Serving or Converting? A Panel: To Serve, then Teach
April 17, 2018[…] I would restate the title of our panel and instead of saying “Go Ye Into All the World: To Convert or To Serve?” I would say “Go Ye Into All the World: To Serve […]
[…] I would restate the title of our panel and instead of saying “Go Ye Into All the World: To Convert or To Serve?” I would say “Go Ye Into All the World: To Serve […]
[…] between the needs of the individual and of the community, between civilization and the wilderness, between the world and the Church, between the Saints and God — the struggling im perfect prophet in whom […]
[…] of these beliefs, including the necessity of practicing polygamy (Chard 1965, 114). He and Shore sustained their mutual discord through correspondence. After Tucker was transferred to work in Herstal, Belgium, in October 1957, Tucker’s […]
[…] and administrative positions within his Church. It seems there should be a higher, more concrete standard for mutual understanding of this important priesthood power. Another key issue that several authors deal with is women’s […]
[…] remember seeing dozens of films on how to deal with incendiary bombs during those tense years of World War II. (West coast residents were always expecting to be bombed by the Japanese.) The projection […]
[…] my heart.) Doris and I first met in the high school library while preparing for the ward Mutual Improvement Association’s speech competition. The assigned topic was “Who Is My Neighbor?” That day we walked […]
[…] an all-wise Providence. . . . As American citizens, as citizens of the nations of the free world, we need to rouse ourselves for the problems which confront us as great Christian nations. We […]
[…] I like to think I expressed my independence, my freedom to choose, my will to remake the world. This is pure fantasy, however. In truth, I married my best friend. We met while working […]
[…] high priesthood being after the order of his Son, which order was from the foundation of the world . . . being prepared from eternity to all eternity, according to his foreknowledge of all […]
[…] and was esteemed by the citizenry of Navajo County as one of their most accomplished members. Even today, almost fifty years following his death, I meet people who still call him Professor Peterson, though […]