A Mighty Change of Heart
April 22, 2018[…] when in comes Claude with hay in his hair and manure on his shoes (he heard the news while milking), and he says he’s just come to say goodbye and gosh, honey, I’m going […]
[…] when in comes Claude with hay in his hair and manure on his shoes (he heard the news while milking), and he says he’s just come to say goodbye and gosh, honey, I’m going […]
[…] 117–124 So this was birthing, this crazy-quilt of contrasts, of senses and feelingsin chaos, coming occasionally to rest, as now, with a sleeping son in the crookof my arm. Had I won the grand prize?
[…] publications are correlated and many members take pride that “the Church is the same all over the world” without asking how much sameness is desirable or even tolerable. The character of Church organization has […]
[…] spiritual documents that have continually shone when man was lost in darkness. Should there be one single world religion? Is it confusing for man to be sur rounded by varieties of religions and types? […]
[…] of religion and the history of philosophy. McMurrin treats ideas not merely as landmarks in a particular world view but as entities that have a life of their own. The genius of his particular […]
[…] submitted to the quorums, orders, and councils of the church and also to the delegations sitting in World Conference for their action on it as embodying the word and will of God. Many refinements […]
[…] great school our heavenly Father has instituted for the benefit of his children” (9: 370). Though the world might decry the lack of formal training, “we are not as ignorant as they are [because] […]
[…] and a blurb announcing it as “the epic saga of a woman who dared to search the world for love.” Such commercial packaging is per haps misleading, but certainly no real dis traction. A […]
[…] the phone, locked it against my ear with my shoulder, and continued to read the already stale news. “Hello,” I said. It was Evan Francis, first counselor in our ward bishopric. “How are you?” […]
[…] history and doctrine at Brigham Young University, has written a history of Mormon ism in Ohio in the 1830s. He appears to have consulted virtually all of the primary sources pertinent to his subject. […]