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The Journal of American College Health is a bimonthly peer-reviewed public health journal covering college health. It was established in 1952 as the Journal of the American College Health Association, and obtained its current name in 1982. [1] It is published by Routledge in cooperation with the American College Health Association. [2]
Research and devotional ministry for the Book of Mormon The Book of Mormon Foundation Independence, Missouri: Originally published as the newsletter for the Foundation for Research on Ancient America. [46] Mormon History: 1968–1970 Monthly loose-leaf Reprints of documents and college papers related to LDS history David C. and Karla Martin
The journal was a venue for new scholarship from a faithful LDS perspective about Book of Mormon geography (Old World and New World), literary structures, name meanings, ongoing research, and other topics. [1] The journal, along with FARMS, operated from the assumption that the Book of Mormon was historically ancient and was divine scripture.
Non-Mormons wrote for a non-Mormon public about how "primitive and dangerous" Mormons were in "extreme terms." [3] Eber D. Howe published Mormonism Unvailed, or a Faithful Account of that Singular Imposition and Delusion in 1834, which claimed that Sidney Rigdon was the original author of the Book of Mormon and that Joseph Smith was a "vile wretch."
Studies of the Book of Mormon is a collection of essays written at the beginning of the 20th century (though not published until 1985) by B. H. Roberts (1857–1933), a general authority of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), which examine the validity of the Book of Mormon as a translation of an ancient American source.
By 1869, McLellin had broken completely with "all organized religion," [4] though he expressed a firm belief in the Book of Mormon in 1880: [15] I have set to my seal that the Book of Mormon is a true, divine record and it will require more evidence than I have ever seen to ever shake me relative to its purity.
George Eugene England, Jr. (22 July 1933 – 17 August 2001), usually credited as Eugene England, was a Latter-day Saint writer, teacher, and scholar. He founded Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, the oldest independent journal in Mormon Studies, with G. Wesley Johnson, Paul G. Salisbury, Joseph H. Jeppson, and Frances Menlove in 1966, and cofounded the Association for Mormon Letters in 1976.
In LDS circles, Robinson is generally considered to be orthodox and to have a reliable grasp of LDS doctrine. He came to the center of a conflict between the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS) and Salt Lake City publisher Signature Books, through his critical review of the writing of Dan Vogel, by describing it as being patterned after the teachings of Korihor, [4] an ...