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Theories that Moroni could have actually been something other than an angel sent by God

Summary: Some critics have charged that Moroni, the resurrected prophet who gave the Book of Mormon plates to Joseph Smith, was really an angel of Satan. They base this charge on two passages in the New Testament: 2 Corinthians 11:13–15 and Galatians 1:8.


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"Somebody could walk into this room
And say your life is on fire.
It's all over the evening news,
All about the fire in your life on the evening news."

- Paul Simon, "Crazy Love, Vol. II," Graceland album (1986).
  • M. Scott Bradshaw, "Defining Adultery under Illinois and Nauvoo Law," in Sustaining the Law: Joseph Smith's Legal Encounters, edited by Gordon A. Madsen, Jeffrey N. Walker, and John W. Welch (Provo, Utah: BYU Studies, 2014), 401–426 (p. 2).
  • M. Scott Bradshaw, "Defining Adultery under Illinois and Nauvoo Law," in Sustaining the Law, edited by Madsen, Walker, and Welch, 2.
  • Bradshaw, "Defining Adultery," 2.


Claim: There's a girl in New York city
Who calls herself a human trampoline.
—Paul Simon, "Graceland (song)," Graceland  (1986), 1-4.

However...

How many roads can a man walk down?
—Bob Dylan, "Blowing in the Wind," Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits  (1975), 347.


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/Witnesses /Primary sources


/answers


ToC Old Table of Contents


Ramsay MacMullen, Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth Centuries (Yale University Press, 1997), 26-27.

Notes