Immortal for Quite Some Time, Part 2
March 16, 2018[…] two roads, one the example you set for me and the other the way I followed. I am really sorry I didn’t change and become a better person while I was home and follow […]
[…] two roads, one the example you set for me and the other the way I followed. I am really sorry I didn’t change and become a better person while I was home and follow […]
[…] earlier, announced the decision to close the mission. A First Presidency announcement which ran in the Deseret News stated that the decision was made, “in consideration of existing conditions in Japan and because of […]
There are so many kinds of never. There’s the never that Jacob’s Mum uses when she says, “Never talk to strangers; it’s dangerous,” and there’s the never his Dad uses when he says, “Never play…
[…] new film Tabloid began its limited release on July 15, 2011, British papers were themselves dominating the news, with the News of the World closing its doors on July 10 and Rupert Murdoch appearing […]
[…] unity. The common theme of the two stories is family conflict as the result of one member breaking with tradition, but the conditions, the obstacles, the developments, the tone, and the outcome are dissimilar. […]
[…] Milton and Chaucer, I am keenly aware of how much distance there is between Middle, Elizabethan and Jacobean English and the English we speak today. Since the English used by King James’s translators was archaic even […]
[…] Then I go with the facts. If it is something that cannot be measured and tested, I am willing to accept it as a matter of faith and be content with it. This approach […]
[…] relationship between the narratives into which these abundant events are inscribed, and the events qua events. I am left wondering which of the two allows us to see the cultural landscape. Or is the […]
[…] Church is exacerbating the very problem that it seeks to erase. I am enormously heartened by the news that you shared with me about the Church’s disengagement from this issue in Maryland. Prince: And […]
[…] fake, and most nineteenth-century Protestants did as well. Still, in the minds of many white Americans and English, the letter’s description of Jesus seemed right. “[W]hile we believe it to be false,” wrote one […]