You Can Count on the Fingers of Your One Hand the Reasons
March 22, 2018[…] to here.” She showed us where here was. “The goal seems to be one a year.” Our order came up, and I sent Ally for the food. “For God’s sake,” Karen said. “He ought […]
[…] to here.” She showed us where here was. “The goal seems to be one a year.” Our order came up, and I sent Ally for the food. “For God’s sake,” Karen said. “He ought […]
[…] the window to neighbors before the Nazis came. Her father had been out of town when the order to round up the Jews was issued. He returned and joined his wife when the Germans […]
[…] Finally, I am a Franciscan. Franciscan, in my case, means that I am a member of the Order of Friars Minor, a worldwide Roman Catholic community of brothers founded by St. Francis of Assisi […]
Dialogue 39.1 (Spring 2006): 1–18 Perhaps no other moral issue divides the American public more than abortion. In part, the controversy hinges on the question of when the spirit enters the body. If a […]
[…] since avoided contact with him. She adds that she knew I wasn’t that type of Mormon. We order orange chicken and lemon shrimp and laugh about work. I think everyone at the table realizes […]
[…] In his own translation of John 1:1, Nibley illustrates how indispensable this concept was to the very order of things: “In the beginning was the Logos [counsel, discussion], and the Logos was in the […]
Over the course of a lifetime, I have had occasion to give thought to the question of why I continue to be an active, committed member of the Church of Jesus Christ of […]
I float in the corner of the university diving pool. My legs, which are more muscular and dense than my torso, pull me down. Closing my eyes, I’m rocked by the wake from a […]
[…] 1989, eight missionaries and their new mission president, Wolfgang Paul, were driven from Hamburg, West Germany, to the German Democratic Republic (GDR). They expected a delay of several hours at the border but were […]
Acccording to republican purists of the Revolutionary generation, the values of commerce, which “fostered a love of gain, ostentatious living, and a desire for luxuries,” could be contrasted with those of agriculture, which encouraged […]