, or the remnants of the house of Israel, would be grafted in, or come to a knowledge of the true Messiah (1 Ne. 10:14). In this passage, Lehi probably drew upon Zenos’s allegory, found on the plates of brass. In incredible horticultural detail, that allegory compares the house of Israel to an olive tree. Yet that Old World information was apparently lost among Lehi’s descendants in the New World. After the fifth chapter of Jacob, the olive is not mentioned again in the Book of Mormon.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Enos
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Olive Oil
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Genealogy and Lineage [see also Covenant, Israel]
Old Testament Topics > Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Genealogy and Lineage [see also Covenant, Israel]
An explanation of differences in lineages of patriarchal blessings in the same family
The family of Abraham and missionary work
Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
First-person experiences and photographs of Egypt
A first-person description of Hezekiah’s Tunnel
Old Testament Topics > Geography
A first-person description of the ancient city of Petra
Old Testament Topics > Geography
The need to know the geography of the Bible
Adam-ondi-Ahman seems to have had reference at an early date to a general area rather than to a specific spot. If the Prophet Joseph Smith knew at that time (March 1832) of a specific location in Missouri to which the name also applied, he left us no written evidence of it. A second reference came some thirty-six months later, on 28 March 1835: the “valley of Adam-ondi-Ahman” is specified in a revelation to the Prophet as the place where Adam met with his posterity.
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Travel description of Palestine
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > Geography
History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Ancient Texts > Lachish Letters
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Reprinted as “The Lachish Letters,” in The Prophetic Book of Mormon, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 8. 380–406.
Suggests connections between the Lachish letters written at the time Jerusalem was destroyed by the Babylonians and events associated with Lehi’s departure. Includes political pressures on prophets, types of proper names, and a possible identification of Mulek.
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
B. H. Roberts’s study of the Creation, the pre-earth existence, and the life and fall of Adam
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezra/Nehemiah
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Scriptures > Joshua
Old Testament Scriptures > Judges
Old Testament Scriptures > Ruth
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Samuel
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > History
The Savior and the division of the kingdoms
Old Testament Topics > History
Theory that rather than Ramses II, it was Nemtyemzaf, son of Pepys II of the sixth dynasty, a minor pharaoh
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Integrity
Integrity as evidenced in the lives of Old Testament people
Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Speculation as to where the lost tribes are located
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
A brief history of the lineage of Ephraim including Joseph Smith’s lineage
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Linguistic studies used to trace the scattering of Israel
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezra/Nehemiah
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Time line
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
The offering of the gospel first to the Jews then to the Gentiles in ancient days and its latter-day offering first to the Gentiles and then to the Jews
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
This second of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the authors have learned from Nibley. Nearly every major subject that Dr. Nibley has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the sacrament covenant in Third Nephi, the Lamanite view of Book of Mormon history, external evidences of the Book of Mormon, proper names in the Book of Mormon, the brass plates version of Genesis, the composition of Lehi’s family, ancient burials of metal documents in stone boxes, repentance as rethinking, Mormon history’s encounter with secular modernity, and Judaism in the 20th century.
This essay serves as a testimony to modern Israel—the Latter-day Saints—that we are beginning to resemble God’s ancient covenant people in ways that conflict with our high ideals.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Discipleship
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Moses
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Scriptures
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Israel’s language, religion, and culture were heavily influenced by Israel’s neighbors. Many early Christian practices were performed even before Christ.
Hugh Nibley presents interesting new scholarship about the relationship between Israelis and other Middle Eastern people in Biblical times.
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Israel’s language, religion, and culture were heavily influenced by Israel’s neighbors. Many early Christian practices were performed even before Christ.
A continuation of Hugh Nibley’s presentation of interesting new scholarship about the relationship between Israelis and other Middle Eastern people in Biblical times.
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Speculation about the location of the lost tribes
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Scattering and gathering of Israel
The Church’s role in Abraham’s covenant
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
The doctrine of the gathering of Israel
How one can be a full-blooded non-Israelite and still be a literal descendant of one of the twelve tribes
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Geography
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Jerusalem
Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Strengthening testimonies of Christ by using Old Testament passages
Consistency of gospel truths in all standard works
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament prophecies
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Examples from the Old Testament of some of the methods the Lord uses to teach
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
The Book of Mormon and modern revelation reveal the true nature of messianic Old Testament passages
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
The Old Testament as a witness of Christ
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
In the text of the Old Testament Yahweh is described as the Redeemer of Israel. A redeemer in Israelite society was a close family member who was responsible to help his enslaved kinsmen by buying them out of bondage. A comparable family relationship is created between the Lord and individuals by the making of covenants and the giving of a new name. The adoptive covenant becomes the basis for the Lord’s acts of redemption. This pattern of adoptive redemption can be seen in both the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon identifies Yahweh, the God and Redeemer of the Old Testament, with Jesus Christ. It further explains that redemption from spiritual bondage comes through the ransom price of his blood and is available to those who enter into adoptive covenants, which create a familial relationship and allow the Lord to act as their redeemer.
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
RSC Topics > G — K > Jesus Christ
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Missionary Work
Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
examples from the life of Joseph of Egypt
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
The life of Joseph focusing on the topics of adversity, interpretations of dreams, the Savior, fathers and blessings, and Joseph in the last days
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
The reason Joseph could marry an Egyptian and still have the heirship of Israel placed on his son Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Reconciling Joseph’s marriage to an Egyptian and his sons being heirs of the priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Judah and the Jews
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
A look at the relationship between Judaism and Mormonism in terms of supersession (Judaism was superseded by Christianity) and paradigm (the exemplary model of biblical Israel’s faith)
The identity of the Jews from an LDS perspective
Early Mormon attitudes towards Jews differed from those of other Christians
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
The offering of the gospel first to the Jews then to the Gentiles in ancient days and its latter-day offering first to the Gentiles and then to the Jews
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
Church pamphlet
One man’s experience at a Jewish funeral
Old Testament Topics > Judah and the Jews
The LDS ties to the Jews and the foundation of the state of Israel as a partial fulfillment of the prophecies of the gathering
Justification
Old Testament Topics > Justification
Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament examples of the consequences of disobedience
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
RSC Topics > G — K > Jesus Christ
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
The law of obedience and sacrifice today
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
The difference between the two sets of stone tablets
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
A follow-up on a previous article on enallage provides further strength for a pattern of a speech to a prophet in which later verses seem to be addressed to both the prophet and his posterity by use of the plural ye.
This essay analyzes examples of poetry in the Hebrew Bible and the Book of Mormon that do not conform to the standards to which prose is typically confined. Each of these poems contains a syntactic device that scholars have come to identify by the term enallage (Greek for “interchange”). Rather than being a case of textual corruption or blatant error, the grammatical variance attested in these passages provides a poetic articulation of a progression from distance to proximity.
Old Testament Topics > Music
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Argument that the different sections of Genesis were originally written autobiographically by the patriarchs
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Similarities between Finnish folk poetry in the Kalevala and the Hebrew Old Testament poetry
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Various kinds of parallelisms known from Hebrew poetry
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Definition, use, and examples of chiasmus
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Gary A. Rendsburg, “Chiasmus in the Book of Genesis,” examines three sweeping chiastic structures in the following Ancestral Narratives of the text of Genesis—Abraham (Gen 11:27–22:24), Jacob (Gen 25:19‒35:22), and Joseph (Gen 37‒50). For each of the three structures, Rendsburg points out the various elements that constitute the chiasmus —the focal point and the mirrored elements that exist on each side of that focal point. Mirrored elements include both narrative themes and specific lexical items. The three chiastic structures are identified and developed in Rendsburg’s book The Redaction of Genesis. In this 2017 proceeding, Rendsburg presents new material, arguing that the major themes of the focal points of the three chiasms for the Ancestral Narratives are, respectively, the covenant (Abraham Cycle), the land of Caanan (Jacob Cycle), and the people of Israel (Joseph Cycle). The same three major themes, proffers Rendsburg, create the essential message of the Hebrew Bible.
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
The need to study the Old Testament as more than literature
An exegesis of Genesis 1
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
A study of texts from biblical, classical, and other literatures
Chiasmus in Exodus 21–23 and Leviticus 24
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Defines simple, compound, and complex chiasmus, surveys the use of chiasmus in Ugaritic epics, the Old Testament, Homer, and later Greek and Latin authors, and compares the appearance of chiasmus in those literatures with chiasmus in the Book of Mormon. The degree of use of chiasmus in the Book of Mormon is similar to that in the Old Testament.
Old Testament Topics > Literary Aspects
Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Abraham’s example in finding his son a celestial partner
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Reprinted from Blueprints for Living: Perspectives for Latter-day Saint Women.
An address given at the BYU Women’s Conference, 1 February 1980.
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Zion, Babylon > Patriarchy, Matriarchy
Reprinted in Old Testament and Related Studies, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 1. 87–114.
An address given at the BYU Women’s Conference, 1 February 1980.
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Zion, Babylon > Patriarchy, Matriarchy
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Plural Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Medicine
Diseases and health issues
Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
LDS sources illuminate Melchizedek and Enoch as types of Christ
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Zion
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Moses
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
This book is a study of the text of Selections from the Book of Moses, an excerpt of Genesis from the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible. Commonly called the Book of Moses, it is the first section in the Pearl of Great Price, one of the standard works of scripture of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We now have access to the revealed text itself, which we did not have before, and we can examine the words as they were recorded when they first came from the inspired lips of the Prophet. We are in a new day, a day of closer access to one of the great fruits of the Restoration—an important branch of Joseph Smith’s calling, as he designated his inspired work on the Bible. With our ability now to examine the original documents closely, we can express our thanks to a loving God who has provided that “righteousness and truth.”
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > Secondary Manuscripts and Published Editions
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Lehi and his people understood their own times in terms of types and shadows from the past. God’s leading the family out of Jerusalem and reinstituting his covenant with Lehi in a new promised land can be understood only by comparison with the exodus and the roles of Lehi and Nephi in terms of Moses. This article identifies fourteen Mosiac themes and circumstances that Lehi invoked in his sermon recorded in 2 Nephi 1 and illustrates close parallels with these themes in Deuteronomy. Lehi may have compared himself to Moses as a rhetorical device to help his children see the divine direction behind his actions. In his final words to his children, Lehi invokes Moses’ farewell address to the Israelites. In so doing, Lehi casts himself in a role similar to that of Moses. Nephi portrays himself in similar terms on the small plates, apparently following the pattern set by his father.
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Nephi tells the story of the founding events of the Nephite people in such a way that his readers will see him as a second Moses. Although Nephi’s use of the Moses typology has been previously noted, what has not been noticed before is that his father, Lehi, also employs this same typology in his farewell address in 2 Nephi 1-4 in order to persuade his descendants of his own divine calling and of their new covenant relationship to the same God who had given the promised land to ancient Israel. The fact that Nephi and Lehi both saw themselves as Moses figures demonstrates their awareness of a recognizable feature of preexilic Israelite literature that has only recently been explicated by Bible scholars.
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
A brief note in the History of the Church under the date of Sunday, 3 April 1836, records the appearance of the Lord, Moses, Elias, and Elijah to Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery in the Kirtland Temple. Subsequent writers have noted that this date corresponds to the Jewish Passover, during which the arrival of Elijah is traditionally awaited. A parenthetical note in the Missionary Training Manual: For Use in the Jewish Proselyting Program states the correlation of the two events emphatically. There we are informed that Elijah appeared in the Kirtland Temple “at about the same hour that the Jewish families in that time zone would have been preparing to begin their feast of the Passover.” These statements, although correct in their identification of the Jewish Passover with the ritual expectation of Elijah and in their connecting the time of the appearance of Elijah in the Kirtland Temple with the Passover season, warrant further elucidation and modest chronological correction.
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha [including intertestamental books and the Dead Sea Scrolls]
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Music
Old Testament Topics > Music
Old Testament Topics > Music
Old Testament Topics > Music
New Testament and the Old Testament
Jesus showed impressive ability both to use the Old Testament and to depart from it, as he did in the Sermon on the Mount. Even speaking “as one having authority, and not as the scribes” (Matt. 7:29), he insisted that he had not come “to destroy the law, or the prophets” (Matt. 5:17).
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Oaths
Old Testament Topics > Oaths
The simile curse is a type of curse that appears in ancient Near Eastern, Old Testament, and Book of Mormon texts. It consists of two parts: (1) an event (e.g., “Just as this wax is burned by fire”) and (2) an application of that event to the subject of the curse (e.g., “so shall Arpad be burned”). In ancient Near Eastern texts, simile curses appear in written treaties and were often part of a ritual acted out during a treaty ceremony. In the Old Testament, simile curses appear primarily in prophetic writings as literary devices. In the Book of Mormon, simile curses appear in the context of treaties, religious covenants, and prophecies, and in several instances were acted out. These curses were probably part of the oral tradition of ancient Near Eastern, Old Testament, and Book of Mormon peoples.
Mark Morrise defines the “simile curse” and discusses its existence in ancient Near Eastern texts, the Old Testament, and the Book of Mormon. In the Book of Mormon simile curses were associated with treaties, religious covenants, and prophecies. Morrise analyzes the common characteristics of simile curses in the Book of Mormon, as well as the similarities between such curses in ancient Near Eastern, Old Testament, and Book of Mormon texts.
Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Selections from this book can be found in Sunstone 6 (May–June 1981): 56–58
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Chart
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Chart
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Reasons why the Bible should be read by the youth of the Church
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
This collection of articles will add zest and savor to your study of the Old Testament. You will find a wide range of readings taken from the Sidney B. Sperry Symposium series. The articles in this book touch on a variety of aspects of Old Testament study. Some authors discuss the Old Testament itself, others offer explanations and interpretations, and still others use the Old Testament as a springboard to discuss Restoration theology. ISBN 1-59038-533-0
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Doctrines and Teachings
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
A brief background and answers to commonly asked questions about each book
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament stories compared with modern ones show that miracles still happen
The development of different versions of the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The biblical canon and its organization
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Origin, Formation, and Translation
Old Testament Topics > Biblical Criticism
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Workbook
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
In December 1832, the Lord instructed the Prophet Joseph Smith, “Seek ye diligently and teach one another words of wisdom; yea, seek ye out the best books words of wisdom; seek learning, even by study and also by faith.” Few members of the Church have followed that admonition as faithfully as has Hugh Nibley, emeritus professor of ancient history at Brigham Young University. As a young man he memorized vast portions of Shakespeare and studied Old English, Latin, Greek and other languages. As a student at Berkeley, in he began reading the southwest corner of the ninth level of the library and worked his way down to the northeast corner of the first level, studying every significant book that caught his eye. And throughout his life, he has related everything he has learned to the greatest knowledge of all-the word of the Lord, as revealed in the scriptures and in the temple. Not content with that, however, Dr. Nibley has dedicated himself to being a teacher, to sharing with others the knowledge he has gleaned through his vast studies. He has lectured and published widely, producing more than three hundred papers and books on a wide variety of subjects.
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
BYU course manual, in two volumes
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Israel, Scattering and Gathering
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
A critique of the New English Bible
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Charts of prophets, dispensations, the family of Abraham, and maps of major historical events. Compiled from the Instructor.
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Archaeological evidence incorrectly used as proof of scriptural accounts
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Knowing the language and culture of the scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezra/Nehemiah
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Scriptures > Joshua
Old Testament Scriptures > Judges
Old Testament Scriptures > Ruth
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Samuel
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
The Bible’s influence on language, law, and hope in the Lord
The 1938–39 study manual for MIA
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Religious principles to be learned from stories and prophets
Short lessons on the characters and teachings of the Old Testament
The relevance of the Old Testament to modern living
An Old Testament textbook for seminary classes
Commentary on the Old Testament with study questions
Textbook with review questions
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
How the Bible has influenced the growth of civilization
Olive Oil
When a group of LDS scholars collaborated in 1994 under the auspices of the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies to publish a book on the allegory of the olive tree in Jacob 5, few substantial works on olive production in the ancient world existed. Now, two new archaeological books add a wealth of information to our understanding of the importance of the olive in ancient life. The first mention of the olive in the Book of Mormon is found in Lehi’s prediction of the Babylonian captivity and the coming of the Lamb of God. Lehi compared the house of Israel to an olive tree whose branches would be broken off and scattered upon all the face of the earth (1 Ne. 10:12). After being scattered,the house of Israel would be gathered and the natural branches of the olive tree, or the remnants of the house of Israel, would be grafted in, or come to a knowledge of the true Messiah (1 Ne. 10:14). In this passage, Lehi probably drew upon Zenos’s allegory, found on the plates of brass. In incredible horticultural detail, that allegory compares the house of Israel to an olive tree. Yet that Old World information was apparently lost among Lehi’s descendants in the New World. After the fifth chapter of Jacob, the olive is not mentioned again in the Book of Mormon.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Enos
Old Testament Topics > Flora and Fauna
Old Testament Topics > Olive Oil
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Olive oil in anointing, washings and anointing, baptism, and the tree of life
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Plural Marriage
A pamphlet on a discussion held in the Salt Lake Tabernacle between Orson Pratt and Rev. Dr. J. P. Newman
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Plural Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Priesthood
Absence of priesthood keys between Moses and the Messiah
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
This first of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the contributors have learned from Dr. Nibley. Nearly every major subject that he has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the influence of Nibley, Copts and the Bible, the Seventy in scripture, the great apostasy, the book of Daniel in early Mormon thought, an early Christian initiation ritual, John’s Apocalypse, ancient Jewish seafaring, Native American rites of passage, Sinai as sanctuary and mountain of God, the Qurʾan and creation ex nihilo, and the sacred handclasp and embrace.
Asks the questions Why the number seventy and why to Gentiles? It then suggests that the key to both questions lies in the catalog of the descendants of Noah in Genesis 10.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints > Leadership, Prophets, Apostles, Seventy, Bishops
Genesis 10 and 46 as a basis for the office
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
LDS sources illuminate Melchizedek and Enoch as types of Christ
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Zion
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Scriptures > Daniel
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Scriptures > Daniel
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Includes a description of patriarchal blessings
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Plural Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Discussion and illustrations of garments, temple clothing, wedding clothing, and heavenly clothing
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
The Sunday School Supplement on the Rod of Aaron, an apocryphal account of Adam and the origin of sacrifice, cultural borrowing, and the Levitical Endowment
History of Aaronic Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
History of Aaronic Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
History of Aaronic Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Problems in the Old Testament
How the Book of Mormon is the stick of Ephraim, even though Lehi was from Manassah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Reconciling Joseph’s marriage to an Egyptian and his sons being heirs of the priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Angels, Heavenly Beings, and Messengers
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Includes questions and answers about Bible passages
Prophets and Prophecy
Absence of priesthood keys between Moses and the Messiah
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Amos, Moses, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
A Bible study guide of the period from the division of the kingdoms to the end of the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Daniel
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
RSC Topics > L — P > Melchizedek Priesthood
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Priesthood
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
Gleaning from the expertise of an eminent array of Latter-day Saint scholars, a Brigham Young University symposium entitled “Isaiah and the Prophets” has brought to light a diversity of thought-provoking ideas relative to the Old Testament. This book contains ten of the addresses given at that symposium. Isaiah and the Prophets is rich in its outpouring of details. The book probes concepts that are pertinent to understanding the Old Testament as the Lord’s prophetic word and the gospel in its fullness. ISBN 0-8849-4522-7
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
RSC Topics > G — K > Judgment
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Revelation
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
The prophecies of Isaiah and Jeremiah on the latter-day Church
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Short lessons discussing the interpretation of the writings of the Old Testament prophets with emphasis on Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, with material taken from Sperry’s book The Voice of Israel’s Prophets.
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Scriptures > Ezekiel
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Part of a roundtable discussion. The author’s response to scholars’ criticisms of prophetic interpretation of biblical scripture
An edited version of The Message of the Twelve Prophets along with additional commentary on the Major Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Reconciliation
Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
The use of the Bible and especially Isaiah by ministers at the time of Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Doctrines and Teachings
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
The Old Testament prophecies that Moroni quoted to Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Bibliographical references and excerpts from Joseph Smith’s discourses on the Bible
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Robert Matthews presents this survey of biblical textual criticism with the suggestion that omissions to the Bible text of today are more extensive and more intentional than most textual critics have realized. He sums up the history of biblical translations and discusses the church situation in June 1830, when Joseph Smith received the first revelation associated with an inspired translation of the Bible.
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Bible: LDS Interpretation
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Bible: Joseph Smith Translation (JST)
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > L — P > Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
RSC Topics > Q — S > Scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Old Testament Topics > Restoration and Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith’s study of Hebrew is related to the translation of the Book of Abraham
Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
poem
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Flood
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
The role of both the mind and the spirit in gaining knowledge
Reprinted in Old Testament and Related Studies, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 1.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
Originally presented as a talk given on 1 April 1980 at Brigham Young University.
A controversial examination of evolution and the Latter-day Saint view on creation and the various roles of Adam.
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Book of Moses Topics > Basic Resources > Perspectives on Science and the Book of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Evolution, Origin of Humankind
B. H. Roberts’s study of the Creation, the pre-earth existence, and the life and fall of Adam
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Old Testament Topics > Creation
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
The folly of Darwinism/evolution
Old Testament Topics > Science and Religion
Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Tabs as inexpensive aids to scripture study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
The scriptures can help clarify other scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Suggests that early mythology writers not only were aware of the parallels between religious stories and myths but often used wove parallels together to create their faith-promoting myths.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Suggests that early mythology writers not only were aware of the parallels between religious stories and myths but often used wove parallels together to create their faith-promoting myths.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
The prophecies of Isaiah and Jeremiah on the latter-day Church
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Knowing the language and culture of the scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Archaeological evidence incorrectly used as proof of scriptural accounts
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Symposia and Collections of Essays
The 33rd Annual Sidney B. Sperry Symposium Before Joseph Smith was born, religious scholars such as William Tyndale and Martin Luther put their lives in jeopardy to spread the word of God to their followers, blazing doctrinal trails so that a restoration of the gospel could occur. This volume highlights these influential men and other important Reformers who helped pave the way for the Restoration.
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
In 1989 there were two Sperry Symposiums held. The first was in February on the Doctrine and Covenants, which was published later that year as Doctrines for Exaltation. The second was in October on the Old Testament, which was published in 1990 as A Witness of Jesus Christ.
Contents:
Preface
Isaiah: Disciple and Witness of Christ / L. LaMar Adams
The Law of Moses and the Law of Christ / Edward J. Brandt
The Waters of Destruction and the Vine of Redemption / Allen J. Christenson
The Abrahamic Test / Larry E. Dahl
A Major Change in Israel: Effects of the Babylonian Captivity / Dean Garrett
The \"Hidden Messiah\" / Richard Neitzel Holzapfel
Job\'s Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century / Clark V. Johnson
The Old Testament, a Witness for Jesus Christ / Daniel H. Ludlow
Beyond the Biblical Account: Adam, Enoch, Noah, Melchizedek, Abraham, and Moses in Latter-day Revelation / Robert J. Matthews
Isaiah 53: The Richest Prophecy on Christ\'s Atonement in the Old Testament / Keith H. Meservy
The House of Israel: From Everlasting to Everlasting / Robert L. Millet
The Twelve Prophets Testify of Christ / Monte S. Nyman
The Marriage of Hosea and Gomer: A Symbolic Testament of Messianic Love and Mercy / Brent L. Top
The Two Davids / Rodney Turner
Redeeming the Dead as Taught in the Old Testament / Bruce A. Van Orden
The Abrahamic Covenant / S. Michael Wilcox
The Waters Which Make Glad the City of God: The Water Motif of Ezekiel 47:1-12 / Fred E. Woods
The 33rd Annual Sidney B. Sperry Symposium Before Joseph Smith was born, religious scholars such as William Tyndale and Martin Luther put their lives in jeopardy to spread the word of God to their followers, blazing doctrinal trails so that a restoration of the gospel could occur. This volume highlights these influential men and other important Reformers who helped pave the way for the Restoration. ISBN 1-5903-8329-X
This collection of articles will add zest and savor to your study of the Old Testament. You will find a wide range of readings taken from the Sidney B. Sperry Symposium series. The articles in this book touch on a variety of aspects of Old Testament study. Some authors discuss the Old Testament itself, others offer explanations and interpretations, and still others use the Old Testament as a springboard to discuss Restoration theology. ISBN 1-59038-533-0
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
The Sperry Symposium is sponsored annually by Brigham Young University and the Church Educational System. Named in honor of the late Dr. Sidney B. Sperry, who, in the course of his forty-year career, earned a reputation for outstanding teaching and scholarship.
Contents:
Our Heritage from Joseph of Israel / Robert J. Matthews
Isaiah’s Imagery of Plants and Planting / Terry Ball
Melchizedek: Seeking After the Zion of Enoch / Frank F. Judd
The Lord Will Redeem His People: “Adoptive” Covenant and Redemption in the Old Testament / Jennifer Clark Lane
Elijah’s Mission: His Keys, Powers, and Blessings from the Old Testament to the Latter Days / E. Dale LeBaron
“The Spirit of Prophecy is the Testimony of Jesus” / D. Kelly Ogden
Symbolic Action as Prophecy in the Old Testament / Donald W. Parry
Seals and Sealing Among Ancient and Latter-day Israelites / Dana M. Pike
Aaron’s Consecration: Its Nature, Purpose, and Meaning / J. Lyman Redd
Jacob in the Presence of God / Andrew C. Skinner
The Wife/Sister Experience: Pharaoh’s Introduction to Jehovah / Gaye Strathearn
The Provocation in the Wilderness and the Rejection of Grace / M. Catherine Thomas
The Exodus: Prophetic Type and the Plan of Redemption / Thomas R. Valletta
Covenant and chosenness resonate deeply in both Mormon and Jewish traditions. For both of these communities, covenant and chosenness represent enduring interpretations of scriptural texts and promises, ever-present in themes of divine worship and liturgy. The chapters of this volume written by leading scholars of both communities, debate scriptural foundations, the signs of the covenant, the development of theological ideas about covenant, and issues of inclusivity and exclusivity implied by chosenness.
The answer to “What is a temple?” is partially the answer to “What was the temple?” Here a distinguished array of scholars trests this theme. This collection of essays—which grew out of a BYU symposium of experts—presents recent findings on the temple in antiquity: historical, linguistic, and archaeological data which bear on the idea of the temple in Israelite, Jewish, and Christian traditions. The book includes an expansive introduction to temple traditions and a bibliography for further clarification and comparison. ISBN 0-8849-4518-9
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Papers presented at the BYU Symposium ‘As Translated Correctly’: Joseph Smith’s Translations of the Bible, January 13–14, 1995
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
In December 1832, the Lord instructed the Prophet Joseph Smith, “Seek ye diligently and teach one another words of wisdom; yea, seek ye out the best books words of wisdom; seek learning, even by study and also by faith.” Few members of the Church have followed that admonition as faithfully as has Hugh Nibley, emeritus professor of ancient history at Brigham Young University. As a young man he memorized vast portions of Shakespeare and studied Old English, Latin, Greek and other languages. As a student at Berkeley, in he began reading the southwest corner of the ninth level of the library and worked his way down to the northeast corner of the first level, studying every significant book that caught his eye. And throughout his life, he has related everything he has learned to the greatest knowledge of all-the word of the Lord, as revealed in the scriptures and in the temple. Not content with that, however, Dr. Nibley has dedicated himself to being a teacher, to sharing with others the knowledge he has gleaned through his vast studies. He has lectured and published widely, producing more than three hundred papers and books on a wide variety of subjects.
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
In the Book of Moses, part of the Latter-day Saint scriptural canon known as the Pearl of Great Price, are what the Prophet Joseph Smith entitled “extracts from the prophecy of Enoch.” These scriptures, says the eminent Latter-day Saint scholar Hugh Nibley, “supply us with the most valuable control yet on the bona fides of the Prophet. . . . We are to test. . . . ‘How does it compare with records known to be authentic?’ The excerpts offer the nearest thing to a perfectly foolproof test—neat, clear-cut, and decisive—of Joseph Smith’s claim to inspiration.”
In Enoch the Prophet, Dr. Nibley examines and defends that claim by examining Joseph Smith’s translations in the context of recently discovered apocryphal sources.
This book contains a collection of various comparisons of the Enoch materials in the Book of Moses with the Slavonic and Ethiopic Enoch texts and other related materials and lore from antiquity, showing the possibility that Joseph Smith’s book of Enoch could be authentic ancient text.
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Enoch
This is a republication of a corrected version of what were originally a series of talks given over KSL under the title “Time Vindicates the Prophets” and then published under that title in pamphlet form as well as in book form, as The World and the Prophets, both in 1954. A second expanded edition of the book was published in 1962. This edition includes a new foreword by R. Douglas Phillips.
In 1954, Hugh Nibley delivered a series of weekly lectures on KSL Radio. The series called “Time Vindicates the Prophets” was given in answer to those who were challenging the right of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to call themselves Christians.
“Time Vindicates the Prophets” (1954)
The World and the Prophets (1987)
The World and the Prophets (1962)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Doctrines, Principles > Plan of Salvation, Terrible Questions > Stage Without a Play
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > History > Christian History, Apostasy
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > History > Christian History, Apostasy > Prophets
Hugh Nibley is probably still best known for his groundbreaking investigations into the ancient Near Eastern backgrounds of Lehi and of the Jaredites. Those classic studies are contained in this volume—the first of several books to appear in the volumes of The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley that deal with the Book of Mormon.
“Lehi in the Desert” (1950)
“The World of the Jaredites” (1951)
Lehi in the Desert and the World of the Jaredites (1952)
Lehi in the Desert and the World of the Jaredites (1980)
Lehi in the Desert and the World of the Jaredites. An unedited reprinting of the original version (1987)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Book of Mormon > Ancient Near East
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Considered by many to be a classic in LDS literature, this new edition of Abraham in Egypt [published in association with the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS)] contains all the material from the first edition as well as additions from Nibley’s 1968–70 Improvement Era series “A New Look at the Pearl of Great Price.”
In 1968–70, Hugh Nibley wrote a series of articles for the Improvement Era titled “A New Look at the Pearl of Great Price.” Brother Nibley asked that some of these articles be made into chapters to be added to Abraham in Egypt. These new chapters are what constitutes the new edition; no changes were made to the original chapters. For the articles, Nibley drew from many Jewish and rabbinical sources, while his work in the first edition was based on Egyptian material.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Bible > Old Testament > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Gleaning from the expertise of an eminent array of Latter-day Saint scholars, a Brigham Young University symposium entitled “Isaiah and the Prophets” has brought to light a diversity of thought-provoking ideas relative to the Old Testament. This book contains ten of the addresses given at that symposium. Isaiah and the Prophets is rich in its outpouring of details. The book probes concepts that are pertinent to understanding the Old Testament as the Lord’s prophetic word and the gospel in its fullness. ISBN 0-8849-4522-7
Old Testament Topics > Prophets and Prophecy
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Ten prominent Church scholars presented at the symposium on the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible. Their in-depth study of the Joseph Smith Translation and related scriptures clarifies the Bible from Genesis to Revelation and show how Joseph Smith restored many plain and precious truths to that holy book. This volume brings together those addresses, illuminating this inspired translation as perhaps no other book had done.
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Book of Moses Topics > Joseph Smith Translation (JST) > History
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Three essays by Hugh Nibley, plus papers presented at the 1993 FARMS symposium, other important papers on the temple, a keynote address by Elder Marion D. Hanks (former president of the Salt Lake Temple), striking illustrations by Michael Lyon (who illustrated Nibley’s Temple and Cosmos)—these features and more make Temples of the Ancient World: Ritual and Symbolism one of the most significant volumes ever published on the temple. Twenty-four essays in this 1994 publication focus on the temple in the Hebrew Bible and ancient Near East, the New Testament, Jewish writings, and the Book of Mormon and ancient America.
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
The essays in this book, written by some of the finest LDS scholars, take a variety of approaches to help readers make the most of the Isaiah passages in the Book of Mormon. These scholars use the prophets of the Book of Mormon as knowledgeable guides, examining how and why those ancient writers used and interpreted Isaiah in order to clarify for modern readers what the Isaiah sections in the Book of Mormon are all about.
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
The Temple in Time and Eternity, edited by Donald W. Parry and Stephen D. Ricks, is the second volume in the series Temples Through The Ages. The importance of the temple to a religious community of the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean world can scarcely be exaggerated. The eleven articles in this volume are divided topically into three sections: “Temple in Ritual,” “Temples in the Israelite Tradition,” and “Temples in the Non-Israelite Tradition.”
The “Temple in Ritual” section features Hugh Nibley’s discussion on “Abraham’s Temple Drama,” which identifies elements of the creation drama that appear in the book of Abraham and elsewhere in the ancient world. An article by Ricks discusses oaths and oath taking in the Old Testament. John A. Tvedtnes shows that baptizing for the dead was known in various parts of the Mediterranean world and in Egypt. In a second article, Tvedtnes enlightens our understanding of the form and purposes of the temple prayer in ancient times.
Richard R. Cowan, in the section “Temples in the Israelite Tradition,” traces the development of temples to modern times. Richard D. Draper and Parry make intriguing comparisons of temple symbolism between Genesis 2–3 and Revelation 2–3, focusing particularly on promises and blessings. Alan K. Parrish shares with us insights into modern temple worship throughout the eyes of John A. Widtsoe, and Thomas R. Valletta examines priesthood and temple issues by contrasting “the holy order of the Son of God and its spurious counterpart, the order of Nehor.”
The concluding chapters of the book, grouped into the section “Temples in the Non-Israelite Tradition,” include John Gee’s discussion of getting past the gatekeeper (gleaned from various Egyptian literary corpora), a fascinating study by Gaye Strathearn and Brian M. Hauglid of the Great Mosque and its Ka’ba in light of John Lundquist’s typology of ancient Near Eastern temples, and E. Jan Wilson’s enlightening treatment of the features of a Sumerian temple.
The distinguished career of Truman G. Madsen has earned him wide respect in and outside of LDS circles as an outstanding teacher, scholar, researcher, speaker, university administrator, church leader, and religious ambassador. With the publication of Revelation, Reason, and Faith: Essays in Honor of Truman G. Madsen, the Institute pays tribute to this remarkable man whose many accomplishments include helping to advance Book of Mormon scholarship and related interests of the Institute.
Edited by Donald W. Parry, Daniel C. Peterson, and Stephen D. Ricks (each of whom also author a chapter), the 800-plus-page volume contains contributions by 31 scholars, 10 of who are not Latter-day Saints, reflecting the wide appeal of Madsen’s academic work and influence. The book is organized into five sections: “Philosophy and Theology,” “LDS Scripture and Theology,” “Joseph Smith and LDS Church History,” “Judaism,” and “The Temple.”
Essays in Honor of Hugh W. Nibley on the Occasion of His Eightieth Birthday, 27 March 1990.
Essays based on what people have learned from Hugh Nibley.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing
Richard Lloyd Anderson is a scholars’ scholar. Among Latter-day Saints, he is dean and master of two separate fields of academic study: the New Testament and early LDS Church history.
His passion for history has profoundly influenced his scholarly career; his passion for order and system has shaped his missionary work and directed him into studying law; and his love for Brigham Young University and loyalty to its mission and destiny have guided his academic path.
This volume, as you can see from the table of contents, contains essays written by outstanding LDS scholars on Book of Mormon Studies, Old Testament Studies and Ancient History, and New Testament Studies and Early Christian History.
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Contents:
Rooted and Built Up in Christ / Carlos E. Asay
The Old Testament: An Indispensable Foundation / George A. Horton
Noah, the Ark, the Flood: A Pondered Perspective / James R. Christianson
The Seed of Abraham in the Latter Days / Bruce A. Van Orden
Genesis 22: The Paradigm for True Sacrifice in Latter-day Israel / Andrew C. Skinner
Trust in the Lord: Exodus and Faith / S. Kent Brown
Kibroth-Hattaavah: The Graves of Lust / Jeff O’Driscoll
The Latter-day Significance of Ancient Temples / Richard O. Cowan
Joseph and Joseph: “He Shall Be Like Unto Me” (2 Nephi 3:15) / Ann N. Madsen, Susan Easton Black
“Has Thou Considered My Servant Job?” / John S. Tanner
Prophets: How Shall We Know Them? / Joseph F. McConkie
Jesus’ Commandment to Search the Words of Isaiah / L. LaMar Adams
A Latter-day Saint Reading of Isaiah in the Twentieth Century: The Example of Isaiah 6 / Paul Y. Hoskisson
Micah, the Second Witness with Isaiah / Monte S. Nyman
The Restoration of the Tribes of Israel in the Writings of Jeremiah and Ezekiel / Stephen D. Ricks
The Last Shall Be First and the First Shall Be Last / LaMar E. Garrard
Daniel: Ancient Prophet for the Latter Days / H. Dean Garrett
Your Daughters Shall Prophesy: A Latter-day Prophecy of Joel, Peter, and Moroni Examined / Alan K. Parrish
Malachi and the Latter Days / Rex C. Reeve Jr
Justification, Ancient and Modern / Chauncey C. Riddle
Ancient Hebrew “Psychology”: A Radical Option for Educators in the Latter Days / Neil J. Flinders, Paul Wangemann
The Restoration as Covenant Renewal / David Rolph Seely
Joseph Smith’s Use of the Old Testament / Grant Underwood
The Brass Plates: An Inspired and Expanded Version of the Old Testament / Robert L. Millet
The Old Testament: Voice from the Past and Witness for the Lord Jesus Christ / Robert J. Matthews
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Contents:
A Surety of a Better Testament / James E. Faust
A Message of Judgment from the Olivet Sermon / Arthur A. Bailey
Miracles: Meridian and Modern / Donald Q. Cannon
He Has Risen: The Resurrection Narratives as a Witness of a Corporeal Regeneration / Richard D. Draper
The Surprise Factors in the Teachings of Jesus / Kenneth W. Godfrey
The Passion of Jesus Christ / Richard Neitzel Holzapfel
Mark and Luke: Two Facets of a Diamond / Roger R. Keller
Truly All Things Testify of Him / Robert England Lee
“Wilt Thou Be Made Whole?”: Medicine and Healing in the Time of Jesus / Ann N. Madsen
“Behold, the Lamb of God”: The Savior’s Use of Animals as Symbols / Byron R. Merrill
The Lord’s Teachings on the Use of This World’s Goods / J. Philip Schaelling
“I Am He”: Jesus’ Public Declarations of His Own Identity / Jonathan H. Stephenson
John’s Testimony of the Bread of Life / Thomas R. Valletta
The Water Imagery in John’s Gospel: Power, Purification, and Pedagogy / Fred E. Woods
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Using the Book of Mormon as a bridge between the Old Testament and us
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Helping students with reading disabilities to be able to understand the scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Examples from the Old Testament of some of the methods the Lord uses to teach
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Abraham’s example in finding his son a celestial partner
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Love
RSC Topics > L — P > Prayer
RSC Topics > T — Z > Teaching the Gospel
RSC Topics > T — Z > Youth
RSC Topics > L — P > Love
RSC Topics > Q — S > Scriptures
RSC Topics > T — Z > Youth
Knowing the language and culture of the scriptures
Old Testament Topics > Scripture Study
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Teaching techniques
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Insights from the Old Testament that can help today’s children
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Teaching the Old Testament
Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
The publication of the Book of Mormon brought forward the first of many comparisons between the restorational work of the Prophet Joseph Smith and his surrounding environment, including Freemasonry. One point of comparison has been the lambskin apparel mentioned in 3 Nephi 4:7. A possible connection exists between this item of apparel and ritual clothing that was worn in ancient Israel, Egypt, and Mesoamerica. I suggest a possible reason for the use of this item of clothing among the secret combinations in the Book of Mormon and discuss the lambskin apron used in Freemasonic ritual.
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Symbolic connections between the sacred mountain and the temple in ancient Israel
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
RSC Topics > T — Z > Zion
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Latter-day temples parallel ancient temples, especially those of the Israelites
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Early Semitic temple and religious practices one thousand years before Israel entered Canaan
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
The symbolism and purpose of Israel’s tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
This first of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the contributors have learned from Dr. Nibley. Nearly every major subject that he has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the influence of Nibley, Copts and the Bible, the Seventy in scripture, the great apostasy, the book of Daniel in early Mormon thought, an early Christian initiation ritual, John’s Apocalypse, ancient Jewish seafaring, Native American rites of passage, Sinai as sanctuary and mountain of God, the Qurʾan and creation ex nihilo, and the sacred handclasp and embrace.
Addresses the argument that names are simply sounds made up to label something and suggests that this takes away from the religious belief that some names have a divine origin.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Temples, Cosmos
The answer to “What is a temple?” is partially the answer to “What was the temple?” Here a distinguished array of scholars trests this theme. This collection of essays—which grew out of a BYU symposium of experts—presents recent findings on the temple in antiquity: historical, linguistic, and archaeological data which bear on the idea of the temple in Israelite, Jewish, and Christian traditions. The book includes an expansive introduction to temple traditions and a bibliography for further clarification and comparison. ISBN 0-8849-4518-9
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Discusses temples in relation to the patriarchal promise given to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
Old Testament Topics > Covenant [see also Ephraim, Israel, Jews, Joseph]
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
RSC Topics > Q — S > Restoration of the Gospel
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
This article first appeared in the Ensign (September 1972), 46–49. It was reprinted in The Prophetic Book of Mormon, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley vol. 8, 265–73.
These are comments about the roles of ancient temples in general, with an emphasis on Mesoamerican temples as centers of religion, culture, the arts, and world view.
“Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1972)
“Chapter 14: Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1989)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Classical Studies, Egyptian Studies
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Original article.
These are comments about the roles of ancient temples in general, with an emphasis on Mesoamerican temples as centers of religion, culture, the arts, and world view.
“Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1994)
“Chapter 14: Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1989)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Reprint of the 1972 Ensign article.
These are comments about the roles of ancient temples in general, with an emphasis on Mesoamerican temples as centers of religion, culture, the arts, and world view.
“Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1972)
“Ancient Temples: What Do They Signify?” (1994)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Originally an unpublished manuscript.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Symbolism
Uses science to find more of the meaning of the temple.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In Temple, the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, Cosmos, he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
Uses science to find more of the meaning of the temple.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
Originally titled “Endowment History,” 1992.
A discussion on how the endowment answers many of life’s most important questions.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Endowment
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In Temple, the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, Cosmos, he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
One of the stunning aspects of Dr. Hugh Nibley’s genius was his persistent sense of wonder. That trait induced him to range widely through very disparate subjects of study—all covered in volume 17 of The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley on Himself, Others, and the Temple. In this compilation of materials, most of which have been published previously outside the Collected Works volumes, Nibley explores the ancient Egyptians, the temple, the life sciences, world literature, ancient Judaism, and Joseph Smith and the Restoration. The contents of this volume illustrate the breadth of his interest through autobiographical sketches, interviews, book reviews, forewords to books, letters, memorial tributes, Sunday School lessons, and various writings about the temple.
A discussion on how the endowment answers many of life’s most important questions.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples
Reprinted in Temple and Cosmos: Beyond This Ignorant Present.
This lecture was originally accompanied by slides. It was circulated in two different editions in 1986 and 1987 and was available in a much expanded version, including illustrations, in 1988.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Sacred Vestments
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In Temple, the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, Cosmos, he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
This lecture was originally accompanied by slides. It was circulated in two different editions in 1986 and 1987 and was available in a much expanded version, including illustrations, in 1988.
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples > Ancient Temples > Sacred Vestments
In Temple and Cosmos, Brother Nibley explains the relationship of the House of the Lord to the cosmos. In “Temple,” the first part of the volume, he focuses on the nature, meaning, and history of the temple, discussing such topics as sacred vestments, the circle and the square, and the symbolism of the temple and its ordinances. In the second part, “Cosmos,” he discusses the cosmic context of the temple-the expanding gospel, apocryphal writings, religion and history, the genesis of the written word, cultural diversity in the universal church, and the terrible questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? and Where are we going?
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (CWHN)
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Science > Cosmology, Creation, Treasures in the Heavens
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Temples
The Garden of Eden pericope (Genesis 2-3) contains a number of powerful symbols that are related to and represent archetypal depictions of subsequent Israelite temple systems. In a cogent manner, the Garden of Eden, as it is referred to throughout the Bible, Pseudepigrapha, and rabbinic writings, served as the prototype, pattern, and/ or originator of subsequent Israelite temples, “a type of archetypal sanctuary.” The garden was not a sanctuary built of cedar or marble, for it is not necessary for a temple to possess an edifice or structure; but rather it was an area of sacred space made holy because God’s presence was found there. Mircea Eliade has stated that the Garden of Eden was the heavenly prototype of the temple, and the Book of Jubilees 3:19 adds that “the garden of Eden is the Holy of Holies, and the dwelling of the Lord.” This essay will examine these claims.
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 3 — Garden of Eden
Book of Moses Topics > Temple Themes in the Book of Moses and Related Scripture
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
This first of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the contributors have learned from Dr. Nibley. Nearly every major subject that he has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the influence of Nibley, Copts and the Bible, the Seventy in scripture, the great apostasy, the book of Daniel in early Mormon thought, an early Christian initiation ritual, John’s Apocalypse, ancient Jewish seafaring, Native American rites of passage, Sinai as sanctuary and mountain of God, the Qurʾan and creation ex nihilo, and the sacred handclasp and embrace.
Looks at temple worship in the Israelite religion, specifically with the idea that “the temple is the architectural embodiment of the cosmic mountain.”
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Bible > Old Testament
Three essays by Hugh Nibley, plus papers presented at the 1993 FARMS symposium, other important papers on the temple, a keynote address by Elder Marion D. Hanks (former president of the Salt Lake Temple), striking illustrations by Michael Lyon (who illustrated Nibley’s Temple and Cosmos)—these features and more make Temples of the Ancient World: Ritual and Symbolism one of the most significant volumes ever published on the temple. Twenty-four essays in this 1994 publication focus on the temple in the Hebrew Bible and ancient Near East, the New Testament, Jewish writings, and the Book of Mormon and ancient America.
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
This first of two volumes of essays honoring Hugh Nibley includes scholarly papers based on what the contributors have learned from Dr. Nibley. Nearly every major subject that he has encompassed in his vast learning and scholarly production is represented here by at least one article. Topics include the influence of Nibley, Copts and the Bible, the Seventy in scripture, the great apostasy, the book of Daniel in early Mormon thought, an early Christian initiation ritual, John’s Apocalypse, ancient Jewish seafaring, Native American rites of passage, Sinai as sanctuary and mountain of God, the Qurʾan and creation ex nihilo, and the sacred handclasp and embrace.
Explores the connection between a name and the existence of the thing it refers to.
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Hugh Nibley > Scholarship, Footnotes, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, CWHN, Editing > Temples, Cosmos
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
The creation of the earth was repetitiously celebrated in rituals in civilizations of the ancient Near East—Babylon, Assyria, Persia, and Israel. Sources suggest that in Israel, perhaps as early as the Second Temple period, laymen recited the Genesis creation story while priests were offering sacrifices. The laymen were expected to recite the account in towns far away from Jerusalem for the benefit of those who could not go to the holy city. Hearing about the creation enabled listeners to experience a renewal of creation in their own setting.
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Temples in the Near East and America
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
A description of the Tabernacle, Dome of the Rock, Solomon’s temple, and Zerubbabel’s temple
Coronation, priesthood, and covenant rites
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Elijah and Isaiah on redeeming the dead, viewed through modern revelation
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Bernard P. Brockbank - The God-given Ten Commandments are still a basic part of God’s way of life and a basic part of the gospel of the kingdom.
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Richard L. Evans - We all make choices every day. We all have to live with the results of the choices we make.
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
The Ten Commandments and how Christ used them
Milton R Hunter - The greatest of all laws in this gospel plan pertains to marriage for life and eternity. Thus it pertains to the family eternal. The sweetest joys and greatest blessings that can be gained in mortality and in the life to come are attained through family life lived in accordance with the gospel plan.
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Following the Ten Commandments will build relationships between man and God
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Essays by Church leaders
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Sabbath
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
A comparison of the Ten Commandments with the laws of Hammurabi of Babylonia
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Old Testament: Overviews and Manuals
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Symposia and Collections of Essays
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Sterlling W. Sill - Because of our birthright, our intelligence, our covenants, and our assignments, we are all special witnesses for God and have some very important things that we should do.
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Tithing
Old Testament Topics > Tithing
Old Testament Topics > Tithing
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Tithing
Old Testament Topics > Tithing
Old Testament Topics > Tithing
Translated Beings
Old Testament Topics > Translated Beings
Old Testament Topics > Elijah
Old Testament Topics > Translated Beings
Old Testament Topics > Translated Beings
Old Testament Topics > Translated Beings
Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Symbolic meanings of the terms
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Kinship redemption
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
In the text of the Old Testament Yahweh is described as the Redeemer of Israel. A redeemer in Israelite society was a close family member who was responsible to help his enslaved kinsmen by buying them out of bondage. A comparable family relationship is created between the Lord and individuals by the making of covenants and the giving of a new name. The adoptive covenant becomes the basis for the Lord’s acts of redemption. This pattern of adoptive redemption can be seen in both the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon identifies Yahweh, the God and Redeemer of the Old Testament, with Jesus Christ. It further explains that redemption from spiritual bondage comes through the ransom price of his blood and is available to those who enter into adoptive covenants, which create a familial relationship and allow the Lord to act as their redeemer.
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Ordinances
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Sacrifice
RSC Topics > Q — S > Sin
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > T — Z > Temples
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Law of Moses
Old Testament Topics > Sacrifice
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > G — K > Judgment
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
RSC Topics > Q — S > Revelation
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and the New Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Nephi tells the story of the founding events of the Nephite people in such a way that his readers will see him as a second Moses. Although Nephi’s use of the Moses typology has been previously noted, what has not been noticed before is that his father, Lehi, also employs this same typology in his farewell address in 2 Nephi 1-4 in order to persuade his descendants of his own divine calling and of their new covenant relationship to the same God who had given the promised land to ancient Israel. The fact that Nephi and Lehi both saw themselves as Moses figures demonstrates their awareness of a recognizable feature of preexilic Israelite literature that has only recently been explicated by Bible scholars.
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Lehi and his people understood their own times in terms of types and shadows from the past. God’s leading the family out of Jerusalem and reinstituting his covenant with Lehi in a new promised land can be understood only by comparison with the exodus and the roles of Lehi and Nephi in terms of Moses. This article identifies fourteen Mosiac themes and circumstances that Lehi invoked in his sermon recorded in 2 Nephi 1 and illustrates close parallels with these themes in Deuteronomy. Lehi may have compared himself to Moses as a rhetorical device to help his children see the divine direction behind his actions. In his final words to his children, Lehi invokes Moses’ farewell address to the Israelites. In so doing, Lehi casts himself in a role similar to that of Moses. Nephi portrays himself in similar terms on the small plates, apparently following the pattern set by his father.
Old Testament Topics > Moses
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > New Testament and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
The serpent is often used to represent one of two things: Christ or Satan. This article synthesizes evidence from Egypt, Mesopotamia, Phoenicia, Greece, and Jerusalem to explain the reason for this duality. Many scholars suggest that the symbol of the serpent was used anciently to represent Jesus Christ but that Satan distorted the symbol, thereby creating this paradox. The dual nature of the serpent is incorporated into the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Book of Mormon.
Olive oil in anointing, washings and anointing, baptism, and the tree of life
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
The chronology of the use of plant imagery
Old Testament Scriptures > Psalms/Proverbs/Ecclesiastes/Song of Solomon
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Topics > Types and Symbols
Urim and Thummim
A collection of LDS perspectives
Old Testament Topics > Urim and Thummim
Old Testament Topics > Urim and Thummim
Old Testament Topics > Urim and Thummim
Witchcraft, Magic, and Astrology
Evidence that the woman consulted by Saul truly was a witch
Old Testament Topics > Witchcraft, Magic, and Astrology
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Witchcraft, Magic, and Astrology
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Includes Eve, Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel, Asenath, and Jezebel
Hosea’s description of his marriage to a harlot as a key to understanding his words concerning the Lord’s anger and the eventual triumph of divine love
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > History
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Temple and Tabernacle
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Insights from the Old Testament to help strengthen the resolve for an eternal marriage
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
The book of Ruth helped strengthen one young convert
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Third Nephi 22 (quoting Isaiah 54) addresses a desolate woman who will be redeemed in the latter days. The desolate woman represents Zion, which itself signifies the city of Enoch in ancient times, the hill where the temple was built in Jerusalem, the celestial city of God, the kingdom of God on earth, and a covenant community of temple-worthy Saints. The Lord promises to relieve the desolation of Zion felt through barrenness, lack of a permanent home, and being forsaken and persecuted. The destiny of Zion parallels the pattern of Noah—both remain faithful to their covenants and witness a cleansing of the earth. The Savior serves as Zion’s husband. The servants of the Lord are equated with Zion—the Lord will not allow oppressors to be successful against Zion. The Lord promises to redeem Zion as he sings a song of redeeming love.
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Topics > Book of Mormon and the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
The reason Joseph could marry an Egyptian and still have the heirship of Israel placed on his son Ephraim
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
The marriage of Hosea and Gomer illuminates the covenant relationship of Jehovah and Israel
RSC Topics > A — C > Covenant
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
RSC Topics > L — P > Marriage
RSC Topics > L — P > Old Testament
Faithfulness under persecution and the involvement of God in his children’s lives
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Ten Commandments
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
How men and women can become one in heart and mind
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
No abstract available.
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Commentary on women in the scriptures
Reconciling Joseph’s marriage to an Egyptian and his sons being heirs of the priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Joseph and Asenath
Old Testament Topics > Problems in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Reprinted in Old Testament and Related Studies, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 1. 87–114.
An address given at the BYU Women’s Conference, 1 February 1980.
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Abraham > Characters > Abraham, Sarah, Abram, Sarai
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Zion, Babylon > Patriarchy, Matriarchy
Reprinted from Blueprints for Living: Perspectives for Latter-day Saint Women.
An address given at the BYU Women’s Conference, 1 February 1980.
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Pearl of Great Price > Book of Moses > Characters > Adam, Eve
Hugh W. Nibley Topics > Zion, Babylon > Patriarchy, Matriarchy
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Evidence that the woman consulted by Saul truly was a witch
Old Testament Topics > Witchcraft, Magic, and Astrology
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Biblical customs and items of interest
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
How the statements cursing Eve in the garden were symbolic
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Abraham and Sarah [see also Covenant]
Old Testament Topics > Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Plural Marriage
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Witchcraft, Magic, and Astrology
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Old Testament Topics > Adam and Eve [see also Fall]
Old Testament Topics > Women in the Old Testament
Zion
A speculative description of the city of Enoch and its inhabitants
Old Testament Topics > Enoch
Old Testament Topics > Zion
LDS sources illuminate Melchizedek and Enoch as types of Christ
Old Testament Topics > Melchizedek
Old Testament Topics > Priesthood
Old Testament Topics > Zion