Religion and Natasha McDonald
March 22, 2018[…] 2004 in her home in Alberta where I grew up and had returned for a visit. Twenty -four years old and completely dependent on others for all physical care, Natasha weighed sixty–seven pounds. Later […]
[…] 2004 in her home in Alberta where I grew up and had returned for a visit. Twenty -four years old and completely dependent on others for all physical care, Natasha weighed sixty–seven pounds. Later […]
<i>Dialogue 38.3 (Fall 2005): 133–145</i><br> In Fall 2005, there is a roundtable on mix–orientation marriages from some who were in them and from therapist Marybeth Raynes and long–time activist Ron Schow.
[…] the art department and a set designer and painter. In the classroom, he taught drawing, painting, calligraphy, design, and art history. During the summers, for many years he conducted student fine art tours to […]
[…] strongest chiasm in the Book of Mormon, Alma 36 . . . appeared in this book by design and rules out the hypothesis that it appeared by chance.” Their “quantitative judgments regarding the intentionality […]
[…] world, no longer the colonized, but rather the colonizer. In this article, I argue that the Utah -based modern Church has replicated the same colonization process on its membership abroad to which it was […]
[…] the Earth that time and circumstance have abused beyond measure. It is easy to become cynical about human nature when surrounded by people victimized by every form of degradation. But when you experience (the most […]
[…] “a general negative critique by Latter–day Saints is not surprising in view of Brooke’s explanation in strictly human terms of virtually everything the Saints hold sacred.” She observes also that “many LDS scholars seem […]
[…] in fourth grade a nun told our class that one of the mysteries of God that the human mind could not comprehend was that God has been here forever. She said that as humans […]
[…] a message to someone,” while at the same time “the visit of a spirit messenger to a human was common in magic and familiar to folk perceptions” (Early Mormonism and the Magic World View, […]
[…] facing up to his mistakes and flaws” (Preface, xix). It is fair, then, to ask: How faith -promoting is this biography and to what degree does Bushman examine all sides of Joseph Smith? That […]