Remarks at Chase’s Missionary Farewell
April 18, 2018There is an apparent rule, honored in some wards as often in the breach I as in its observance, that talks given at missionary farewells are not to be devoted to eulogizing the departing […]
There is an apparent rule, honored in some wards as often in the breach I as in its observance, that talks given at missionary farewells are not to be devoted to eulogizing the departing […]
Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 15–20 I have heard many LDS women approach the issue of women and the priesthood by protesting that they do not want to hold the priesthood because they have no […]
[…] morning sky? He’d read an article the week before on terminal patients who told how beautiful the world had become, how they gloried in it as they grieved. Mark had read with a shock […]
[…] on the ground that women are subservient, due to their supposed responsibility for bringing sin into the world (UPI 1984). The explanation for the Mormon tradition of using the Bible uncritically and literally lies […]
[…] had once lived. The young wives became matriarchs, raising large families within their towns, fearful of the world beyond and its alien language. Then the Mexicans came to follow this pattern of immigrant experience. […]
One of the least known rites of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the sacred hosanna shout.
[…] the hazy multiplicity of the wave into a distinct singularity. In other words, our curiosity about the world causes the wave to collapse upon and give macroworld reality to just one of its infinitely […]
Dialogue 19.4 (Winter 1986): 77–85 The role of leadership within the Mormon community is vastly interrelated, and thus often confused , with management.
Dialogue 20.4 (Winter 1987): 77–85 When Joseph Smith III preached his first sermon as a leader of the Reoganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints at Amboy, Illinois, on 6 April 1860, […]
[…] 23.3 (Fall 1990): 65–82 Evidence from Mormon women’s journals, diaries, and meeting minutes tells us that from the 1840s until as recently as the 1930s, LDS women served their families, each other, and the […]