Pilgrims in Time
April 15, 2018[…] a typewriter into its case. When my mother found him at it, she merely turned the case over and fit the machine inside. Once, he could fix nearly any mechanical object imaginable. My older […]
[…] a typewriter into its case. When my mother found him at it, she merely turned the case over and fit the machine inside. Once, he could fix nearly any mechanical object imaginable. My older […]
[…] on their own terms, sometimes using the methods of the Children of Darkness (but without malice) in order to defeat them. Richard Niebuhr did not agree. He said as soon as virtue adopts these […]
[…] local Mormon ward. Fawn consented to be married there, despite her growing alienation from the Church, in order to please her mother (P. Brodie 1988). Indeed, Fawn’s mother was the only one of either […]
[…] Evan Mecham. Mon day mornings were brighter because people brought to work new jokes they had heard over the weekend. Children learned jokes at school and brought them home to their parents. Business people […]
[…] editor of the Times and Seasons, the bi-monthly “official” publication of the Church. During his brief proprietorship over the paper, editorials and columns devoted to the Jewish people bore the impress of Smith’s theological […]
[…] way ashamed of it. —Anthony Maitland Stenhouse So wrote Anthony Maitland Stenhouse (no relation to T. B. H. Stenhouse), a Scot transplanted temporarily to the western Canadian wilderness and an ardent nineteenth-century proponent of polygamy.
<i>Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 85–97</i><br> Chronicling the history of baptizing for the dead during the Nauvoo Period, this article introduces the practice from the first baptizers to how it was altered after Joseph Smith’s death.
<i>Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 99–105</i><br>Underwood discusses why two religions who share the same exact upbringing have different opinions about the temple rituals.
<i>Dialogue 23.2 (1990): 61–83</i><br> Launius shares how the Reorganized Church has changed their stance on baptisms for the dead.
[…] first grandchildren; and since Mama traveled a lot following Daddy during the war, we were consequently taken over by my doting grandmother, who spoiled us and dominated most of our upbringing. Grampa made our […]