I Was a Stranger . . .
April 24, 2021[…] troubled by the aggressive and insensitive treatment of these families.” We have seen the pictures on the news of refugees who drowned trying to cross a river or an ocean, of decaying bodies in […]
[…] troubled by the aggressive and insensitive treatment of these families.” We have seen the pictures on the news of refugees who drowned trying to cross a river or an ocean, of decaying bodies in […]
[…] semi-scholarly work will have much effect on the Church. Rather, it reads more like a literature of mutual reassurance, a literature designed to fill the empty spot in their lives which, in my opinion, […]
[…] take his application. Frank Adams Helena, Montana Grant Syphers replies: The basis of any dialogue must be mutual respect. It is difficult to carry on a discussion when one’s thoughts and feelings bring a […]
[…] (Spring 2020): 129–142</i><br>Interview with Brittany Mangelson who is a full-time minister for Community of Christ. She has a master of arts in religion from Graceland University and works as a social media seeker ministry specialist.
<i>Dialogue 52.2 (Summer 2019): 59–84</i><br>Due to the fact that visiting with angels isn’t part of the normal human experience, it makes it hard for historians to prove that it happened through an academic investigation. […]
[…] “Of course, I didn’t really want to be a wife. But I was eight years old, and in my mind, if all I really wanted from the future was a husband, then that must […]
[…] That arch-villain Brigham Young, they would say, foisted the image of a temporal-minded Joseph Smith upon the world. Brigham put into the mouth of a Joseph unavailable to defend himself doctrines which the Utah […]
[…] that art and religion are different, that they are likely to remain that way, and that their mutual mistrust and criticism — so “deplored” by Dr. Clark — may actually function for good. Art […]
[…] take on the form of what he wishes life were, and we, with him, can imagine a world of fantasy and romance. Or, his vision may be what he thinks life really is, and […]
[…] want to deny that the Book of Mormon has been a book of considerable impact and importance in America, insofar as it has affected the lives of many millions of citizens; yet it has […]