Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation

Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation


Latest Episodes

Interpreter Radio Show — April 7, 2024
April 15, 2024

  In the April 7, 2024 episode of The Interpreter Radio Show, our hosts are Brent Schmidt, Hales Swift, and Martin Tanner. They discuss General Conference and Come, Follow Me Book of Mormon lesson 18.

“Our Great God Has in Goodness Sent These”: Notes on the Goodness of God, the Didactic Good of Nephi’s Small Plates, and Anti-Nephi-Lehi’s Renaming
April 12, 2024

Abstract: Anti-Nephi-Lehis speech (Alma 24:716) reveals multiple allusions to significant texts in Nephis small plates record. Thus, when he declares I thank my God, my beloved people, that our gr

Conference Talks: “This Thing Is a Similitude”
April 10, 2024

David M. Calabro spoke at the Tracing Ancient Threads in the Book of Moses Conference on Saturday, September 19, 2020 about This Thing Is a Similitude: A Typological Approach to Moses 5:115 and An

Nibley Lectures: Come, Follow Me Book of Mormon Lesson 16
April 09, 2024

This week, we have lectures 25 through 27 from Hugh Nibleys Book of Mormon classes at Brigham Young University, covering Jacob 57 through Mosiah 1. During 1988, 1989, and 1990, Hugh Nibley taught Ho

Interpreter Radio: The Book of Mormon in Context Lesson 16
April 09, 2024

In the March 24th Come, Follow Me segment of the Interpreter Radio Show, our hosts Steve Densley, John Thompson, and Don Bradley discuss Book of Mormon lesson 16, He Worketh in Me to Do According t

Interpreter Radio Show — March 31, 2024: Discussion
April 08, 2024

In the March 31, 2024 episode of The Interpreter Radio Show, our hosts are Martin Tanner and Terry Hutchinson. They discuss Come, Follow Me Book of Mormon lesson 17, the meaning of Son of Man, and

The Plagiary of the Daughters of the Lamanites
April 05, 2024

Abstract: Repetition is a feature of all ancient Hebraic narrative. Modern readers may misunderstand this quality of biblical and Book of Mormon narrative. Biblical and Book of Mormon writers believed