Letters to the Editor
March 18, 2018Ross C. Anderson, A Call for Compassion John-Charles Duffy, Clarifying My Own Stance Cheryl L. Bruno, Asherah Alert Kevin L. Barney, Kevin Barney Responds William P. MacKinnon, Rest of the Story
Ross C. Anderson, A Call for Compassion John-Charles Duffy, Clarifying My Own Stance Cheryl L. Bruno, Asherah Alert Kevin L. Barney, Kevin Barney Responds William P. MacKinnon, Rest of the Story
[…] in myriad ways that the time is right for LDS scholars in the humanities and other Saints to speak up about the environmental crises which, as President Gordon B. Hinckley has asserted, render creation […]
[…] There was an aura over everything. I felt like every electron in my body had suddenly reversed directions because everything had changed in fundamental ways. Everything was new.” “Ironic, hey, how you are now […]
[…] in antebellum America constituted a set of contradictions. Men should be steely, resolved, and assertive; women ought to be reserved, flighty, and, under the right conditions, sexually explosive. As historian Karen Lystra has observed, “There […]
[…] attractive job at Tulane University in New Orleans. At the same time, he was offered—and ultimately accepted— a position at Indiana University. Six months later, Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, and Tulane shut down […]
What shall we do with thou? If this question grates on your ear, it may be because you recognize that thou is a nominative pronoun (a subject) and therefore never follows a preposition. If […]
[…] status as “good” Mormons being possibly irrelevant to that measurement. After all, as you point out, someone can go through the motions of Mormon life, as you went through the motions of Ramadan, and […]
It is a privilege to speak to you today as your bishop, but also a responsibility that deeply humbles me. I pray that the Spirit will be with me. First, let me address one […]
[…] of the late Elder Neal A. Maxwell, “divine architecture,” then it follows that one task of theology ought to be to seek God in the structure of the book. In this vein, Adam Miller argues […]
[…] to me. I don’t know if my wandering is over, and I’m still unsure of whether I can say “this is the place” on my own faith journey. Instead, my story about coming back […]