Letters to the Editor
May 28, 2024Dear Sirs: …. The genius of your plan lies in the title, for I think that at present many of us are engaged in a dialogue. Perhaps when we have better defined our position […]
Dear Sirs: …. The genius of your plan lies in the title, for I think that at present many of us are engaged in a dialogue. Perhaps when we have better defined our position […]
Listen to the Dialogue Podcast #2 featuring John G. Turner discussing his new book Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet? Then check out this roundtable conclusion at Juvenile Instructor (with all the contributions listed at the […]
[…] contains this claim is included in the student manual for the Foundations of the Restoration religion course.[ 6] He also stated that after the Church ended the ban in 1978, “The reasons that had […]
Professor Andrea Radke-Moss provides a fascinating overview of sister missionary service in the history of the church over at Juvenile Instructor, which proves to spotlight why Saturday’s announcement was truly revolutionary.
Early this week, scholar John Turner presented an opinion piece in the New York Times on “Why Race Is Still a Problem for Mormons.”
[…] not cite him, this charge is similar to one that Grant Underwood made in an unfortunately overlooked article nearly four decades ago. Underwood, “Re-visioning Mormon History,” Pacific Historical Review 55, no. 3 (Aug. 1986): 403–26.
[…] wings they can fly again, the length of the next generation’s journey to their summer home in Canada, the fallow fields, the sustaining sweetness of Manitoba milkweed; iv. up— the pulsing quasars, the Light-ladened […]
[…] then walked back to peer through the window in the door. The surgeons labored on, trying to buy the fetus more days, weeks, months in the womb. Isa watched Cael, who watched his wife. […]
[…] studio art. Several juried shows have featured her work, including the 11th and 12th International Art Competitions for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the 34th, 35th, and 36th Annual Spiritual […]
NNAMDI OKONKWO was born in Nigeria in 1965 and has always been drawn to art. He was recruited by BYU–Hawaii to play basketball. There, he found an opportunity to nourish all his talents and […]