A Lesson from the Past
May 1, 2018[…] preached such a sermon. We know better, because Brigham Young read the transcript and directed the Deseret News to print parts of it. If our elders in the east—the apostles—had sent our immigration in […]
[…] preached such a sermon. We know better, because Brigham Young read the transcript and directed the Deseret News to print parts of it. If our elders in the east—the apostles—had sent our immigration in […]
[…] by secular writers like William James and Aldous Huxley, the latter of whom begins his Brave New World with these words: Chronic remorse, as all the moralists agree, is a most undesirable sentiment. If […]
Dialogue 6.1 (Spring 1971): 37–45 Thomasson argues that because the church did not give in to the federal government regarding Renyolds v United States, even though it might not look like it, he believes […]
[…] said, “We feel that we should not condescend to imitate the pride, folly, and fashions of the world.” “Real beauty,” they declared, “appears to greater advantage in a plain dress than when bedizened with […]
[…] to Bush, Hugh Nibley argues that it is God who chooses who he wants to ordain and who should be denied due to various reasons, hence the scripture “Many are called, but few are chosen.”
The ancients of light radiating wisdom on wings of eagles break through the sky in a surge of compassion: In the Milestones section of Time Magazine a few cramped words: “Died, Harold B. […]
As a lawyer, I have had a professional interest in the unfolding of Watergate. Lawyers have, of course, played a central role in the saga. A staggering number of the key players were lawyers—those […]
[…] remains obsure. The events of his life suggest a pattern of disappointment, frustration and failure, as the world judges. In the inner realm of the spirit, his vivid imagination found release and solace, and […]
[…] as Saturday’s Warrior and Beyond This Moment. However, home literature has not had the impact on the world that Brother Whitney hoped for. It has not led to the development of “Miltons and Shakespeares […]
[…] think he would have carried on both jobs had it not been for the earlier insult. When World War I broke out in April 1917, we had a very small professional army in the […]