The Man at the Chapel
April 16, 2018[…] of excruciating confrontations with myself. I know I don’t understand the positions he had to take in order to meet the responsibilities of his calling. Still, too many faces haunt me — too many […]
[…] of excruciating confrontations with myself. I know I don’t understand the positions he had to take in order to meet the responsibilities of his calling. Still, too many faces haunt me — too many […]
[…] describe the position of these “traditionalist” critics. Furthermore, what he does say about them is often confusing[ 6] as well as difficult to follow since a number of his references are to works that […]
[…] more. People fight their tears, he said. “Try to smile.” Try to smile. That was a big order. I saw little motivation in the scene for a smile. The mother is conversing with the […]
Dialogue 21.4 (Winter 1990): 114–121 Lehr discussed the journey undertaken by Charles O. Card to move to Canada and preserve polygamy, before the First Manifesto during a time that members were being hunted down […]
[…] “It cannot be done effectively part-time,” says the address. “It must be done all the time in order to save and exalt your children” (p. 11). If this were true, then fathers are truly […]
[…] means that Eve desires Adam to return her to her former state of equality rather than ruling over her. I felt Rockwood was really stretching there. Melodie Moench Charles takes the scriptural precedents for […]
[…] were Satan, I would certainly make every effort to keep a tight rein on Church history, in order to make it easier for such things as the Tales of Hofmann to haunt us again. […]
[…] thick, clear, shining, a steady, warm light” (p. 4). The dark sky makes visible the beauty and order of the heavens. Contrasting the artificial against the natural light, Carl meditates on the constellations and […]
[…] working with the original documentary evidence of the life of the founding prophet. One caution is in order in using this edition of Jessee’s book. No one realized when the book was published that […]
[…] of Utah and Mormon historiography ought to be rejoicing at the flowering of literature in that field over recent years. Beginning perhaps in the last decade with Wallace Stegner’s biography of Bernard DeVoto and […]