Are Mormons Playing the Race Card?
FEATURES
- He Comes as Help: The Blessing Is His Presence by Patrick D. Degn
- There Are Angels Among Us by Anne Hinton Pratt
- Aliens and Latter-day Saint Theology by C.D. Cunningham
- A Mother Remembers: On Losing Confidence by Maurine Proctor
- Crossing Our Own Jordan by Paul Bishop
- Against Wind and Tide: Wilford Woodruff’s Call to the British Capital by Steven C. Wheelwright and Kristy Wheelwright Taylor
- The Invisible Ledger- Five Smooth Stones: Essays on Faith for Latter-Day Saints by Paul Bishop
- Are You Saying “Telephone Prayers”? by Ted Gibbons
- The Counsel of Early Church Leaders About Anger by H. Wallace Goddard
- The First Presidency Tours the New Humanitarian Center Ahead of Dedication by Meridian Church Newswire
















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tinaJuly 29, 2015
I find Alma 3 and the website blacks in the scriptures . com very clear in specifying that race and color is not the same thing and reason... because of the slave issue, it saved many lives to have held back even though there were Phood holders in the early LDS Church, and in the correct time for America and other lands across the world, the timing was well suited
Sasha Bill KwapinskiApril 21, 2015
The Book of Mormon contains at least twenty references indicating that the gospel will go forth among all nations, tongues, and people. The D&C contains about 78 such passages, and still more are in the Pearl of Great Price. The Bible contains the promise that through the seed of Abraham all families of the earth will be blessed - a promise also repeated on the Book of Mormon. Similarly, the Book of Revelation speaks of "another angel," flying through the air, bringing the everlasting gospel to all people. Joseph Smith, Brigham young, and any number of other LDS church leaders have made statements and predictions to the effect that the church will in time become established among all nations and people. Perhaps this helps.
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