Turning
April 17, 2018Thanks to the human heart by which we live, Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, its fears, To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for […]
Thanks to the human heart by which we live, Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, its fears, To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for […]
[…] bonding of intimate friendships which is, in my opinion, one of the most rewarding and durable of human relationships. As Mormons, many of us tend to have our needs for friendship filled by spouse, […]
[…] characteristic of Japanese firms. This type of company culture spawns a quiet, obedient, acquiescent employee. These new humanistic systems are characterized by unequal power, gentle exploitation, and social domination. The beauty of modern totalitarianism […]
[…] studied and taught at BYU. His ‘Alpine modernist’ style combines realistic forms in with abstract elements. The human form was at the center of much of his work. He saw grace and beauty in […]
[…] in this essay. 2013: Wilfred Decoo, “As Our Two Faiths Have Worked Together”— Catholicism and Mormonism on Human Life Ethics and Same-Sex Marriage,” Dialogue 46.3 (Fall 2013): 106–141. Wilfred Decoo writes in 2013 ““As […]
[…] the archive, and the inability of the archive (in theory and praxis) to encompass narratives of the human experiences it claims. Queerness may present itself in the archive as “scraps,” but it also sits […]
[…] and prayer, to comprehend what it would mean to be homosexual. Most of my comprehension of this human phenomenon comes from counseling Latter-day Saint homosexuals over the past fifteen years. As I have spent […]
[…] we understand reality through our models—they mediate reality for us. This is a normal part of the human experience, and it works great if you and I both realize that the model we’re discussing […]
[…] additional insight into the divine feminine and the earth’s Heavenly Mother. In her 1877, “The Ultimatum of Human Life,” Snow penned: Obedience will the same bright garland weave, As it has done for your […]
[…] were trapped in the past. As a prophet, he unlocked the world of the supernatural—making the divine- human interaction simultaneously more literal and more personal than was customary in Protestant America. Over the centuries, […]