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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Author of The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ

1,709+ Works 21,628 Members 273 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

This author name is "thechurchofjesuschri"
Copyrights include "Intellectual Reserve, Inc.", "Corporation of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". Some publications are prepared by the "Church Educational System"
...none of which should be combined here.

Image credit: Sarah Marie Parker-Allen

Series

Works by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ (1830) — Author — 8,178 copies, 100 reviews
Gospel Principles (1978) 472 copies, 6 reviews
True To The Faith: A Gospel Reference (2004) 289 copies, 1 review
Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Brigham Young (1997) — Corporate author — 259 copies, 2 reviews
Saints, Vol. 2: No Unhallowed Hand, 1846-1893 (2020) 252 copies, 4 reviews
Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Spencer W. Kimball (2006) — Corporate author — 241 copies, 3 reviews
Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Heber J. Grant (2002) — Publisher — 238 copies, 1 review
Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph F. Smith (1998) — Corporate author — 233 copies
New Primary Children's Songbook (1989) 208 copies, 4 reviews
Teachings of Presidents of the Church: George Albert Smith (1996) — Publisher — 168 copies, 4 reviews
Truth Restored / Gospel Principles (1990) — Author — 146 copies, 1 review
Book Of Mormon Stories (1997) 133 copies, 3 reviews
New Testament Stories (2005) 105 copies, 2 reviews
Old Testament Stories (2021) 103 copies, 2 reviews
Doctrine and Covenants Stories (1983) 92 copies, 1 review
Family Home Evening Resource Book (1997) 88 copies, 1 review
For the Strength of Youth (2001) 88 copies
Doctrines of the Gospel: Religion 430-431 (2000) 62 copies, 1 review
Scripture Stories (1980) 43 copies
Book of Mormon Reader (1978) 37 copies, 1 review
Hymns: Simplified Accompaniments (1986) 35 copies, 1 review
Hymns Made Easy (1990) 26 copies
Family Guidebook (2001) 22 copies, 1 review
British Isles Vital Records Index (2001) 21 copies, 2 reviews
The Restoration (2006) 20 copies
Young Women Camp Manual (1992) 17 copies
Principles of the Gospel (1969) 17 copies
2006 Church Almanac (2005) 16 copies
Deseret Recipes (1981) 13 copies
To This End Was I Born (2004) 13 copies
The Children Sing (1951) 12 copies
Gospel Art Book (2009) 11 copies
Hymns Made Easy (1990) 11 copies, 1 review
A Parent's Guide (1985) 11 copies
The Activity Book (1977) 10 copies, 1 review
Teaching Guidebook (1994) 10 copies, 1 review
Family Guidebook (2001) 9 copies
Family Exaltation and You (1973) 9 copies
Deseret Recipes (1981) 9 copies
The Children Sing (1951) 8 copies
The Mormons (1972) 8 copies
Missionary Gospel Study Program (1988) 8 copies, 2 reviews
Uniform System for Teaching the Gospel (1986) 8 copies, 2 reviews
THE RESTORATION MOVIE (2004) 7 copies
1881 Canadian Census 7 copies, 1 review
The Choirbook (1980) 7 copies, 1 review
Truths We Live By (1959) 6 copies
Discussions for New Members 5 copies, 1 review
Principios Del Evangelio (2009) 4 copies
Faith in God for Girls 4 copies, 1 review
Hymn Preludes for Piano (1976) 4 copies
Scripture Stories [dvd] (2008) 3 copies, 1 review
Henry B. Eyring 3 copies
Guidebook for Conductors (1974) 3 copies
Dallin H. Oaks 3 copies
The Lamb of God 3 copies
The New Testament: KJV: LDS 3 copies, 1 review
Improvement Era (18) (1915) 2 copies
The Nativity 2 copies
L. Tom Perry 2 copies
The Scouter's Minute (1987) 2 copies
James E. Faust 2 copies
David B. Haight 2 copies
Neal A. Maxwell 2 copies
Boyd K. Packer 2 copies
Basic Self-Reliance (1989) 2 copies
Poland 2 copies
The Mountain of the Lord (DVD) 2 copies, 1 review
Australian Vital Records Index 2 copies, 1 review
Selected Hymns 2 copies
Principles of the Gospel (1943) 2 copies
Preach my Gospel (2023) 2 copies
Legacy (2000) 2 copies
Duty to God 2 copies
Spanish for Missionaries (1983) 2 copies, 1 review
Together Forever (2005) 2 copies
The Ensign-September 2018 2 copies, 1 review
The Ensign-August 2018 2 copies, 2 reviews
The Beehive House (1978) 2 copies
Ensign, May 2015 (2015) 2 copies
Favorite Seminary Songs (1965) 2 copies
Canciones Para Los Ninos (2002) 2 copies
Together Forever (2005) 2 copies
Himnos 2 copies, 2 reviews
Nauvoo Temple 2 copies
Alberta Temple 2 copies
Joseph F. Smith 2 copies
Family First 2 copies
THE SCOUTER'S MINUTE (1965) 2 copies
Family registry index 1 copy, 1 review
Cook book 1 copy
In His Footsteps Today (1969) 1 copy
Guidebook for Organists 1 copy, 1 review
Vi’iga 1 copy
MIA Let's Sing (1970) 1 copy
Kitabu Cha Mormoni (2006) 1 copy
The Children Sing (1951) 1 copy
Ensign, May 2013 (2013) 1 copy
Germany 1 copy
October 2023 1 copy
April 2024 1 copy
Dance Manual 1 copy
Love (1986) 1 copy
Nuestro Legado (2007) 1 copy
Circa test 1 copy
No date test 1 copy
space test 1 copy
string test 1 copy
suffix test 1 copy
dashes test 1 copy
dash test 1 copy
モルモン書 1 copy, 1 review
Family First 1 copy
Holy Bible 1 copy
Matthew Cowley Speaks (1976) 1 copy
Compass 1 copy
Tree of Life 1 copy
The Liahona 1 copy
The World 1 copy
Adam and Eve 1 copy
Hyrum Smith 1 copy
Emma Smith 1 copy
King David 1 copy
Jumping rope 1 copy
Enos praying 1 copy
Logan Temple 1 copy
Manti Temple 1 copy
Light of the World: A Celebration of Life [CD] (2002) — Publisher — 1 copy
Musical Interludes (1974) 1 copy
Masterworks 1 copy
The Ensign - January 2017 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign, November 2016 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign - February 2017 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign - April 2017 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign, May 2017 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign - June 2017 1 copy, 1 review
The Ensign - July 2017 1 copy, 1 review
Legacy - DVD 1 copy, 1 review
Jesus' tomb 1 copy
The Wise Men 1 copy
Jesus Christ 1 copy
Ten Lepers 1 copy
Esther 1 copy
Moses 1 copy
A shepherd 1 copy
Dance manual 1 copy
Happy Family 1 copy
Scotland 1 copy
Luke II 1 copy
Dear Returning Missionary 1 copy, 1 review
Family First 1 copy
A Song of the Heart (1978) 1 copy
Tokyo Temple 1 copy
The Ensign-October 2018 1 copy, 1 review
Basic Self-Reliance (1989) 1 copy
Family First (1992) 1 copy
A happy boy 1 copy
The Christus 1 copy
Genealogy In Action (1964) 1 copy
Gesangbuch 1 copy
Star B 1 copy

Associated Works

The Doctrine and Covenants / The Pearl of Great Price (1986) — Publisher, some editions — 202 copies, 2 reviews
History of the Church, Vol. 1-7 [1820-1848] and Index (1902) — Publisher, some editions — 191 copies, 1 review
History of the Church, Vol. 1-6 [1820-1844] (1948) — Publisher, some editions — 10 copies
The Family: A Proclamation to the World (1995) — Publisher — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, The
Birthdate
1830-04-06
Gender
n/a
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Disambiguation notice
This author name is "thechurchofjesuschri"
Copyrights include "Intellectual Reserve, Inc.", "Corporation of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". Some publications are prepared by the "Church Educational System"
...none of which should be combined here.
Associated Place (for map)
Utah, USA

Members

Reviews

283 reviews
Terribly repetitive, racist at it's core, anachronistic, boring, and wholly unoriginal.

It lifts big chunks, word for word, straight out of the KJ Old Testament. What isn't stolen from the Bible seems to be taken from 1. [b:View of the Hebrews 1825: Or the Tribes of Israel in America|981827|View of the Hebrews 1825 Or the Tribes of Israel in America|Ethan Smith|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1349044745s/981827.jpg|966716] 2. [b:The Late War Between the United States and Great Britain: From show more June 1812 to February 1815, Written in the Ancient Historical Style: Containing Also, a Sketch of the Late Algerine War ... the Commercial Treaty with Great Britain, and the Treaty...|14219538|The Late War Between the United States and Great Britain From June 1812 to February 1815, Written in the Ancient Historical Style Containing Also, a Sketch of the Late Algerine War ... the Commercial Treaty with Great Britain, and the Treaty...|Gilbert J. Hunt|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1349068390s/14219538.jpg|19858281] and 3. [b:The First Book of Napoleon, the Tyrant of the Earth|14450358|The First Book of Napoleon, the Tyrant of the Earth|Anonymous|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348271326s/14450358.jpg|20092752].

The linguistic, anachronistic, scientific and archaeological evidence against this being an accurate history of the Americas is absolutely staggering. That being said, a lot of people get a lot of hope out of this book, so they must not mind picking the rotten parts to get to a morsel of decency here and there.

p.s. If you absolutely must read it, try to get your hands on the 1st edition text, it's quite a bit different than what is published today.
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In the family of Mormon revelatory literature, if the Book of Mormon is the flashy older sibling who gets all the attention, then the Doctrine and Covenants (D&C) is the quiet younger sibling doing most of the work even though no one outside the family pays any attention.

In my estimation, the D&C is essential reading if you want to grasp the contours of the LDS Church as it exists today. That doesn’t mean it’s light or even riveting reading, unless you’ve always nursed a secret wish show more that the minutes of the deacon board were holy writ requiring study and meditation.

This, of course, is what makes reviews like this hard. From the glowing online reviews of the D&C by Mormons who feel elevated by its contents, I gather I lack the inner witness to vibe with these prophecies, so many of which are fairly pedestrian organizations and reorganizations of Church affairs.

That’s not to say I can’t appreciate the historical drama beneath even the most mundane revelations. The first generation of Mormons were a dynamic bunch devoted to an uphill climb against trenchant opposition, and occasionally against the factionalists and doubters and backsliders in their own midst.

The effort to erect a new (they would say “restored”) Church in the teeth of so much difficulty attracted a stream of revelations to Joseph Smith in the early 1830s, which were collected, published, adjusted, and augmented periodically through the years as the D&C.

This is where you find the distinctive Mormon doctrines and Church polity that we know today. For example, the unique teaching of the celestial, telestial, and terrestrial kingdoms is the fruit of Smith’s labors to translate the Book of Revelation; and baptism for the dead is unfolded in the D&C.

Here you find the teaching that the Father and the Son are flesh and blood, whereas the Holy Spirit is spirit. Here is the resurrection of saved men as angels, the exaltation of the most righteous as gods, the institution of plural marriage by Smith in the 1840s, and its retirement in 1890 by the Church.

The Presidency of the Church is here established, along with the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the bishoprics, and the Aaronic and Melchizedekian priesthoods. The impression I get is that the existence of the LDS Church today is a credit to the attention Smith gave to organizing an institution that could survive his death.

And that leads to another impression I gained; namely, that Joseph Smith himself must have exerted a measure of winsome magnetism to pull this off. Smith demanded a lot of himself and sunk deeply into debt for the sake of the Church, but he likewise demanded a lot of his people.

Much of the D&C is devoted to laying down the law with regard to specific members contributing their wealth to the treasury of the Church, and to upending their lives to send them to Zion in Missouri, or to Kirtland, or on far-flung missions to the “east countries” or to the Lamanites on the American frontier.

Smith must have exerted impressive personal pull to wield such power, greater even than the apostles. In contrast to their light fiscal touch, with which they settled for encouragement or silence when it came to giving, Smith brooked no private property if the LDS Church needed funds badly enough.

Also in contrast to the apostles, who encouraged the early Christians to work quietly and faithfully as members of their local communities, Smith erected barriers to commerce with the “Gentiles” that worked beautifully to section off the LDS Church as a people apart.

In the revelation that any liquid is permissible for communion, the express purpose is to end the necessity for payments to the Church’s enemies for sacramental wine. Medical aid is forbidden if it comes from the Church’s enemies. No one is to become indebted to the Church’s enemies.

Moreover, salvation depends in part on belief in the Book of Mormon and baptism in the Mormon Church. Sacred and secular ordinances thus combine to create a system of belief and practice which seems uncompromisingly exclusive, at least to me.

In fact, the system is so exclusive that it’s hard for me to understand how Mormon missionaries can claim a shared Christianity with someone like me. Seems pretty clear Smith would’ve considered me on the wrong side of the strait gate, stuck in a system of dead works that avails me nothing.

Where my Mormon friends and I might agree is that the D&C is worth your time, although our reasons would differ. A Mormon might consider it a chance for you to receive a testimony of its truth, and I consider it crucial to understand how divergent the LDS Church is from what I consider Christianity. Sure, these motives might be so different as to be oppositional, even confrontational; but in a disagreeable world it’s nice to have at least one point of agreement, so we take what we can get.
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4.5 Stars

I must admit I was underwhelmed at the beginning. The pacing was done well ("started with a bang" as someone somewhere said) but the language was simple. Definitely not the type of historical style that is or has been popular lately and, I must admit, I was unprepared for that. The writers aimed for simplicity and clarity. I still wish it had been the beautiful prose I love (hence the -.5 stars) BUT, and I'm not sure when this redirection happened, upon personal reassessment at 3 show more chapters in I loved it. *

In spite of the language, I found the story to be full of the drama that is human life. Not the triangle type, but the living, dying, trying to provide a living, trying to do the best and failing and then trying again type. I found people that were indisputably good and still indisputably human and bending under the day-to-day cares and troubles that I know so well.

Most history books previously had focused on Joseph Smith with a dose of Emma thrown in. But here! There were women, scores of women, whose voices told their own story. There were women who traveled the world, women who were single, women who were old, from every type of life imaginable. I wish I had been able to read this when I was single because I would have felt in good company. There were people from all over the world (listed by name!) who challenged my inadvertently preconceived notions about early congregations and communities of that time period.

They shied away from telling the popular stories, if they weren't necessary (Goodbye Father Tanner), and went for the stories you didn't hear all the time (whatever happened to Edward Partridge anyway?).

I got lost in the footnotes, just like I did in [a:Gerald N. Lund's|207452|Gerald N. Lund|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1458916871p2/207452.jpg] similar series, only these were better because it was their handwriting and contained so much more details about life then than the part that corresponded to that event. I learned things at times and at other times-- for example Parley's escape from prison and Orson Hyde's and Orson Pratt's returning to Nauvoo-- I thought "There's a little bit more to the story according to Susan Easton Black, but that's the general gist."

Couple of notes regarding some complaints:
Some reviewers pointed out that certain facts were not "dealt with." So, therefore, I was absolutely blindsided when they were addressed. Not with suppositions, but with the available primary sources which, as Dr. Underwood always stressed in my history class, are the only sources one should ever use. The text is quite bluntly honest when it doesn't have such sources. For more questions/answers look here.


* Minor question: Where was Lorenzo Snow? His story would have added some texture to several points of history, I'm sure. Also, here's wishing Anson had showed up at least once.
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Uncharitably, I can say the Book of Mormon reads like a meme: “I forced an AI to spend 1000 hours reading the Bible and then write a new Bible based on that information.” I found it derivative, repetitive, hackneyed, and nigh unreadable for long boring stretches.

The problem with this assessment is two-fold. First, I don’t want to be uncharitable. Second, this assessment is too lazy. It’s not hard to sit outside and criticize. What I tried to do instead was understand why Mormonism show more caught fire when it did in the way that it did, and I do have some thoughts.

First, there’s a deliberate simplicity to the Book of Mormon. “Plain speaking” recurs often as a mark of the righteous, in contrast to the “priestcrafts” of those who bury the truth in convoluted theologies that bind the laity to a caste of theologians who care nothing for the poor and the downtrodden.

Many “plain spoken” teachings of the book resonate, I suspect, with many an average church-goer today. The fall into sin was not only accounted for in God’s plan, but required because without sin there is no free will — and God would never trammel a man’s free will.

There’s no reason to ask why prophecy and healing and tongues ceased, because they never ceased — God is the same yesterday and today and forever. The revelation of Jesus was not limited to one corner of the globe — salvation is only through the name of Jesus and all have heard his name.

The atonement is not limited but infinite, and guarantees resurrection for all from the first death. We’re responsible to live righteously in this probationary period if we want to escape the second death. There’s an internally logical simplicity to the Book of Mormon that could appeal to someone who’s exhausted by lofty churchmen with their complicated empty words and conceited empty lives.

Also, none of the weird stuff is in the Book of Mormon. Plural marriage is outright condemned in Jacob 2-3 and Ether 10, and is tacitly absent in the social welfare system of Mosiah 21. There’s not a trace of the complicated system of righteous men achieving exaltation to godhood. I assume these were later revelations, but I’m open to correction from someone who knows more than I do.

If you’re not theologically grounded, there isn’t anything freaky here to put your back up. I can understand how the “plain speaking” of the Book of Mormon might appeal as an alternative to crusty orthodoxies that seem more interested in their own power structures than in living like Jesus.

Second, the Book of Mormon is very much a work of its time. Americans were fascinated by the vanished Mound Builders, so the idea of great precursor civilizations was in the air. The agnostic teachings of the false prophet Korihor sound an awful lot like 19th-century scientific materialism.

In the east, the social panic of Anti-Masonry echoes in the secret rites of the Gadianton robbers. In the west, the opening of the hinterlands to settlement provides an obvious escape route for persecuted Mormons in the same way that Lehi and his family fled to the American wilderness ahead of judgment.

I even find theological justification for “management” of Native American populations. In the account of the final triumph of the godless Lamanites over the apostate Nephites, the path to redemption for the Lamanites includes laying aside weapons and forswearing violence.

Since Mormon anthropology considers Native American tribes as degraded remnants of the Lamanites, it’s not difficult to sense the prejudices of expanding white America. Tribes that submit peacefully are on the path to redemption, and those that resist are wicked Lamanites practically begging for conquest.

As I read it, the Book of Mormon appeared at the only time it could have found such explosive success. Rising tensions over slavery threatened the geopolitical order, rising materialism undermined the spiritual order, rising disillusionment with organized religion left people religiously hungry but spiritually adrift, and rising consciousness of extinct civilizations made the discovery of ancient records plausible. If this is right, then the rise of Mormonism is not as hard to understand as it might first appear.

I set out in this review to be charitable, and I’m not sure I succeeded. No doubt, a devout Mormon would consider this nothing but a polite attack on their faith, a reduction of a movement of God to a quirky side effect of social and historical forces.

There’s probably some truth to that. I didn’t finish my reading of the Book of Mormon with an inclination to convert, but I do feel I understand its appeal in its time. Even today, progressive Mormons like fantasy author Brandon Sanderson, who seems to acknowledge the fictional nature of the book’s narrative, considers it a story through which God molds the character of his people.

Given this sort of adaptability in the teeth of advancing knowledge, not to mention Mormonism’s long track record of cohesive community and hard work, I suspect that both the faith and its book will survive for some time regardless of how strange or outdated it appears outside the walls of the temple.
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Scott A. Hales Writer, General Editor
Matthew J. Grow General Editor, Managing Director
Lisa Olsen Tait General Editor, Historical Review Editor
Steven C. Harper Writer, General Editor
John Taylor Contributor
Joseph Fielding Smith Contributor, Author
Angela Hallstrom Writer, General Editor
Jed L. Woodworth Historical Review Editor, General Editor
Wilford Woodruff Contributor, Author
Spencer W. Kimball Contributor
Gordon B. Hinckley Contributor, Author
Joseph F. Smith Contributor
Richard E. Jr. Turley General Editor
Jed Woodworth General Editor, Managing Historian
Bruce R. McConkie Contributor
Jerry Thompson Illustrator
Robert T. Barrett Illustrator
Nathan N. Waite Editor, Editorial Manager
Greg Newbold Illustrator, Cover artist
James Allen Contributor
Karen Lynn Davidson Contributor, Editor
Brian D. Reeves Research Specialist
Kathryn Burnside Research Specialist
Patric Gerber Cover designer
Chad O. Foulger Research Specialist
Greg K. Olsen Cover artist
Harry A. Dean Contributor
B Cecil Gates Contributor
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Joseph S. Murdock Contributor
John E. Tullidge Contributor
Ebenezer Beesley Contributor
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Simon Dewey Cover artist
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Alan Silva Narrator
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