On Sexuality
April 29, 2018[…] opposite sex. This means that we shut out the possibility of emotional closeness with half of the human race and since we have already severely limited the possibility of emotional intimacy with the other […]
[…] opposite sex. This means that we shut out the possibility of emotional closeness with half of the human race and since we have already severely limited the possibility of emotional intimacy with the other […]
[…] of empathy among young scholars today. In addition, there are enough bits of humor to add the human touch so essential to appreciate such a man. In 1898, for instance, he was in England […]
[…] difficult passage of 19:25 into correct perspective (pp. 134–5, 219) by defining the “vindicator” as a non- human mediator who (like a Sumerian personal god acting as an “advocate and defender in the assembly […]
[…] another. The book does have one redeeming chapter, “Information About Divorce Procedures,” which demonstrates an acknowledgment that human people, who might also be Latter–day Saints, do in fact get divorces. Providing “proven guidelines for […]
[…] in fiction not of the well–documented plight of the polygamous wife, but of the universal and significant human experiences which such an anomaly as polygamy prevents us—and writers— from confronting. If we were to […]
[…] suffering. Whether a revelation is required to enable us to share the Gospel fully with all the human family, or merely a policy decision by President Lee, I pray with all my heart that […]
Dialogue introduced its readers to Cornerstone, “An Organization of Latter -day Saints for the Preservation of their Architectural Heritage,” in its roundtable on the Coalville Tabernacle (Winter 1970). Since its organization, Cornerstone has played […]
[…] of the actual formation of the earth, the appearance of life forms, and the development of the human race. Such questions we are left to puzzle out for ourselves. “The Structural Study of Myth,” […]
[…] brothers responded vigorously and completed the church. Success in prosecuting the Lord’s work and contrition for his human foibles of dropping cusswords and snitching an occasional cup of coffee are two hallmarks of Kimball […]
[…] Hansen—are with Flanders’ the best essays in the collection. Bitton’s “Early Mormon Lifestyles; or the Saints as Human Beings” is a straightforward probe of the life of “the common people” of Mormonism, accenting place, […]