Special Dialogue Podcast: "Spirit of Dialogue" Conference Session 1
October 5, 2016In this first session, essayists and bloggers discuss “Grappling with Groupthink: Dialogue’s Role in Addressing Critical Social Issues.”
In this first session, essayists and bloggers discuss “Grappling with Groupthink: Dialogue’s Role in Addressing Critical Social Issues.”
[…] a literal one and not simply a reflection of either his own dialect or King James English.”[ 6] Once again, Joseph, as a non-Hebrew speaker, is therefore excluded as a possible source. This collection […]
[…] sure you are muted. We hope you’ve brought your own beverages to the symposium! Among many claimants for possible literary influence on the Book of Mormon (1830), no one that we know of has […]
[…] Dickinson (Little Brown: Boston, 1960), 160. Peggy Fletcher Stack,”A Mormon mystery returns: Who is Heavenly Mother?” Salt Lake Tribune, 6 May 2013, https://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=56282764&itype=cmsid David Paulson and Martin Pulido, “‘A Mother there’: A Survey of Historical Teachings […]
[…] of Mormon in which a sensitivity to trauma could reveal greater insights from the text, and argue for the importance of using a trauma hermeneutic. We conclude with an application of a trauma hermeneutic […]
[…] the requisite resources. The International Mormon Studies Book Project is a new effort to provide critical resources for developing Mormon studies internationally by purchasing books to form a base Mormon studies collection at institutions […]
[…] Dickinson (Little Brown: Boston, 1960), 160. Peggy Fletcher Stack,”A Mormon mystery returns: Who is Heavenly Mother?” Salt Lake Tribune, 6 May 2013, https://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=56282764&itype=cmsid David Paulson and Martin Pulido, “‘A Mother there’: A Survey of Historical Teachings […]
[…] Thomas highlights the different metal writing cultures from around the same time as the Book of Mormon periods to see if it is historically likely for the Gold Plates to exist from that time period.
Dialogue 51.4 (Winter 2018): 171-174 Heavenly Mother is a cherished doctrine among many Latter-day Saints. Her unique esthetic of feminine deity offers Latter-day Saint women a trajectory for godhood—the ultimate goal of Mormon theology.
[…] an ideal of cosmic as well as human collaboration. His personal mode of leadership increasingly shifted from autocratic to collaborative—and that mode infused both his most radical theologizing and his hopes for Church comity itself.