Quackery and Mormons: A Latter-day Dilemma
April 24, 2018[…] every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat. Meat makes me sluggish. We are also told not to eat fat or blood. […]
[…] every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat. Meat makes me sluggish. We are also told not to eat fat or blood. […]
[…] type decide to buy the book may also depend on their willingness to pay a 1980 price for a volume of 1970 vintage. Neither author nor publisher acknowledges the fact that, except for the […]
[…] from England about 100 years ago, and he suffered persecutions from his Hindu parents, relatives and villagers for his having accepted Jesus Christ as his Way. Through him, after about thirty years, all his […]
[…] any geographical region. They are a natural result of the clash between various traditions. It is natural for people to love their own country and customs. Patterns and traditions bring order and sense to […]
[…] being carried to black Africa, expanding be yond the white strongholds. Communist-controlled territories are being observed carefully for mission penetration. Missionary inroads have been made into such historic European Catholic nations as Spain, France […]
For some years I have been working on Jungian interpretations of history, not in order to lay claim to any special insight into historical events, but as a way of enriching our experience […]
[…] Monthly in 1971. Unfortunately, the reader of the earlier article may be disappointed in the present book, for, like The Passover Plot, the logic used in Mormon Answer to Skepticism is akin to proving the […]
[…] of the MHA and a nearby ward. They will sing a work com missioned by the MHA for the occasion, a work based on the Wentworth Letter. I am amazed that a composer could […]
[…] cohesive array of archaeological, linguistic, ethnographic, and ethnobotanic evidence, modern Pacific scholars accept a Southeast Asian origin for Polynesians. With minimal exceptions, scholars agree that explorers called Lapita (Mongoloid and Melanesian Australoid Phenotypes) migrated […]
[…] see that only a considerable curiosity had overcome his instinctive reluctance to approach a stranger. “Excuse me for being nosey, but I couldn’t help but notice that you were copying something by B. H. […]