Art and the Church: or “The Truths of Smoother”
Wayne BoothAs I tried to figure out why on earth I was chosen for this talk, I could think mainly of reasons against it. First of all, I am a striking example of the failed artist.…
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Winter 1980
The Winter 1980 Issue examines the role of art, revelation, and personal expression in Mormonism. Wayne C. Booth discusses the relationship between art and religious truth, while Peter Crawley reflects on shifts from Mormon primitivism. Candadai Seshachari explores revelation as a unifying force in the global Church, and Linda Sillitoe presents poems by contemporary Mormon women, with additional poems by Sonia Johnson and Colin Douglas. Fiction by Robert L. Egbert and personal reflections by Edward R. Hogan and Kent L. Walgren explore themes of faith and departure. L. Jackson Newell addresses the balance between personal conscience and priesthood authority in a pulpit address.
As I tried to figure out why on earth I was chosen for this talk, I could think mainly of reasons against it. First of all, I am a striking example of the failed artist.…
Some of Mormonism’s most important ideas appear to lie at the point of a paradox. The president of the Church, for example, is considered to be the divinely appointed mouthpiece of God, a prophet who…
President Spencer W. Kimball, in his address to the Samoa area conference in 1976, pointed out that he is frequently asked at press conferences about what he thinks is the single “greatest” problem facing the…
The sensibility described by Amy Lowell—that there is something odd about women who write serious poetry—is still given substance today by the endangered state of the species. Even I will not waste time counting the few woman poets anthologized before Lowell’s time; contemporary statistics suffice.
Biographies and family histories, have been by far the most popular subject of Mormon-related books during the past year. These works stem in large part from the ingenuity of family organizations and the ever increasing…
“Whoa.” Benjamin Vaughn pulled back on the lines and stopped his four horse team. It was midmorning and he had just finished cutting his ten-acre patch of barley. With the binder stopped, Ben grasped the…
In few cases is the Mormon Church at such odds with “the learning of men” as in its answers to the intriguing questions of Polynesian origins and migrations. Apostle Mark E. Petersen expressed the Mormon…
Two “common sense” theories of international relations have been with us from ancient times to the present: utopianism and realism. Both share a common belief that understanding man will help explain international relations, and power…
I was born in the Church and have always been active in it—more or less. My conviction in the validity of its claims has vacillated over the years. Until recently there always had been in…
A few Saturdays ago, I stood in the duplication center at the University of Utah, photocopying a book-length manuscript with the cover title: “A Manuscript, by B. H. Roberts.” Halfway through the project, a dark-haired…
The church of my childhood
was redbrick, too.
Smug and warm inside, I’d
watch the snow battling the windows
Take, eat; this is my body.
Like a deer he came to me,
Parting the ferns,
Like a deer with bright antlers.
I chased him across meadows,
Let the stone whisper to the flower,
The flower to the sun,
And the sun to the stars of heaven,
That Jehovah is come for his bride;
From the teachings of its founder, Joseph Smith, down to the present time, Mormon doctrine has recognized two complementary, though sometimes competing, sources of authority in personal affairs. Through one source, the priesthood hierarchy, Latter-day…