The Book of Mormon contains many prophecies of the time immediately before the coming of Jesus Christ to reign on the earth. Many of these prophecies are based on the words of Isaiah. Nephi, Jacob, and Jesus use his words as a point of reference to descri
How did receiving an intellectual as well as spiritual testimony of the Book of Mormon influence Avraham Gileadi? What impact has it had on others?
Why is it important to know Latter-day Saints are called “the Gentiles” in the Book of Mormon? How does that impact our role toward the house of Israel?
Why is it important to know whom the Book of Mormon identifies as the “house of Israel”? What role do Latter-day Saints have toward the house of Israel?
Why is it important to apply the Book of Mormon's keys to understanding Isaiah? Have Latter-day Saints been confused because they haven't done this?
Do Latter-day Saints realize that many plain and precious parts removed from the scriptures consist of the covenants God made with the house of Israel?
What does it mean for Latter-day Saints to serve as kings and queens? Who are the spiritual kings and queens of the Gentiles who restore the house of Israel?
How does understanding the words of Isaiah help Latter-day Saints understand the Book of Mormon? Have we missed many central truths by not doing so?
Why does the Book of Mormon include only select portions of Nephite history and exclude so much else? What impact did Isaiah have on Nephite prophets?
Why does Isaiah use the metaphor of God's “arm” to identify a person? Does God have one or two arms? What are the key endtime roles of God's arms?
Do the scriptures predict an endtime division among all people, including the Latter-day Saints? How should we prepare ourselves to choose the right?
Should Latter-day Saints apply Isaiah's definitions when interpreting his words or their own? Are Isaiah's main themes a key to Book of Mormon prophecy?
How do the scriptures identify Jesus Christ as Israel's God Jehovah? Do Latter-day Saints understand the interplay between God's divine justice and mercy?
How accurately does the Book of Mormon agree with the Bible from a literary, prophetic, and theological standpoint? Have we examined the evidence?
Have Latter-day Saints observed how God's covenants operate in the Book of Mormon and Book of Isaiah? Why is the Davidic Covenant so important?
How do Book of Mormon wilderness journeys of God's people to promised lands help understand Isaiah's prophecies of an endtime wilderness journey?
Do Latter-day Saints understand that Zion is established among the house of Israel just prior to Jesus' second coming in fulfillment of the words of Isaiah?
Do Book of Mormon examples of secret combinations typify an endtime secret combination that leads to the worldwide destruction that Isaiah predicts?
What can Latter-day Saints learn from Isaiah's covenant theology that informs us why and at what point God reverses his endtime people's circumstances?
Does an explicit “war pattern” in the Book of Mormon's war narratives typify a great war to end all wars that Isaiah predicts will precede Jehovah's coming?
Based on Jesus' key that all things Isaiah spoke “have been and shall be,” will an endtime “King of Assyria” conquer the world as his predecessors did?
Why does the Book of Mormon define a key spiritual principle on which his people's eternal destiny depends as whether or not they harden their hearts?
Why is it important to know the difference between sin and iniquity? How do we know when we as a people are ripe in iniquity? What happens to us then?
Could Isaiah's prophecies of an utter destruction upon the whole earth be fulfilled in our day? Does Book of Mormon history illustrate what that looks like?
Do Latter-day Saints realize the Book of Mormon contains mostly lesser things than God wants to give us? What must we do to qualify for greater things?
Why is God's endtime servant hidden until the time of Jesus' coming to reign on the earth? Was that a reason Nephi was forbidden to say anything about it?
Are Zenos' servants who graft in the natural branches, John's 144,000 servants, and Isaiah's servants who restore the house of Israel all the same servants?
Do Book of Mormon instances of translated beings foreshadow what Latter-day Saints may become who qualify by doing the kinds of works they did?
Should Latter-day Saints act on God's invitation to see all things the brother of Jared saw by exercising faith and performing a similar ministry to his?
Do the scriptures speak of more than one prophet like Moses besides Jesus Christ? Do Isaiah's prophecies throw light on what Jesus said about his servant?
Do the scriptures contain foreshadowings of Jesus' second coming to the earth that inform Latter-day Saints of what the events of his coming will be like?