Mt. Rainier Sanctification
September 2, 2022[…] and wind. I was depleted, and we hadn’t even started the hard part yet. What in the world was I thinking? Rainier is a serious mountain—14,411 feet of massive rock and ice. I was […]
[…] and wind. I was depleted, and we hadn’t even started the hard part yet. What in the world was I thinking? Rainier is a serious mountain—14,411 feet of massive rock and ice. I was […]
[…] documents such as the 1909 First Presidency statement[6] and the 1995 “The Family: A Proclamation to the World.”[7] Unlike the traditional Christian interpretation of gendered terminology relating to God as metaphorical, Mormons interpret gendered […]
[…] about growing up as a child to Japanese American immigrants who met in the internment camps during World War II. Born on a farm in rural southern Utah (“in order to be far from […]
[…] career. That I did not care to improve my craft before trying to announce myself to the world was the first of my failures and an example of my prideful tendencies, an obvious parallel […]
[…] kind of com motion today, one that the Church and its members are facing in our information-saturated world, and a different kind of simplicity, one that is very elusive and that may take a […]
[…] a scene then while somersaulting off a roof (8). Eve laments the “delicious bite” that invoked the world in which she finds Abel dead (11). The poet imagines pausing the world, halting people in […]
[…] right for a Christian man, who serves the Lord Christ, to serve in the armies of the world.” He was immediately beheaded. According to the testimonies of those present, he died in great peace […]
[…] elements in the doctrine of the political kingdom of God are these: (1) The governments of this world will shortly pass away. (2) The government of the kingdom of God administered by the L.D.S. […]
[…] period of intellectual, spiritual, and moral development for the “intelligences.” The varieties of men observed in this world are, to a degree, but products or temporal recapitulations of the gradations of achievement previously gained.[14] […]
[…] EI Islam, . . . a restoration by revelation of the pure and primaeval religion of the world” (p. 383). Meyer observed that “both Mohammed and Joseph Smith considered their revelations to be in […]