It's the The Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship. I misspoke; Maxwell said that it helped the church not to be outflanked by its critics:
In September 1993, my wife Mary Ann and I met in private with LDS "apostle-ologists" Neal A. Maxwell and Dallin H. Oaks in Maxwell’s downtown Salt Lake City Church office. During the ensuing discussion, we directed to them several questions concerning LDS origins, history, doctrine, policy and practice.
At one point in our meeting, attention turned to the service role as bucket brigade played by FARMS for Mormonism’s tongue-tied, in-over-their-heads Special Witnesses for Christ.
Maxwell, in particular, was very appreciative of the work FARMS offered in bailing him out of tight places.
Indeed, Maxwell declared to us that, as far as the Mormon Apostles were concerned, "We're grateful for FARMS . . . because they protect us on the flank."
Maxwell told us that FARMS, in fact, had been given the express mission of not letting the Church become outflanked.
In expressing this sincere gratitude, it was obvious that what Maxwell meant by his observation that FARMS served to prevent the Mormon Church from defeated by end-arounds, was that FARMS kept the Apostles themselves from becoming outflanked.
Despite Maxwell's appreciation for the work FARMS did in covering his posterior, Oaks griped that FARMS sometimes gets "hyperactive" in trying to prove that the Book of Mormon is true. Oaks told us that he becomes concerned when FARMS "stops making shields and starts turning out swords" because, he said, "you cannot prove the Book of Mormon out of the realm of faith." Accepting the Book of Mormon, Oaks said, was ultimately a matter of faith.
Still, Maxwell was obviously thankful to have FARMS there as his go-to guy during times of scientific stess.
As they say, when the going gets tough, the Apostles get going to FARMS.
In fact, in defense of the junk translation of the Book of Abraham, Maxwell handed me a FARMS review, written by Michael D. Rhodes, of Charles M. Larson's book, . . . By His Own Hand upon Papyrus: A New Look at the Joseph Smith Papyri (Grand Rapids: Institute for Religious Research, 1992, p. 240 pp., illustrated).
On later, closer examination of the paper on which Rhodes review was photocopied, I was able to determine that the review had originated from the FARMS offices at BYU. It had been printed on fax paper bearing the acronym “F.A.R.M.S,” along with the “FAX” date of “09/09/93.” It also bore a dispatch time of "1:55" and a B.Y.U.-area phone number of "378 3724."
In short, Holy Ghost-impaired Apostle Maxwell had solicited the assistance of FARMS in preparing for our examination of Mormon scripture.
Well, if Neal A. Maxwell--Apostle of the Most High God--employs FARMS to defend the revealed truth of the Kingdom, then, hell, it must be good. :)