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A Word in Season

Isaiah's Reception in the Book of Mormon
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A groundbreaking look at the relationship between two sacred texts The Book of Mormon's narrative privileges Isaiah over other sources, provocatively interpreting and at times inventively reworking the biblical text. Joseph M. Spencer sees within the Book of Mormon a programmatic investigation regarding the meaning and relevance of the Book of Isaiah in a world increasingly removed from the context of the times that produced it. Working from the crossroads of reception studies and Mormon studies, Spencer investigates and clarifies the Book of Mormon's questions about the vitality of Isaiah's prophetic project. Spencer's analysis focuses on the Book of Mormon's three interactions with the prophet: the character of Abinadi; the resurrected Jesus Christ; and the nation-founding figure of Nephi. Working from the Book of Mormon as it was dictated, Spencer details its vital and overlooked place in Isaiah's reception while recognizing the interpretation of Isaiah as an organizing force behind the Book of Mormon.
Joseph M. Spencer is an assistant professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Young University.
Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Preliminaries Part I. Mormon's Isaiah 2 Controversy in a Nephite Colony 3 Tradition and Innovation 4 A New Direction at the Meridian of Time 5 A Radical Hermeneutic in Outline Part II. Nephi's Isaiah 6 Nursing Fathers and Nursing Mothers 7 The Structure of Nephi's Record 8 He Shall Set His Hand Again the Second Time 9 As One That Hath a Familiar Spirit Notes Works Cited Index
"The most in-depth study of the Isaiah question in Book of Mormon Studies. It is also the first study of its kind to assess the Book of Mormon as it was dictated rather than as it was printed. The result is a truly original reading of the text." --Elizabeth Fenton, author of Old Canaan in a New World: Native Americans and the Lost Tribes of Israel
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