FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Pages that link to "Template:FairMormon"
The following pages link to Template:FairMormon:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Book of Mormon/Metals/Silver (transclusion) (← links)
- Book of Mormon/Metals/Steel (transclusion) (← links)
- Book of Mormon/Metals/Ziff (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "Iron use was documented in the statements of early Spaniards, who told of the Aztecs using iron-studded clubs" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "Lumps of hematite, magnetite, and ilmenite were brought into Valley of Oaxaca" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "Bones of domesticated cattle...have been reported from different caves in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico" (transclusion) (← links)
- Journal of Book of Mormon Studies: "Pottery and other cultural materials were found in levels VII and above. But in some of those artifact-bearing strata there were horse bones, even in level II" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is the fact that Salt Lake City has many plastic surgeons indicative of Mormon vanity and concern with appearance? (transclusion) (← links)
- Template:Critical sources box:Mormonism and culture/Plastic surgery/CriticalSources (transclusion) (← links)
- Madden et al.: "by the beginning of the tenth century B.C. blacksmiths were intentionally steeling iron" (transclusion) (← links)
- Roper: "For example, an iron knife was found in an eleventh century Philistine tomb showed evidence of deliberate carburization" (transclusion) (← links)
- Roper: "archaeologists have discovered a carburized iron sword near Jericho" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "By 1400 BC, smiths in Armenia had discovered how to carburize iron by prolonged heating in contact with carbon" (transclusion) (← links)
- Hoskisson: "the mistaken assumption that scimitars did not exist in the pre-Islamic Old World" (transclusion) (← links)
- Roper: "a strange double-curved weapon held in the left hand of the warrior figure on the Loltún cave relief might be considered a scimitar/cimeter" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question:Did the Jaredites bring swarms of bees across the ocean in their barges (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch2:18:Land of Jerusalem (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Chadwick:Glimpses of Lehi's Jerusalem:Lehi's House at Jerusalem and the Land of His Inheritance:Going "up" to Jerusalem (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Roper et al:“If there be faults:BYU Studies 53:3:Nephi had been a Jew politically, but his ancestors were of Manasseh (transclusion) (← links)
- Jeffery R. Holland: "It is wrong to assume that Nephi in any way wished to take Laban’s life" (transclusion) (← links)
- Godfrey: "Martin found a rock closely resembling the seerstone Joseph sometimes used in place of the interpreters and substituted it without the Prophet’s knowledge" (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Gardner:Joseph the Seer:2009 FAIR Conference:long before golden plates complicated his position as a local seer (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is there anything wrong with early Church leaders using the term "angel" to refer to Jesus Christ? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What prior knowledge did George Q. Cannon have of the First Vision? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: How have critics taken George Q. Cannon's First Vision "angel" references out of context? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Why did George Q. Cannon say that Joseph Smith was visited by an "angel" during the First Vision? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What did Brigham Young say that leads one to believe that he denied the First Vision? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Who was the "angel" in the First Vision that Andrew Jenson was referring to? (transclusion) (← links)
- Ensign (Sept. 1977): "If his translation was essentially the same as that of the King James version, he apparently quoted the verse from the Bible" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Could Joseph have used a Bible during and simply dictated from it during Book of Mormon translation? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Did Joseph know what the italics in the Bible meant? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Did Joseph own a Bible at the time of the Book of Mormon translation? (transclusion) (← links)
- Barney: "three types of evidence favoring the conclusion that Joseph understood the meaning of the italicized words" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What do the italicized words in the Bible represent, and why is it relevant to the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Were the Isaiah passages in the Book of Mormon simply plagiarized from the King James Bible? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Why are many of the quotes from Isaiah in the Book of Mormon identical to those in the King James Bible? (transclusion) (← links)
- Matthews: "To regard the New Translation...as a product of divine inspiration given to Joseph Smith does not necessarily assume that it be a restoration of the original Bible text" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: How is the Joseph Smith Translation best understood? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: If the Joseph Smith Translation (JST) is Joseph Smith's 'correction' of Biblical errors, why do these corrections not match known Biblical manuscripts? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What changes were made to the 1837 edition of the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Why did Joseph Smith make changes to the Book of Mormon such as modifying "God" to read "the Son of God"? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Were any of the changes to the Book of Mormon made in reaction to sectarian criticism? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Was Thomas Stuart Ferguson an archaeologist? (transclusion) (← links)
- Gee: "Ferguson is largely unknown to the vast majority of Latter-day Saints; his impact on Book of Mormon studies is minimal" (transclusion) (← links)
- Peterson and Roper: "We know of no one who cites Ferguson as an authority, except countercultists" (transclusion) (← links)
- Peterson: "Thomas Stuart Ferguson's biographer...makes every effort to portray Ferguson's apparent eventual loss of faith as a failure for 'LDS archaeology'" (transclusion) (← links)
- Brigham Young (1855): "The Lord did not come with the armies of heaven...But He did send His angel to this same obscure person, Joseph Smith jun" (transclusion) (← links)
- Brigham Young (1861): "The Lord chose Joseph Smith, called upon him at fourteen years of age, gave him visions" (transclusion) (← links)
- Brigham Young (1867): "the Lord called upon Joseph he was but a boy—a child, only about fourteen years of age" (transclusion) (← links)
- George A. Smith (1868): "revealed to Joseph by the ministration of angels, the true condition of the religious world" (transclusion) (← links)