Item Detail
-
29006
-
2
-
12
-
English
-
The Book of Mormon and Dialogic Revelation
-
Journal of Book of Mormon Studies
-
2001
-
10
-
2
-
Provo, UT
-
Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship
-
16-27, 69-70
-
"This article has been adapted from the Author's book By the Hand of Mormon: The American Scripture That Launched a New World Religion. The author discusses three common understandings of the term revelation: (1) revelation as doctrine, (2) revelation as history, and (3) revelation as inner experience. He suggests that the Book of Mormon introduces a fourth type: revelation as dialogue. This form of revelation allows individuals to have direct contact with God, rather than only through the scriptures, and can be applied to our lives just as it was to the lives of those living in Book of Mormon times." [abstract provided]
-
Delusions : An Analysis of the Book of Mormon ; with an Examination of Its internal and External Evidences, and a Refutation of Its pretences to Divine Authority
Early Mormonism and Early Christianity : Some Parallels and Their Consequences for the Study of New Religions
Evangelical America and Early Mormonism
How Wide the Divide? : A Mormon and an Evangelical in Conversation. [by] Blomberg, Craig L;[by] Robinson, Stephen E
Rediscovering the Context of Joseph Smith's Treasure Seeking
Reflections on the Mormon 'Canon'
Religious Seekers and the Advent of Mormonism
The Book of Mormon in a Biblical Culture
The Founder of Mormonism : A Psychological Study of Joseph Smith, Jr.
The Persisting Idea of American Treasure Hunting
Two Integrities : An Address to the Crisis in Mormon Historiography
Wilford Woodruff and the Changing Nature of Mormon Religious Experience