Book Club
July 27, 2022[…] Mormon Liberal Kristine L. Haglund Heike’s Void Steven L. Peck Mormon Women at the Crossroads Caroline Kline 2021 Books Ezra Taft Benson and the making of the Mormon Right Matthew L. Harris Syliva Twila […]
[…] Mormon Liberal Kristine L. Haglund Heike’s Void Steven L. Peck Mormon Women at the Crossroads Caroline Kline 2021 Books Ezra Taft Benson and the making of the Mormon Right Matthew L. Harris Syliva Twila […]
[…] 2002): 81–110; and Jesse Walker, “Eldridge Cleaver: The Mormon Years,” Friday A/V Club, posted online May 7, 2021. Also see Newell G. Bringhurst and Craig L. Foster, The Mormon Quest for the Presidency (Independence, […]
[…] often thought that I should write to Paul and thank him, but I procrastinated. By January of 2021 it was too late. Tragically, Paul ended his own life. Unbeknownst to me, Paul had long […]
Elsewhere in this issue Robert Flanders speaks of the New Mormon History as having begun in 1945 with the publication of Fawn Brodie’s No Man Knows My History. While Brodie’s book is certainly pivotal, an…
Currently, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints defines the Godhead as consisting of three separate and distinct personages or Gods: Elohim, or God the Father; Jehovah, or Jesus Christ, the Son of God both…
[…] can be seen. It took one year for the seed to germinate. 360 =time + 720 =times ±180 =half a time 1260 years of darkness 1830 Church […]
[…] disappearance of the ten northern tribes of Israel after the kingdom was sacked by the Assyrians around 720 BCE. Over time, legends developed that one day they would be rediscovered and rejoin the Jews. […]
[…] Joseph Smith & Money Digging, p. 2; cf. HDA 7:1008-9. Hand, “Treasure,” p. 115; HDA 7:1004-7, 1:1079, 1080, s.v. Berggeister. See also Byrd Howell Granger, A Motif Index for Lost Mines and Treasures Applied […]
Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):109–128
JOSEPH SMITH GREW UP in a time and place where folk magic was an accepted part of the landscape. Before he was a prophet, he was a diviner, or more specifically, a scryer who used his peepstone to discover the location of buried treasure.
Dialogue 23.4 (Winter 1990): 83–96
This essay explores some of the strengths of deliberately choosing
to relate to our world with gender-inclusive language in three areas