
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.
This is an index of claims made in this work with links to corresponding responses within the FAIRwiki. An effort has been made to provide the author's original sources where possible.
Page | Claim | Response | Use of sources |
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13 | Mormons exist in "two distinct groups:" Chapel Mormons and Internet Mormons. | Internet Mormons vs. Chapel Mormons |
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15 | The Journal of Discourses was viewed on par with the Standard Works by early Church members. | Journal of Discourses | |
16 | "Gospel Principles" is published by the Church, but contains a disclaimer that states that it is not an official publication of the Church. | ||
17, 331 n.35 | Mormons "focus on a minor issue while dismissing the broader point that is being made by a critic of the church." | Mormons believe in Celestial Sex? |
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Page | Claim | Response | Use of sources |
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24 | Joseph's family survived by "money digging." | Joseph Smith and money digging |
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24 | Joseph was adept at "occult ritual." | Joseph Smith and the occult |
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24 | Joseph's neighbors thought that he was "an imposter, hypocrite and liar." | The Hurlbut affidavits |
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26 | During the First Vision, Joseph was told that "all Christian creeds" were an abomination and that "all Christian teachers" were corrupt. | Individual versus organizational apostasy [needs work] | |
26 | Many Mormons believe that "their salvation, to a limited degree, rests upon Smith." | Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief |
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26 | Bruce R. McConkie said that "we must turn to Joseph Smith to gain salvation." | Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief |
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26 | Dallin Oaks said that "I have built my life on the testimony and mission of the Prophet Joseph Smith." | Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief |
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27 | Joseph Smith was "harsh and violent." | Personal failings of Joseph Smith | |
27 | James E. Faust said that Joseph Smith "was the greatest prophet who ever lived upon the earth." | Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief |
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28 | Joseph Smith may have been a "pious fraud," who believed that he had been called of God while perpetrating fraud. | Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith |
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28 | Joseph Smith and other church leaders "often used deception to conceal their activities." | Joseph Smith's character [needs work] | |
28 | Polygamy was practiced in secret and denied publicly. | Joseph Smith and polygamy |
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28 | Heber C. Kimball predicted that the world would someday see Joseph Smith as "a god." | Joseph Smith's status in LDS belief |
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28 | Brigham Young applied 1 John 4:3 to Joseph Smith. |
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29 | LDS claim that Joseph Smith "told but one" First Vision. | First Vision accounts |
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30 | The 1832 account of the First Vision states that Joseph was in his "sixteenth year," and that he "probably meant when he was 16 years old. | Different age provided in the 1832 text |
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30 | The 1832 account does not mention two personages. | Only one Personage appears in the 1832 account |
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30 | The 1832 account does not mention that "all the churches in Joseph's day were false." | 1832 account doesn't forbid joining a church |
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31 | Joseph claimed that he learned about the errors in Christendom through personal Bible study several years before the First Vision. |
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31 | Orson Pratt said the the two personages "declared themselves to be angels." | Orson Pratt confused about "angel" or Father-Son |
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31 | Church historian Andrew Jenson said that "The angel again forbade Joseph to join any of these churches." | Andrew Jenson called personage an "angel" |
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31 | Joseph dictated the 1838 account of the First Vision to counter the leadership crisis in Kirtland. | 1838 account modified to offset leadership crisis? | |
31 | The visit of Moroni was confused with the First Vision, and "was probably the real first vision." | First Vision fabricated to give "Godly authority" | |
34 | "Not a single piece" of literature published in the 1830's mentions a visit by the Father and the Son. | No reference to First Vision in 1830s publications? | |
34 | Joseph's mother said that the First Vision was of an angel. | Prophet's mother said First Vision was of an "angel" |
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34 | Joseph privately began reworking the story of seeing an angel into a vision of Christ. | Oliver Cowdery not aware of First Vision in 1834-35 |
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34 | Without "Mormonism's so-called" Melchizedek Priesthood, no man can see God and live. | D&C 84 says God not seen without priesthood | |
34 | Nobody knows "when or how" the Joseph received the Melchizedek Priesthood. | Date of the restoration of the Melchizedek priesthood |
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34 | Joseph "had to backdate" the First Vision to 1820 in response to a leadership crisis. | 1838 account modified to offset leadership crisis? |
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35 | The First Vision originally stated that the personages were angels. | The "Angels" of the 1835 account |
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35 | There was no 1820 revival in Palmyra that converted "great multitudes" of people. | Religious revivals in 1820 |
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35 | Joseph Smith joined other churches after having been told that churches were wrong. | Joseph Smith joined other churches | |
35, 342 n. 79, n. 80 | Newspapers reported in 1829 that Joseph Smith had a dream in 1827 about a spirit visiting him three times in one night. |
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35-36, 343 n. 83 | Joseph Smiths First Vision may have been a dream of a "bloody ghost dressed as a Spaniard. |
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36, 343 n. 85 | Joseph Smith was an "occultist." | Joseph Smith and the occult |
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36 | Early Mormons believed in "witchcraft." |
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36 | Joseph's mother talked about "magic circles" and the "faculty of Abrac." |
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37, 344 n. 93 | Joseph's family had a "magick dagger" that was owned by Hyrum Smith. |
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37, 344 n. 94 | Joseph's family had "three magick parchments." One of these was owned by Hyrum Smith. |
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37, 344 n. 95 | Joseph had a "Jupiter talisman" with him the day he died. | Joseph Smith and Jupiter talisman |
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38 | "Researchers of Mormonism" now believe that Joseph was influenced by "Jewish kabbalism." | ||
38 | Joseph considered the date April 6th to have "astrological significance." |
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38-39, 346 n. 104-109 | Joseph was arrested in 1826 for being a "disorderly person and an imposter." | Joseph Smith's 1826 glasslooking trial |
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39 | No "statements of repentance by Smith" for money digging have ever been found. |
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40, 348 n. 123 | Gordon B. Hinckley cited false documentation to support the story of an 1820 revival. | Religious revivals in 1820 [needs work] |
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42, 349 n. 126 | There is no evidence that Joseph Smith was "persecuted" for telling the story of his vision between 1820 and 1824. |
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42 | Contradictions in the stories of Paul's vision were "long ago resolved by scholars analyzing the Greek texts." |
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42 | Brodie's idea that the First Vision may have been "the elaboration of some half-remembered dream stimulated by the early revival excitement" is a satisfactory way to "explain things." | Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith |
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44 | Brodie's idea that the First Vision may have been "created some time after 1830 when the need arose for a magnificent tradition to cancel out the stories of his fortune-telling and money-digging" "further weakens" Mormon claims. | Psychobiographical analysis of Joseph Smith |
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45, 351 n. 144 | Joseph "continued practicing magick, divination, astrology, and soothsaying long after the LDS Church was founded in 1830." | Joseph Smith and seer stones |
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46 | Brigham Young used Oliver Cowdery's divining rod to point out the location where the temple would be built in Salt Lake City. |
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46 | Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball were given divining rods by Joseph Smith. |
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46 | Joseph received a revelation praising Oliver's gift of using his divining talents. | Oliver Cowdery and the "rod of nature" | |
48 | Joseph continued to discover and use new seer stones. | Joseph Smith and seer stones [needs work] |
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48 | Joseph "never stopped being" an occultist. | Joseph Smith and the occult |
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49 | The activities of Joseph's family may have been "satanic." | Joseph Smith and the occult |
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Page | Claim | Response | Use of sources |
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51, 353 n. 2 | The Book of Mormon plagiarizes from the Bible and the Apocrypha. | Book of Mormon plagiarized from the Bible | |
51, 354 n. 3 | Some Book of Mormon stories are simply reworked Bible stories. | Book of Mormon plagiarized from the Bible |
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55 | The 1839 history of the Church identified the angel who delivered the plates to Joseph as Nephi rather than Moroni. | Nephi or Moroni |
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56 | The name "Nephi" is related to "generic terms used by nineteenth-century occultists for spirit messengers." |
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56, 357 n. 34 | Joseph used his seer stone to locate the plates. |
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56, 357 n. 33 | Joseph Smith's vision of Moroni may have taken place through his seer stone |
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56, 357 n. 35, 36 | The "golden book" was originally supposed to be about "hidden treasure" — the "religious twist" was added later. |
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56 | Joseph translated the plates by looking at his seer stone in his hat. The plates were not nearby. | Joseph Smith and seer stones |
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57, 358-9 n. 47 | Each sentence and word in the 1830 Book of Mormon "had supposedly come directly from God." | Book of Mormon translation method |
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57-58, 359 n. 49 | A voice from heaven proclaimed that the translation was correct, therefore no further editing should have been required. | Book of Mormon textual changes |
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58, 359 n. 50, 51 | The use of the word "synagogue" in the Book of Mormon is an anachronism. | Book of Mormon anachronisms/Synagogues [needs work] |
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58, 359 n. 52, 53 | There are references to cows, oxen, horses, and goats in the New World hundreds of years before Christ. | Book of Mormon anachronisms/Animals |
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58, 359 n. 53 | "LDS apologist John Sorenson has suggested that Smith mistranslated numerous words" from the gold plates and that "cattle and oxen should have been rendered deer and bison," and that "horses should also have been translated deer." | Book of Mormon anachronisms/Animals |
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58, 359 n. 54 | The Book of Mormon "is simply a rehashing" of the speculation in the 19th century regarding Indian origins due to the presence of burial mounds "dotting the land." | Book of Mormon and the Mound Builders |
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60, 360 n. 58 | Joseph Smith incorporated text from Josiah Priest's The Wonders of Nature into the Book of Mormon. | Book of Mormon plagiarism accusations/The Wonders of Nature | *Josiah Priest, The Wonders of Nature, 1825
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60-61, 360 n. 59-63 | Joseph Smith plagiariazed Ethan Smith's View of the Hebrews | Book of Mormon and View of the Hebrews |
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61 | Anyone who looked on the gold plates would die. | Viewing the gold plates would result in death? |
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62, 361 n. 69-72 | The witnesses never actually physically saw the plates - they only saw them in visions. | Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal |
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64 | Martin Harris said that he never saw the plates with his "natural eyes." | "Eye of Faith"/"Spiritual Eye" statements by Martin Harris |
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64, 362 n. 81-82 | Cowdery, Whitmer and Harris's statements that they actually saw the plates only refer to times that the plates were either covered with a cloth or in a wooden box. | Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal |
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64, 362 n. 83-84 | Martin Harris said that none of the eight witnesses had seen or handled the plates. | Book of Mormon witnesses/Spiritual or literal |
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65 | The Book of Mormon "can hardly be considered unique" since James Strang produced a set of plates that were seen by witnesses. | James Strang |
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65, 362 n. 87 | LDS defenders (apologists) have redefined many of the terms that Joseph Smith used in the Book of Mormon text: steel means iron, horses are deer, tents are huts, etc. | Book of Mormon anachronisms |
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66, 362 n. 88 | LDS scholars such as Dee F. Green have stated that Book of Mormon archaeology is a "myth." | Book of Mormon archeology |
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66, 362 n. 89 | Dr. Michael Coe stated that there was no Book of Mormon archaeology. | Amerindians as Lamanites/Maya and Olmec |
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66, 363 n. 92 | LDS scholar Terryl L. Givens "admitted" that no connection has been made between the Book of Mormon and cultures or civilizations in the Western hemisphere. | Amerindians as Lamanites/Maya and Olmec |
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67, 363 n. 95-96 | The limited geography theory "cannot bear rigorous scrutiny" and "does violence" to the text of the Book of Mormon. | Book of Mormon geography/New World/Limited Geography Theory |
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67, 363 n.99 | Apologists have suggested that "not a single early Mormon, including Joseph Smith, ever bothered reading the Book of Mormon 'closely enough to grasp the fact' " that the plates were not buried in the hill where the final Nephite battle occurred. |
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70, 365 n.115 | Joseph Smith said that the angel told him that all American Indians were "literal descendants of Abraham," but DNA has disproved this | Amerindians as Lamanites |
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71, 365 n.120 | Joseph Smith founded the "Restored Church" on the belief that all Native Americans were descendants of the Israelites. |
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72, 366 n.127 | All modern Mormons believed that all inhabitants of the New World were descendants of the Lamanites until "science showed it to be erroneous." | Book of Mormon geography/Borders of the Lamanites |
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72, 366 n.128 | The "updated LDS paradigm" claims that Nephites intermarried with non-Israelite natives, thus diluting their DNA | Amerindians as Lamanites |
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72, 366 n.130 | The LDS view has always been that Israelites were the first people to populate the Americas, since the land was "kept from the knowledge of other nations." | Book of Mormon anachronisms/Demographics |
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73, 367 n.131-135 | Not many Christians actually believe that the world was created around 4000 B.C., or that the flood occurred around 2000 B.C. In fact, "[T]he majority of traditional Christians unddrstand that the world is older than 6000 years," therefore the claim that the DNA argument is fundamentalist "suicide bombing" is false. | Fundamentalist "suicide bombing" |
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73, 367 n.136 | The Lamanites were supposed to become "white" once they converted en masse to Mormonism. This was to be accomplished by having LDS men take Indian wives. | Native Americans to become "white and delightsome" through polygamous marriage? |
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73, 367 n.137 | The phrase "white and delightsome" was changed to "pure and delightsome" in the Book of Mormon | Book of Mormon textual changes/"white" changed to "pure" |
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73, 367 n.138 | LDS leaders claimed that the alteration to the Book of Mormon had nothing to do with the Indians physically turning white. LDS leaders taught that the curse would one day be removed. | Lamanite curse | |
74 | LDS apologists dismiss Church teachings in order to make Mormonism compatible with scientific findings | Mormonism and science |
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75, 368 n.142 | LDS apologist B.H. Roberts "reached a shocking conclusion" that that Book of Mormon wasn't authentic | B.H. Roberts and "Studies of the Book of Mormon" |
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76, 368 n.143 | B.H. Roberts "had come to realize that the Book of Mormon was a nonhistorical document." | B.H. Roberts' testimony of the Book of Mormon |
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76 | FARMS claims that Roberts was playing "devils advocate," but have never provided documentation to support this assertion. They only focus on his declarations that he made before he reached his "final conclusion." | B.H. Roberts' testimony of the Book of Mormon |
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77 368 n.145-147 | Thomas Stuart Ferguson lost his testimony of the Book of Mormon after failing to find archaeological evidence. |
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77 369 n.150-153 | LDS scholars believe that Quetzalcoatl was Jesus Christ. However, Quetzalcoatl's association with a "feathered serpent" constitutes "snake worship," and is therefore inconsistent with worship of Jesus Christ. | Quetzalcoatl and Jesus Christ |
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Page | Claim | Response | Use of sources |
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84, 370 n.9-11 | The revelations in the Book of Commandments were modified because they were "showing their age," "contained outdated information," "included erroneous statements" and "abandoned doctrines." Some of the revelations "revealed too much information about LDS beliefs." | Doctrine and Covenants textual changes |
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85, 371 n.14 | Mormons view divine truth as "not absolute or fixed; it is changeable, flexible." | Changing doctrine |
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87, 370 n.23 | Joseph received a "false revelation" through his seer stone to go to Toronto, Canada to sell the Book of Mormon copyright | Did Joseph Smith attempt to sell the Book of Mormon copyright? |
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87, 371 n.25 | Some of the modified revelations had their meanings "reversed." | Doctrine and Covenants textual changes |
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89, 372 n.28 | Joseph modified the revelation now found in D&C 5:4 to add additional gifts. After translating the Book of Mormon he was not supposed to become a prophet or organize a Church. | Doctrine and Covenants textual changes |
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89, 372 n.29-30 | Joseph modified what is now D&C 8:6-9 to hide Oliver Cowdery's use of a divining rod. | Oliver Cowdery and the "rod of nature" |
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90, 372 n.34, 375 n.35 | Apostle William E. McLellin left the Church because he was "shaken by the changes made in the revelations." |
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90 | Mormons claim that Biblical writers modified revelations, but cannot provide data to support this. This is an "argument from silence." |
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94 | Joseph Smith turned the "Book of Breathings" into the "Book of Abraham." Joseph claimed that the "Book of the Dead" had been written by Joseph of Egypt. | Book of Abraham/Papyri |
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94-98 | The restoration of the missing portions of Facsimile 1 were "terribly wrong." | Book of Abraham/Papyri |
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99 | LDS apologists' main purpose is to explain away "any and all criticisms that might damage the validity of Smith's writings." | Apologetics |
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100 | Documents show how the hieroglyphs from the papyri were matched to the Book of Abraham text. One or two words in Egyptian were expanded to entire paragraphs in English. | Kirtland Egyptian Papers |
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