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Mark J. Johnson

Mark J. Johnson is an independent researcher and Interpreter Foundation volunteer who helps with the production of the Interpreter radio show. He has a degree in Marketing Management from Western Governor’s University. He has papers published in Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship, the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, and the Review of Books on the Book of Mormon. His interests include scripture study, family history, woodworking, and 1950s-era rock and roll. Mark lives in Salt Lake City with his wife, Melissa and two children.
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Book of Moses Essays
#45: Moses 1: A Literary Masterpiece. Chiasmus in Moses 1
(Moses 1)

by Book of Mormon Central | 03-06-2021

This Essay examines the ancient literary form of chiasmus within Moses 1. Chiasmus includes “several types of inverted parallelisms, short or long, in which words first appear in one order and then in the opposite order.”

Book of Moses Essays
#44: Moses 1: A Literary Masterpiece. Hebrew Literary Features of Moses 1
(Moses 1)

by Mark J. Johnson | 02-27-2021

This Essay continues our look at the literary features of Moses 1. Since Moses 1 leads directly into the narrative flow of JST Genesis, it is natural that it should share stylistic and literary features of the Hebrew Bible (our Old Testament). Below, we will highlight three topics: parallelism, Hebraisms, and figures of speech or idioms.

The Lost Prologue:
Reading Moses Chapter One as an Ancient Text

by Mark J. Johnson | undefined 36 | 03-20-2020

[Page 145]Abstract: The character and complexion of the Prophet Joseph Smith’s translation of the Bible (JST) is often a puzzle to students and scholars. One text in particular, the first chapter of the Book of Moses, claims that its very words would be lost and later restored to the believing. As this bold claim has not yet […]

Scriptures through the Jeweler’s Lens

by Mark J. Johnson | undefined 36 | 02-28-2020

[Page 85]Review of Terryl Givens with Brian Hauglid, The Pearl of Greatest Price: Mormonism’s Most Controversial Scripture (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019). 285 pages. $34.95 (hardback).   Abstract: Among the many revelatory works of Joseph Smith, members and scholars alike seem to give lesser attention to what is found in the Pearl of Great Price. […]

Scriptures with Pictures: Methodology, Unexamined Assumptions, and the Study of the Book of Abraham

by Mark J. Johnson | undefined 25 | 04-07-2017

Research on the origins and nature of the Book of Abraham and the accompanying facsimiles has long been hampered by faulty methodology. And while the last few years have seen a significant reexamination of the assumptions that represent the underpinning of our understandings of the Book of Abraham, some unexamined assumptions persist. This study addresses seven aspects of the Book of Abraham, which include a discussion of the sources, the process, the results, the content, the witnesses, and the historical background. For each of these aspects, this study identifies lingering assumptions and shows how a proper methodology can validate or eliminate these assumptions from the scholarly discourse.

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All journal publications and video presentations are available for free by digital download and streaming. The price of hard copy versions of journal articles covers only the cost of printing; books are typically priced to help cover both upfront pre—publication expenses and royalties to authors when applicable. In some cases, the Foundation may subsidize publication costs to keep retail prices affordable.