Best of Dialogue 2015
December 31, 2015What was the most read Dialogue pieces in 2015? How about Facebook?
What was the most read Dialogue pieces in 2015? How about Facebook?
[…] this category, the common characteristic that comes to mind is that they tend to be exceptionally well read. One who comes to recite the list has almost always gained her knowledge via the internet. […]
[…] to take what remains of that exhibit—the words written thirty years ago and a handful of photographs—and share them with readers of Dialogue. Consider it an example of hauntology: the enduring presence of elements […]
[…] embrace it. And thus we hate to see members off on tangents alien to most of the world because we know that our primary responsibility is to show others just what God’s plan of […]
[…] Professor Midgley responds: Dear Sirs: I am sorry that Mr. Stanfield has received with considerable consternation the news that his particular political ideology is neither consistent with the gospel nor supported in the scriptures. […]
Notes and comments are not merely short articles or long letters; they are varied, informal glimpses of Mormon thought and life. The Editors welcome news, profiles, opinions, accounts, speeches and other items that seem appropriate.
[…] got my first acceptance letters a few months later and was not just relieved but energized. The news felt good, and it felt right. Whatever I was to do with my future, the Spirit […]
[…] computer connected to the internet, including those hosting websites; for example, as of this writing, the official English-language website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints can be accessed by entering 216.49.176.20 […]
[…] demanded action. A bold move was necessary, and it was my job to execute it. Lara was breaking unspoken rules. She craved an equal voice with her husband, but no one wanted to give […]
[…] 2 (1978): 201. See also B. H. Roberts, The Mormon Doctrine of Deity (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1903), 227. “History, 1838–1856, volume E-1,” 1972. Zucker L. “Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew.” […]