Ace of Saints
August 26, 2020<i>Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 108–123</i><br> I felt free. I felt empowered. I might fall in love and get married, or I might not. Either way would be fine. I didn’t need to have the […]
<i>Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 108–123</i><br> I felt free. I felt empowered. I might fall in love and get married, or I might not. Either way would be fine. I didn’t need to have the […]
[…] the apostles affirmed that Blacks could now be “adopted into the House of Israel” as full participants in Mormon liturgical rites. But this doctrinal shift did not resolve the vexing question of whether or […]
[…] don’t you tell us things like this?” Why would I tell you, Helen thinks. Who in this world likes to brag about projects that they chaired straight to failure? *** Twenty-one years after the […]
[…] also an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as well as a professor at Brigham Young University, where I teach courses in literacy education, educational research methods, and multicultural education.”
[…] a century. Mormons usually considered that all Indians were Lamanites and that the “antiquities” of the New World were products of the Nephites, Lamanites, and Jaredites. As for the biblical area, that was of […]
[…] Hunter never digresses to explain her Mormon beliefs, but fits them gracefully into the story, referring to Mutual and ^missionary work as easily as breathing, with a slightly longer explanation of the Three Nephites. […]
[…] the morality of individual life as their central concern, she is seldom articulate or resolute about the world view Catholicism should have given her. An absence of positive comment seems to express implicit criticism […]
[…] venture to guess that almost anyone who might be called such has taken occasional flights into the world of speculation, and has frequently emphasized the value of reason in the quest for truth, even […]
<i>Dialogue 1.3 (Fall 1966): 47–62</i><br>Understanding Mormon history involves appreciating some of the formidable obstacles which confront throse who seek to write it. There is still sensitivity among Mormons to probing that might bring embarrassment […]
[…] an Eastern house, a man without family where family means almost more than anything else in the world, an out-going person in the most reserved of sections. Consequently, he returned to the West in […]