Mormon books

From MormonWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Bible and Book of Mormon
There are several kinds of books which may be described as "Mormon books." The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, sometimes erroneously called the Mormon Church, publishes two classes of books. These are:

The official, canonical scriptures of the Church, namely

  1. The Holy Bible
  2. The Book of Mormon—Another Testament of Jesus Christ
  3. The Doctrine and Covenants
  4. The Pearl of Great Price

These four volumes are sometimes collectively referred to as "the Standard Works" or simply "the Scriptures." In Latter-day Saint usage, this goes beyond the usual sense of "a work of recognized excellence" and is actually equivalent to "the official, canonical scriptures of the Church."

The Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price are shorter books than the Bible, so they are often combined and bound together in one book, which members of the Church call the "triple combination." Editions of the scriptures can also be purchased in one large book with the Bible (both Old and New Testaments) included. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ have nicknamed this the "quad," or "quadruple combination."

The second class of books includes:

Procedural handbooks and lesson manuals. These contain curriculum materials for classes taught in Church meetings, materials to assist families, and instructions and policy guidelines to Church leaders. These are "official" in the ordinary sense, but do not rise to the status of scripture.

Both of these book categories are available online at the Church website and on the Church's app.


In addition to these, there are books of various kinds written by individual Church members for the edification of other Latter-day Saints. While there is no formal system of classification for these, most would fall into one or more of the following broad categories:

  1. Doctrinal: works expounding doctrine or providing scriptural commentary.
  2. Historical: works describing events in Mormon history or (less commonly) general history that is of interest to Latter-day Saints.
  3. Devotional: works intended to assist Latter-day Saints in personal or family worship, or to cope with grief or stressful life events.
  4. Recreational: light fiction featuring Latter-day Saint themes or characters.

Additionally, books by non—Latter-day Saints about the Church may be described as "Mormon books." While a few valuable scholarly works do emerge from time to time, many or most of these books are controversial in nature, and are more properly described as "anti-Mormon books."

The Bible in the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ

As noted above, the Bible is one of the Church's "Standard Works," or canonical volumes. As such, it is scripture, and its contents are considered doctrinally binding upon the Church.

The Bible used by the Church throughout the English-speaking world is the King James Version (KJV). It is used in its entirety, both the Old and New Testaments. The Church does not use the Apocrypha, though latter-day prophets have noted that there is much in the Apocrypha that is of value for study. In 1980, the Church published its own edition of the KJV with new footnotes and cross references to the other Standard Works, as well as a new concordance-style index called the Topical Guide, a Bible Dictionary, a Guide to the Scriptures, a Reference Guide to the Holy Bible, and some excerpts from the Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible. No changes were made by the Church to the body of the King James Version. Note that the Church does not subscribe to any "King James only" ideology, and Church members and scholars are entirely free to consult other translations, or to read them in the original or other languages if they so choose, in the course of their scripture study.

One of the Church's Articles of Faith states, "We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated correctly." While the Church's critics frequently accuse the Latter-day Saints of using this as some kind of all-purpose escape clause, the reality is that it merely acknowledges the transmission problems and translation errors that current editions of the Bible have.

Additional Resources