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  1. Feb 14, 2024 · It is easy—even natural—for modern readers of the Book of Mormon to intuitively see contemporary sensibilities regarding race and skin color in passages about a “skin of blackness” or “dark skins,” but such interpretations are misplaced when reading an ancient text.

  2. Book of Mormon Language about Skin Color: The curse is expressed in two antithetically parallel phrases: “as they were white, and exceedingly fair and delightsome the Lord God did cause a skin of blackness to come upon them” (2 Ne. 5:21). The phrases describe a previous condition and its succeeding condition, pivoting upon causation.

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  4. Likewise, the “skin of blackness” Nephi describes was not necessarily physical, but rather symbolizes experiencing a “spiritual death” by being cut off from the Lord. Their souls were in spiritual darkness. For example, the Book of Mormon uses white and dark imagery to describe people in Nephi’s vision of the tree of life.

  5. Book of Mormon, which represented God’s “words that are given through [Joseph]” (Doctrine and Covenants 5:11). The Book of Mormon represents a great outpour - ing of truth delivered to the world through the Prophet Joseph Smith. The Book of Mormon restores plain and precious truths that were lost over the centuries. The prophet Nephi saw

    • The Godhead
    • The Plan of Salvation
    • Additional Examples

    Some of the many “plain and precious things” that were restored through Joseph Smith by way of the Book of Mormon include truths about the Godhead. The Book of Mormon affirms the unity of the Godhead (see 3 Nephi 11:27), while, at the same time, emphasizing that its three members are separate and unique, each bearing record of the others.1Some spec...

    Other “plain and precious truths” found clearly taught in the Book of Mormon pertain to God’s plan for his children. The phrase “plan of salvation,” and other similar phrases found in the Book of Mormon, are not found in the Bible. The Book of Mormon teaches that God had a plan prepared for the salvation and exaltation of mankind since before the f...

    Many additional examples of the “plain and precious things” restored through Joseph Smith by way of the Book of Mormon could be listed here. Without being exhaustive, here are just a few more: 1. Unambiguous Prophecies of Christ: For example, King Benjamin declared that the Messiah “shall be called Jesus Christ, the Son of God … and his mother shal...

  6. The words and phrases of the Book of Mormon are “powerful and great” (Ether 12:25). Treasures await the pondering mind that contemplates virtually every word, idiom, figure of speech, or semantic value in the texts of this remarkable record. Several studies are underway to examine distinctive words and phrases in the Book of Mormon.

  7. The True Light. The account of the first Christmas in the Book of Mormon helps us learn that Jesus Christ is the “light which shineth in darkness” (see Doctrine and Covenants 10:57–61 ). The most familiar and beloved account of the Savior’s birth is found in the second chapter of Luke in the New Testament. I am filled with gratitude ...