July 13, 1965 by •
Alma,
American Indians,
Arab(s) scholar,
arrow divination,
belomancy,
Bible,
Book of Mormon,
brass ball,
compass,
direction,
director,
divination,
divinatory sticks,
Ezekiel,
faith,
familiar,
gifts of God,
God,
Indians American,
Jaredites,
Jesus Christ,
Jewish custom,
Joseph Smith,
Lehi,
Liahona,
magic,
magicians,
miracle(s),
miraculous power,
Nephi,
ordinary,
pointers,
power(s) of God,
punctuation,
revelation(s),
round ball,
shaking,
shining stones,
shooting,
s_hamachul (arabic),
T. Fahd,
temporal,
the critic(s),
the Kaabeh,
time of Ignorance,
tossing,
travelers,
type and shadow,
writing,
zalam
The Improvement Era 64:2 (February 1961):87-89, 104-106, 108-111. An examination of the Liahona in the light of Arabic divination arrows. — Midgley
May 2, 1963 by •
Abraham,
Abraham Testament of,
anti-Mormon,
Apocalypse of Abraham,
Bible,
Book of Abraham,
Book of Breathings,
Book of Mormon,
Egyptian,
Egyptian Alphabet and Grammar,
Egyptian hieroglyphics,
Egyptologists,
facsimiles,
jealousy,
Joseph Smith,
Joseph Smith Papyri,
Kirtland,
meaningless,
Oliver Cowdery,
papryi Joseph Smith,
Testament of Abraham,
the critic(s),
translation,
vignettes,
W.W. Phelps
Judging and Prejudging the Book of Abraham. An appendix in They Lie in Wait to Deceive, vol. 1:236–45, by Robert L. and Rosemary Brown, edited by Barbara Ellsworth, rev. ed. Mesa, AZ: Brownsworth, 1982.
January 1, 1900 by •
A. Leaney,
A. M. Hunter,
Bible,
Bodmer Papyrus 2,
Bodmer Papyrus 3,
C. B. Armstrong,
C. C. McCown,
C. F. D. Moule,
C. H. Dodd,
C. L. Mittion,
Chester Beatty Papyri,
Christian(s),
Christian(s) scholars,
Christology,
criticism,
Crosby Codex,
Dead Sea Scrolls,
divine authority,
E. C. Blackman,
E. Howell,
E. M. Good,
Edgerton Papyrus 2,
F. Filson,
Father Herbert,
God,
H. Riesenfeld,
Hebrew(s),
Hellenistic,
Hugh Nibley,
infallible,
J. Jeremias,
Jesus Christ,
Jews,
John Rylands Papyrus 457,
K. W. Clark,
L. Wallis,
M. H. Franzman,
N. Turner,
Nag Hammadi Manuscripts,
New Education Testament,
O. Cullmann,
Old Testament,
Paul,
Prof. William Foxwell Albright,
revelation(s),
Synoptic the Gospels,
T. W. Manson,
the critic(s),
the Fourth Gospel,
the Spirit,
the Word of God,
utterances of Jesus,
V. Taylor,
W. C. Van Unnik
No More Infallible Books L. Wallis: “God’s plan for the human race obviously does not include what is called an ‘infallible’ volume of Scripture. The Bible is holy – but not in the sense of ancient orthodoxy among Jews and Christians….The source materials in the Bible are, to a considerable degree, at variance with each …
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