Apple Indian
April 12, 2018[…] should use that money to help the poor. That’s why God gave it to you, not to buy cars and clothes and big houses.” Tracy’s remarks were not well received. Old Brother Dixon harumpfed […]
[…] should use that money to help the poor. That’s why God gave it to you, not to buy cars and clothes and big houses.” Tracy’s remarks were not well received. Old Brother Dixon harumpfed […]
[…] Although the wars, especially World War II, had exacted a heavy toll of the young LDS men[ 6] in a church where men were needed and less plentiful, partly because they were less often […]
[…] quorum meetings which she has attended. A most disconcerting note in the diary is an entry on 3 May 1845. Zina begins with a preamble which reads, “God onely knows my heart this day. […]
[…] family. Expense of interest on mortgages and delinquent taxes ate all the equity we had in our 3,000 plus acres of land. Vera was relocated on a run-down fruit farm in Orem. I was […]
[…] but optimum tension that provides the best prospect for the future of any religious movement or organization.[ 6] Mormonism in the World Market Obviously the church has gotten the “tension factor” about right in […]
[…] command and judge us. For example, the supreme norm of the Hebrew Bible is summarized in Deuteronomy 6:4-6, “Hear, O Israel: the LORD our God is one LORD.” Here is a statement against idolatry, […]
[…] the opposite: “I think if we lose fee for service in this country … the opportunity to buy insurance from private companies, the opportunity to sit down with an agent and talk about what […]
[…] the same topic, presenting an expanded version of this argument in an all-out attack on Brodie’s work.[ 6] I. Both of Midgley’s essays on Brodie make the same essential points about her work on […]
[…] later success, a loyalty to divine law that keeps “the Lord . . . with Joseph” (39:21).[ 6] I didn’t think of this in my youth, but lately it has come to seem somewhat […]
[…] exciting change in policy. Early LDS missionary work in Russia had been concentrated in large urban areas where most missionaries could enjoy such civilized luxuries as paved roads, frequent public transportation, telephone lines, and […]