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Jerald Tanner was born in Provo, Utah, and was a fifth-generation Mormon. He studied at the University of Utah and received a degree from Salt Lake Trade Technical Institute . His great-great-grandfather, John Tanner , gave large donations to church founder Joseph Smith when the fledgling church was deeply in debt.
The book was originally entitled Mormonism: A Study of Mormon History and Doctrine and has been reprinted five times since (the latest edition was in 2008). The book is a long, densely written work full of copies of early Latter Day Saints documents accompanied by commentary.
In later years, after Jerald and Sandra Tanner joined her organization, Hancock's church established a second branch in Salt Lake City, Utah. Though Hancock remained a devoted believer in the Book of Mormon to the end of her life, her church began increasingly to question that book following her death, and ultimately made a decision to reject ...
In 1982, Jerald and Sandra Tanner published typed excerpts from Clayton's Nauvoo diaries between January 22, 1843, and January 28, 1846. [52] Their excerpts came from a copy from Andrew Ehat's notes. Ehat charged the Tanners with copyright violation, but a judge ruled that his transcript was a copy of preexisting material and not copyrightable.
Jerald and Sandra Tanner, opponents of the LDS Church (Mormons) Leatherhead F.C., a football (soccer) club in Leatherhead, England; a nickname for Peabody Veterans Memorial High School, a public high school located in Peabody, Massachusetts
Tate (or as I call him, Jimmy Cooper from The O.C.) and Sandra met while filming Love Potion #9, and even got engaged before they eventually split. “I adored Tate so much,” Sandra told Vanity ...
Jerald and Sandra Tanner, writers, researchers and critics of the LDS Church [110] Lynne Kanavel Whitesides, feminist [111] Excommunicated members
Among the most prominent of the traditional anti-Mormons are Jerald and Sandra Tanner. Both former members of the LDS Church, the Tanners converted to evangelical Protestantism; in 1964, they founded the Modern Microfilm Company to "document problems with the claims of Mormonism and to compare LDS doctrines with Christianity."