from “A Paris Journal”
March 16, 2018[…] * * * So far the only testimony I’ve understood completely: a tourist from Japan speaking in English and being translated into French. He arrived this morning and was still undecided: attend church or […]
[…] * * * So far the only testimony I’ve understood completely: a tourist from Japan speaking in English and being translated into French. He arrived this morning and was still undecided: attend church or […]
Abraham H. Cannon was Mormon aristocracy. The son of long-time First Presidency member George Q. Cannon, he accepted a call as an apostle at age thirty. During the latter portion of his life, the […]
Christ was perfect. Christ turned water to wine at the wedding at Cana. Did Christ create the perfect wine?
[…] things have been on my mind recently. They have provoked a lot of thought and research. Over the past months, I have spent hours on the internet perusing medical studies, Church websites, and countless […]
Paul Gutjahr’s The Book of Mormon: A Biography is one of the inaugural offerings from Princeton University Press’s Lives of Great Religious Books—a series that proposes a new lens for studying major religious texts […]
[…] wait but how I wanted to be free again Find a way to get a taste of the fruit from off that tree again The Day of Judgment hangs above my neck just like […]
Albert Einstein famously wrote: “I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know […]
[…] in April, 2013, in Elon, North Carolina. In 2011, Utah State University Press published Tom’s book Still, the Small Voice: Narrative, Personal Revelation, and the Mormon Folk Tradition. Shawn is Tom’s colleague at Elon […]
In our Spring issue, we mistakenly omitted Terence L. Day’s biographical note. Our sincerest apologies. There was also a mistake in the printing of James Goldberg’s poem, “The Feather Pen.”
This excellent collection of essays not only honors one of the most influential LDS thinkers of the past forty years, David L. Paulsen, but does so as a beautiful example of the very sort […]