Audio podcast of Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture show

Audio podcast of Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture

Summary: Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture is a nonprofit educational journal focused on the scriptures of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: the Book of Mormon, the Pearl of Great Price, the Bible, Doctrine and Covenants, early LDS history, and related subjects. All publications are peer-reviewed and are made available as free internet downloads or through at-cost print-on-demand services. Our goal is to increase understanding of scripture through careful scholarly investigation and analysis of the insights provided by a wide range of ancillary disciplines, including language, history, archaeology, literature, culture, ethnohistory, art, geography, law, politics, philosophy, etc. Interpreter will also publish articles advocating the authenticity and historicity of LDS scripture and the Restoration, along with scholarly responses to critics of the LDS faith. We hope to illuminate, by study and faith, the eternal spiritual message of the scriptures—that Jesus is the Christ. Although the editors of the journal fully support the goals and teachings of the Church, the journal is an independent entity with no affiliation with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, nor with Brigham Young University. The Board of Editors alone is responsible for its contents.

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  • Artist: Audio podcast of Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture
  • Copyright: ©2016 The Interpreter Foundation. Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 3.0 Unported license.

Podcasts:

 Scripture Roundtable 180: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 36, On the Morrow Come I into the World - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:15

This is Scripture Roundtable 180 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #36, On the Morrow Come I into the World, focusing on scriptures in 3 Nephi 1-7. Continue reading →

 Scripture Roundtable 179: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 35, Repent and Return unto the Lord - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:12:04

This is Scripture Roundtable 179 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #35, Repent and Return unto the Lord, focusing on scriptures in Helaman 13-16. Continue reading →

 Three Degrees of Gospel Understanding - Daniel C. Peterson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 13:37

Few fireside talks outlive the week in which they are given. But Professor Stanley Kimball’s remarks, offered one evening long ago in southern California, have stayed with me for nearly three and a half decades. In my view, they offer a key to surviving challenges or even what have come to be called “faith crises” — and, indeed, a key not only to surviving them but to thriving spiritually by having overcome them. Continue reading →

 Scripture Roundtable 178: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 34, How Could You Have Forgotten Your God? - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 55:22

This is Scripture Roundtable 178 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #34, How Could You Have Forgotten Your God?, focusing on scriptures in Helaman 6-12. Continue reading →

 Scripture Roundtable 177: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 33, A Sure Foundation - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 57:34

This is Scripture Roundtable 177 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #33, A Sure Foundation, focusing on scriptures in Helaman 1-5. Continue reading →

 “With the Tongue of Angels”: Angelic Speech as a Form of Deification - Neal Rappleye | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 37:06

The “tongue of angels” has long been a point of interest to Latter-day Saints, who wonder whether it really is as simple as speaking under the influence of the Spirit or if it might mean something more. Drawing on the structure of Nephi’s record and the interactions with angels that Nephi recorded, we learn that this notion of speaking with the tongue of angels has connections with ancient Israelite temple worship and the divine council. Nephi places the act of speaking with the tongue of angels at the culmination of a literary ascent, where one must pass through a gate (baptism) and by a gatekeeper (the Holy Ghost). This progression makes rich allusions to imagery in the visions of Lehi, Nephi, and Isaiah, where these prophets were brought into the presence of the Lord, stood in the divine council, and were commissioned to declare the words of the Lord. Nephi’s carefully crafted narrative teaches that all are both invited and commanded to follow the path that leads to entrance into the Lord’s presence, and ultimately grants membership into the heavenly assembly. Continue reading →

 Reading A Pentecostal Reads the Book of Mormon - Stephen O. Smoot | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:09

Review of John Christopher Thomas, A Pentecostal Reads the Book of Mormon: A Literary and Theological Introduction, Cleveland, TN: CPT Press, 2016. 448 pp. + bibliography. $24.95 Continue reading →

 Remembering and Honoring Māori Latter-day Saints - Louis C. Midgley | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 44:44

Review of Robert Joseph, “Intercultural Exchange, Matakite Māori and the Mormon Church,” in Mana Māori and Christianity, ed. by Hugh Morrison, Lachy Paterson, Brett Knowles and Murray Rae (Wellington, New Zealand: Huia Publishers, 2012), pp. 43–72; and of Selwyn Kātene, ed, Turning the Hearts of the Children: Early Māori Leaders in the Mormon Church (Wellington, New Zealand: Steele Roberts Publishers, 2014). 231 pp. Glossary (pp. 220–22), Index (pp. 223–31). N.Z. Abstract: Dr. Robert (Rob) Joseph’s essay on Māori matakite (seers) is described and assessed, along with the contents of a book, edited by Dr. Selwyn Kātene, consisting of essays on twelve nineteenth-century Māori Latter-day Saint “leaders.” All these essays are indications that Māori scholars are setting out and defending the Māori Latter-day Saint narrative. These essays also make available to future generations the stories of some of the Māori who subsequently helped set in place a Māori community of Latter-day Saints in Aotearoa (now the official Māori name for all of New Zealand rather than merely the name for the North Island). One crucial fact is that there were divine special revelations to Māori seers that opened the way for the message brought to them by Latter-day Saint missionaries. These essays will help Māori Saints (and others) remember and honor earlier encounters with the divine that yielded what was for at least a hundred years primarily a Māori community of Saints in New Zealand. Continue reading →

 Scripture Roundtable 176: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 32, They Did Obey-Every Word of Command with Exactness - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 54:18

This is Scripture Roundtable 176 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #32, They Did Obey-Every Word of Command with Exactness, focusing on scriptures in Alma 53, and 56-68. Continue reading →

 Scripture Roundtable 175: Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson 31, Firm in the Faith of Christ - Administration | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:26:28

This is Scripture Roundtable 175 from The Interpreter Foundation, in which we discuss the Book of Mormon Gospel Doctrine Lesson #31, Firm in the Faith of Christ, focusing on scriptures in Alma 43-52. Continue reading →

 Were We Foreordained to the Priesthood, or Was the Standard of Worthiness Foreordained? Alma 13 Reconsidered - A. Keith Thompson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 53:28

Alma 13:3–4 is often interpreted as Book of Mormon confirmation of the doctrine that all those who are ordained to the Priesthood on the earth were foreordained to receive that Priesthood in the pre-existence as a result of their exceeding faith and good works. That interpretation is inconsistent with the 1978 revelation on Priesthood. A contextual reading of the account of Alma2’s ministry to the people of Ammonihah also suggests that Alma2 was not telling the men of Ammonihah that they (or anyone else) had been foreordained to receive the Priesthood. Rather, Alma2 was teaching that what we now call worthiness was ordained as the standard for ordination to the Priesthood before the foundations of this earth were laid. If the people of Ammonihah demonstrated their worthiness by repenting of their sins, they could qualify to receive the ordinances of the Melchizedek Priesthood and enter into the rest of the Lord as many of the ancients had done. The manner in which men were ordained to the Priesthood and in which its ordinances were administered was intended to show the people how they should look to Christ for redemption. Continue reading →

 Jeffrey M. Bradshaw – “The Future Isn’t What It Used to Be” - Jeffrey M. Bradshaw | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 31:21

This is a presentation by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw at the 2016 Science & Mormonism Symposium: Body, Brain, Mind & Spirit, which took place on 12 March 2016 in Orem, Utah. Continue reading →

 Mormonism, Materialism, and Politics: Six Things We Must Understand in Order to Survive as Latter-day Saints - Rick Anderson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 23:11

We are called as Latter-day Saints to be a force for good in the world in every way possible, which necessarily includes active and positive engagement with political and social issues. At the same time, it is essential to our spiritual survival that we never allow ourselves to forget the radical difference between the philosophies of men — no matter how superficially harmonious some of these may seem with particular principles of the gospel or with some aspects of traditional Mormon culture — and the teachings of the prophets. In a world that constantly entices us with messages designed to lure us away from the eternal truths of the restored gospel and into the embrace of philosophies that are partially and contingently true at best and actively destructive at worst, we must exercise constant vigilance. This essay suggests and discusses six propositions that, if understood and embraced, should help us maintain that vigilance. Continue reading →

 Brant A. Gardner – “In the Visions of the Night: The Human Brain and Divine Revelation” - Brant A. Gardner | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:49

This is a presentation by Brant A. Gardner at the 2016 Science & Mormonism Symposium: Body, Brain, Mind & Spirit, which took place on 12 March 2016 in Orem, Utah. Continue reading →

 Perhaps Close can Count in More than Horseshoes - Brant A. Gardner | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 8:54

Review of Gerald E. Smith, Schooling the Prophet: How the Book of Mormon Influenced Joseph Smith and the Early Restoration (Provo, UT: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2015). pp 305. Abstract: Schooling the Prophet provides a good survey of many early Latter-day Saint doctrines. It suggests that there is a causal link between the Book of Mormon and those doctrines. Sometimes it makes the case; many times it is close but doesn’t quite support the thesis of the book. Continue reading →

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