Father-Daughter Interview on Blacks and the Priesthood
January 14, 2019[…] it, with Darius Gray. I don’t know when it was done, but it was on Blacks and the priesthood. Greg: Thank you. Egide: I want to thank you for all the work that you […]
[…] it, with Darius Gray. I don’t know when it was done, but it was on Blacks and the priesthood. Greg: Thank you. Egide: I want to thank you for all the work that you […]
Take me back before the broken tablets, back to the secrets of winds unfurled, constellations rising
For the past decade-plus, Jonathan A. Stapley (b. 1976) has authored or co-authored a series of peer-reviewed article-length essays treating various aspects of LDS priesthood ritual (expressions of what he defines as liturgy). Though […]
The artwork of Hildebrando de Melo rises from Angola itself—from the valleys near Huambo where he was born, through the urban streets of Luanda where he lives with his wife and children, amid […]
[…] Becky told the story of how they were each led to end their respective same-sex marriages in order to marry each other. It’s not the first time I’ve been exposed to a story of this […]
[…] the rolling blankets of grass and tame, edenic groves of trees. It’s an almost insufferable tameness and order. I think it would be stifling were it not for the playful breeze that alone in […]
[…] web format of this article as a courtesy. There may be unintentional differences from the printed version. For citational and bibliographical purposes, please use the printed version or the PDFs provided online and on JSTOR.
The stories in Heidi Naylor’s short story collection Revolver present characters who have experienced regret, grief, loss, and even death. As readers, we have the opportunity to peer into the abyss of their lives, […]
[…] their mentally ill brother Paul, all former Mormon missionaries. Morgan wants to understand madness and horror in order to understand Tricia’s murder. She becomes interested in exorcisms and wants to perform one. While watching […]
[…] life of Joseph Smith, wherein he declared that a jovial dinner party he attended was “after the Order of the Son of God.” Brother Joseph, too, found the divine in the quotidian, Hickman argues. […]