The Otherside of Cumorah
The Nephite Struggle for Survival in Their Land of Promise
The other side of Cumorah may have played an important role in Nephite and Jaredite last battles at Hill Cumorah. What might that role have been? The answer to this and many other questions will be explored in this new and fascinating book. What about Jaredite and Nephite voyages to America? Are there sufficient clues to be found in Book of Mormon accounts that can give us insight into such voyages? Readers may be surprised to find that many new and exciting ideas about such voyages have mostly been overlooked.
This book contains many maps, pictures and illustrations that are sure to hold the attention of readers from, first to last page.
A Few Instering Points...
The Other Side of Cumorah presents a different picture of Nephite life in ancient North America. The Nephites are seen to occupy lands surrounded by other peoples, as was typically so for the Lord's people in the Old World.
This book is sure to pose more questions than it offers answers. A few of the topics discussed will pose questions such as:
- Can 10 key points in geography, taken from Book of Mormon accounts, convince one that Book of Mormon lands are identifiable today?
- Is it likely that the peoples of The Book of Mormon were "mound builders"?
- Are all North American Indians Lamanite descendants?
- What evidences are there that other peoples might have also existed within Book of Mormon times, in various places within what is today the United States?
- How does the Book of Ether's "Great Sea" offer a convincing clue as to where and how the Jaredites may have come to ancient North America?
- How do "borders of the Red Sea" become "evidence" for where Lehi most likely had come to on the Red Sea?
- Do Book of Mormon accounts support the suggestion that Lehi and his family traveled in the footsteps of Israel, through Egypt's Sinai wilderness?
- Can ancient Lebanon be seen as the "bountiful place" on the sea, from which Nephi built a ship, and Lehi's family sailed onward to ancient North America.
