Item Detail
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5667
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16
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7
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English
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Nineteenth-Century Mormons : The New Israel
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Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought
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Spring 1979
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12
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42-56
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Mormons are said to be especially fond of Old Testament scriptures, but a study of doctrinal Mormon writings does not support this view, because they more frequently refer to the New Testament. The Mormons did, however, perceive themselves as a chosen people similar to Israel, a family with God at its head.
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All Abraham's Children : Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage
Equal Rites : The Book of Mormon, Masonry, Gender, and American Culture
From the Outside Looking In : Essays on Mormon History, Theology, and Culture
In Search of Ephraim : Traditional Mormon Conceptions of Lineage and Race
Joseph Smith III : Pragmatic Prophet
LDS Approaches to the Holy Bible
Mormonism : The Story of a New Religious Tradition
Mormon Memory, Mormon Myth, and Mormon History
Mormons and the Bible : The Place of the Latter-day Saints in American Religion
Standing Apart : Mormon Historical Consciousness And The Concept Of Apostasy
Taming the Past to Conquer the Future : The Pioneer Jubilee of 1897
The Construction of the Mormon People
The Emergence of Brigham Young and the Twelve to Mormon Leadership, 1830-1841
The Millenarian World of Early Mormonism
The Mormon History Association's Tanner Lectures : The First Twenty Years
The Mormon Reformation of 1856-1857 : The Rhetoric and the Reality -
Mormonism and the Bible, 1832-1838
Mormon Songs from the Rocky Mountains : A Compilation of Mormon Folksong
Nauvoo: Kingdom on the Mississippi
Textual Parallels to the Doctrine and Covenants and Book of Commandments as Found in the Bible
The Law of Adoption : One Phase of the Development of the Mormon Concept of Salvation, 1830-1900
The Psychological and Ethical Aspects of Mormon Group Life
To Transform History : Early Mormon Culture and the Concept of Time and Space