Divine Reason
April 3, 2018[…] reason and revelation are intended to mark a division between two modes of learning. The position is for the most part uniform: one can learn things by reason or by revelation, but when the […]
[…] reason and revelation are intended to mark a division between two modes of learning. The position is for the most part uniform: one can learn things by reason or by revelation, but when the […]
[…] examines the complicated life of the missionary in Bolivia. The stories in themselves are a reason to buy the book. The myths and stories differ from one another, yet in the telling become contoured […]
[…] the Clayton journals simply because the major portion of this particular volume, from 10 December 1845 to 6 January 1846, is in Clayton’s handwriting. Anyone who has studied the keeping of journals in church […]
[…] should be wine, yea, pure wine of the grape of the Vine, of your own make” (89:5- 6). These verses have qualities of poetic jazz. In the early days of the Utah church Brigham […]
[…] members, especially general authorities. Nevertheless, the text reveals a number of deficiencies in Reynolds’s understanding. She glosses over the differences within what she calls “traditional Christianity,” by attributing to all non-Mormon Christians doc trines […]
[…] (D&C 88:63, 67). My eighty-five-year-old mother-in-law lives with us now. I care for her, watch over her, buy the things she enjoys, see that her meals are on time, and in the late afternoon […]
<i>Dialogue 30. 3 (Fall 1999):90–103</i><br>To average LDS church members in 1909, Roberts’s New Witnesses for God substantiated their beliefs and further embellished his stature for them as a historian and defender of the Book […]
[…] Conduct of Mormon Criticism,” 30 Mar. 1995, Brigham Young University Literature and Belief Colloquium, 7, typescript dated 6 Apr. 1995, privately circulated. Susan Howe, “The Moral Imagination,” in Annual of the Association for Mormon […]
[…] and documents. Frances Bennion Morgan, his youngest sister, had kept all the letters Lowell had written her over the years, and his old friend Bill Moran gave me a well-written diary and letters dating […]
[…] is ever to be resolved, it must include taking Leroy Robertson’s output seriously. His branches reach out over the wall requiring that his output be measured against the finest composers our country has produced. […]