by Book of Mormon Central, Matthew L. Bowen and Jeffrey M. Bradshaw | Feb 13, 2021 |
Moses 1 constitutes a self-contained literary unit and prologue to the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible, demarcated by an inclusio. The Latin word inclusio (literally, an “inclosing” or “closing-in”) serves as “a technical term for a passage of scripture in which the opening phrase or idea is repeated, paraphrased, or otherwise returned to at the close.”...
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by Book of Mormon Central, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, Matthew L. Bowen, David J. Larsen and Stephen T. Whitlock | Jan 30, 2021 |
Having traversed the veil, Moses and Abraham experience a comprehensive vision of the earth and its mortal inhabitants through the ages. In both texts, this raises questions for the prophets, but the nature of the questions differs somewhat in Moses 1 than in the Apocalypse of Abraham (ApAb)....
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by Book of Mormon Central, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, David J. Larsen and Stephen T. Whitlock | Jan 16, 2021 |
In light of our cultural and conceptual distance from the milieu of Moses 1, we are fortunate that imperfect documents from antiquity like the Apocalypse of Abraham (ApAb) may nevertheless provide keys for understanding that “mysterious other world,” even when existing manuscripts were written much later and, not infrequently, have come to us in a form that is riddled with the ridiculous....
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by Book of Mormon Central, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, David J. Larsen and Stephen T. Whitlock | Jan 2, 2021 |
In Moses 1:21 we read the dramatic culmination of Moses’ confrontation with Satan: “And Moses received strength, and called upon God, saying: In the name of the Only Begotten, depart hence, Satan.” ...
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by Book of Mormon Central, Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, David J. Larsen and Stephen T. Whitlock | Dec 19, 2020 |
In this Essay, we will describe the first part of the heavenly ascent of Moses 1 which, like the Apocalypse of Abraham 9:8, opens on “an exceedingly high mountain.”...
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by Book of Mormon Central and Jeffrey M. Bradshaw | Dec 5, 2020 |
In a previous Insight, we discussed similarities and differences between heavenly ascent, an actual encounter with Deity within the heavenly temple, and ritual ascent, a figurative journey into the presence of God such as the one experienced in earthly temples.
In this Insight, we will introduce the general two-part narrative pattern of departure and return used in ancient and modern literature. We then illustrate how narratives of heavenly and ritual ascent often conform to a similar two-part structure of descent and ascent—a down-road followed by an up-road. Recognizing this pattern can help us better identify the intended narrative structure of the Book of Moses. ...
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