February 1, 1988 by •
Apostolic Church,
Arab(s),
ben Chaiyim,
Bible,
Catholic(s),
censorship,
Christian(s) church,
churchmen,
Constantine,
control,
darkness,
deception,
destruction of documents,
documents,
emendation,
Eusebius,
evidence,
evolution,
Ezekiel,
fact(s),
fair deception,
falsification,
fiction,
follies of translation,
forgery,
George Orwell,
God,
Greek,
historian(s),
history,
idioms,
illusion,
interpreting,
Jerome,
Jesus,
Jesus Christ,
Jews,
kale apate,
knowledge,
Koran,
language(s),
lie,
lying,
Masoretic text,
Middle Ages,
New Education Testament,
Odes of Solomon,
opinion(s),
Origen (early church father),
Patrologiae,
Protestant(s),
Roman emperor church,
Romans,
rule of,
salvation,
scholar(s),
scholarship,
scientific,
scripture(s),
selecting,
Septuagint,
shortcuts,
substitution,
the ancients,
the Church history,
translations,
translator,
unfavorable,
Unquenchable Light,
Vatican excavations Library,
writing
a series of articles in three parts in The Improvement Era. This series was to have been continued, but was actually abandoned. The materials were eventually used in “The Passing of the Church,” Church History 30: 2 (June 1961): 131-154; reprinted in When the Lights Went Out (1970, 2001): 1-32; and in BYU Studies 16:1 …
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July 2, 1967 by •
ancient religious writings,
Arab(s),
Bible,
buried records,
Dead Sea Scrolls,
Dead Sea Scrolls discoveries in 1947 and 1952 and 1956,
desert,
government of Jordan,
Hebrew(s) University,
Jerusalem,
Jews,
Messiah,
Qumran,
Qumran caves,
Teacher of Righteousness,
Wadi Murrabb'at,
wilderness
Instructor 98:7 (July 1963): 233-235; CWHN 1: 245-252. An address originally given on July 5, 1962, to the Seminary and Institute Faculty assembled at Brigham Young University. — Midgley
June 2, 1965 by •
ancient civilization,
Arab(s),
Babylonian(s),
Cicero,
conceited,
entertainment,
Hajji Baba,
intellectual,
knowledge,
orators,
persuasion,
philosophy,
Protagoras,
rhetor,
rhetoric,
scholar(s),
self-interest,
Socrates,
Sophistry,
Sophists,
spoiled
“Victoriosa Loquacitas: The Rise of Rhetoric and the Fall of Everything Else,” Western Speech 20:2 (Spring 1956):57-82; CWHN 10:243-286. A study of the rhetoric of the second Sophistic movement and its influence on politics and culture generally, with obvious significance for our own time because of remarkable parallel developments in the current world of business, …
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in Western Political Quarterly 5:2 (June1952): 315-16.