Entertaining Angels Unaware
March 20, 2018[…] to them on the phone. And we’re supposed to be missionaries, or have you forgotten that, too? Am I supposed to just sit back and let you ruin everything?” “Why is everything automatically my […]
[…] to them on the phone. And we’re supposed to be missionaries, or have you forgotten that, too? Am I supposed to just sit back and let you ruin everything?” “Why is everything automatically my […]
As a teacher of language and literature, I am probably supposed to sneer at Stephenie Meyer’s novels. They are not just genre fiction but, by blending urban fantasy and romance, genre fiction twice over; […]
[…] counter-example of Catholic intellectuals. Faced with such a question, they have the luxury of a rich philosophical and theological tradition on which to draw. They can turn to Aquinas or modern Catholic social thought […]
<i>Dialogue 43.1 (Spring 2010): 1–36</i><br> And in fact, what might it mean that God “used” evolution tocreate life’s diversity? Was this a choice for God among other al-ternatives? Do Wildman’s pessimistic conclusions hold for […]
[…] said: “I know it will get very difficult in the future to have this mindset, but I am determined to be grateful even when I suffer.” Reading Erik’s message was a vivid reminder that […]
[…] group. So my feeling lately has been, “Why keep trying to fit or hiding who I really am. Why not go someplace where I can be more comfortable?” For a while I felt like […]
[…] the 1960s cultural revolution. Hicks is, by nature, a producer of things. Compared with the youth of today who seem to be primarily consumers of digital content on digital devices, Hicks lives in an […]
[…] exaltation in the kingdom of God and receive authority and power as queens and priestesses, and I am sure if they have that power they have some power to rule and reign. Else why […]
[…] the Nauvoo Temple grounds on Friday, May 12, 1844 Joseph pleaded with all Saints present there: “I am going on in my progress for eternal life, . . . . Oh! I beseech you […]
<i>Dialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 155–180</i><br>This article tells the impact of LDS racial teachings on a single family history, the Marshalls, from Alabama in the 19th c. to Filmore, Utah in the present.