A Voice Against the War
May 4, 2018[…] the ways of war. We shall make possible their building into a military caste which from all human experience bodes ill for that equality and unity which must always characterize the citizenry of a […]
[…] the ways of war. We shall make possible their building into a military caste which from all human experience bodes ill for that equality and unity which must always characterize the citizenry of a […]
[…] exclude the doctrine that an infallible God helps direct the Church through the medium of divinely appointed—albeit human—leaders. And here we might well focus upon the root word “divine.” The word “divine” descends from […]
[…] their lives, I wonder if the time has not arrived that Mormons can view their leaders as human beings. Indeed, realistic biographies of three dimensional individuals would seem to offer several advantages. They might […]
[…] and that it is a moral evil for any person or group of persons to deny any human being the right to gainful employment, to full educational opportunity, and to every privilege of citizenship. […]
[…] charitable relief which every humane and Christian soul holds a debt to the suffering portion of the human family. . . . A notice in the Daily Union the day before the event reminded […]
[…] and sublimity of imagery characteristic of Larson’s style often smack of remoteness, and the joy in intense human experience Larson professes is often undercut by the lordliness (one is almost tempted to say the […]
[…] these unfired clays, These slippery garden snakes, Into furious reptiles! XI My boundless intellect Fingers, in the human soul, A lute of my revenge Made by your very hands. And although your Fatherhood, Veiled […]
[…] large region of the United States. The respondents were students from four major western universities in 1949 -50 and again in 1960. The students were representative of all students enrolled in sociology classes at […]
[…] change. Innovation could not be introduced easily. Besides institutional blocks to development of new methods, there was human fear of change or, more accurately, the fear of failure and inevitable hunger if the customary […]
[…] government or majorities. War is ugly and far from glorious. It often robs those involved of any human sentiment and pity and permits one to be “objective” about cruelty and pain. In the beatitudes […]