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Question: Are the Book of Mormon's and the Late War's descriptions of travel to "faraway lands" similar enough to suggest an authorial relationship?: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Faraway_Lands_Late_War.png]]
[[File:Faraway_Lands_Late_War.png]]
===Problems===
===Problems===
It came to pass occurs in the Bible. The Late war states a strong ship. The location in the Late War mentions the that it was meant to be to the children of Israel and the direction is southward in the Late War and northward in the Book of Mormon. Another very specious connection.
It came to pass occurs in the Bible. The Late war states a strong ship while the Book of Mormon just says ship. The location in the Late War mentions the that it was meant to be to the children of Israel and the direction is southward in the Late War and northward in the Book of Mormon. Another very specious connection.
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{{endnotes sources}}
{{endnotes sources}}

Revision as of 18:43, 3 November 2019


Question: Are the Book of Mormon's and the Late War's descriptions of travel to "faraway lands" similar enough to suggest an authorial relationship?

Critics’ Comparison

Problems

It came to pass occurs in the Bible. The Late war states a strong ship while the Book of Mormon just says ship. The location in the Late War mentions the that it was meant to be to the children of Israel and the direction is southward in the Late War and northward in the Book of Mormon. Another very specious connection.


Notes