Item Detail
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25786
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16
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2
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English
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One Eternal Round
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Salt Lake City, UT
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Deseret Book
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698
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"One Eternal Round" is the culmination of Hugh Nibley's thoughts on the Book of Abraham and represents over fifteen years of research and writing. The volume includes penetrating insights into Egyptian pharaohs and medieval Jewish and Islamic traditions about Abraham; Greek, Egyptian, and Mesopotamian myths; the Aztec calendar stone; Hopi Indian ceremonies; and early Jewish and Christian apocrypha, as well as the relationship of myth, ritual, and history. The final groundbreaking chapter delves into geometry and mathematical relationships depicted on Facsimile 2. All these are woven together into a magnificent tapestry of evidence demonstrating that the book of Abraham and its facsimiles represent actual ancient materials and traditions. This book would not have come to fruition without the efforts of co-author Michael D. Rhodes. It includes illustrations by Michael P. Lyon.
--Amazon.com book description -
A Guide to the Book of Abraham
Ancient Texts and Mormonism: Discovering the Roots of the Eternal Gospel in Ancient Israel and the Primitive Church
An Introduction to the Book of Abraham
Could Joseph Smith Have Drawn on Ancient Manuscripts When He Translated the Story of Enoch? : Recent Updates on a Persistent Question
Feminism and Heavenly Mother
“From the Catecombs of Egypt” : Latter-day Saint Engagement with Ancient Egypt and the Contest of Religious Identity
"How Thankful We Should Be to Know the Truth" : Zebedee Coltrin's Witness of the Heavenly Origins of Temple Ordinances
Let's Talk About the Book of Abraham
Pearl of Great Price Reference Companion
Precept upon Precept: Joseph Smith and the Restoration of Doctrine
Prophets, Pagans, and Papyri: The Jews of Greco-Roman Egypt and the Transmission of the Book of Abraham
Scriptures with Pictures : Methodology, Unexamined Assumptions, and the Study of the Book of Abraham
Temple Themes in the Book of Abraham
The Ancient Doctrine of the Two Ways and the Book of Mormon
“Wherefore, for This Cause”: The Book of Mormon as Anti-type of the Brass Serpent
Worthy of Another Look : Classics from the Past : The Early Christian Prayer Circle