In this location where much of the Book of Mormon was written, the translation occurred, I thought it would be wonderful to get the help from the History Department with an original copy of the Book of Mormon. And I didn't want to trust myself with it; I don't have one. But we have one in the archives, and Brandon Metcalf, one of our church historians, was kind enough to come with artifacts. Brandon, tell us about these treasures that you've blessed us with. Sure. So we've brought two artifacts that relate to the Book of Mormon. One is the 1830 edition, which would have been one of the 5,000 that was printed in Palmyra in the Grandin Bookshop there. And we also brought, what's even more special, is a page from the original manuscript of the Book of Mormon. Oh, please, tell us more. And so with the Book of Mormon, I just am so touched by these documents as I am able to work around them. There's a spirit. There's a witness to these documents. As you discuss the Book of Mormon, the coming forth of the Book of Mormon, you think about the sacrifice that the Saints made. You think about the importance that they placed upon publishing the Book of Mormon and publishing the early revelations of the Church. And one of the lessons that I love that we learn from these artifacts is, it wasn't easy. And it's the same way in all of our lives, is that the Book of Mormon, you think of all things, that maybe the Lord would have paved the way and made it easy, is to publish the Book of Mormon. And trial after trial, Joseph Smith struggles along the way. How does this differ from the Book of Mormon that I have? Very little. You'll notice that there's very long paragraphs. There's two pages without an indentation. Chapters and verses are definitely organized differently today. You have a nice index and cross references today, but the words, very little changed over time. We've had changes where they went to subsequent editions, and Joseph as seer and translator, did make did make changes here and there. But as far as word changes go, very, very little. Interesting. Now tell us about the content of this precious page. So this is one of the few surviving pages of the original manuscript of the Book of Mormon. Moroni took the plates back, so this is as close as we get to the plates. But this is from Alma, a section from a part of chapter 33 and chapter 34, which talks about the need of the infinite Atonement in our lives. You can see it wasn't stored in ideal conditions. Joseph himself kept the original manuscript in his possession, and then later on in Nauvoo, he placed it in a cornerstone where it sat for just over four decades near the Mississippi River with high humidity and flooding. So most of it is not in great shape as you can see. They wrote on both sides of the paper. They wrote on both sides. What I love about this as sort of a witnessing document of the Book of Mormon is, as you read all of the surviving portion of the original manuscript, it's free flowing. There's almost no strikeouts. There's no punctuation, which tells you that Oliver and others that are helping as scribe are just writing this. Just writing the words. All from the mouth of the prophet. Yeah, fast as they could. And what's amazing to me is, this is the one and only draft. And I can't compose an email to invite someone to lunch in one draft. And so that to me is just a remarkable testimony of the process in just over 60 working days. Thank you for bringing those artifacts along.