Mormons in the Executive Suite
May 3, 2018[…] no problem in serving liquor to guests when his home was used for business entertainment. Apparently, in order to pass the oral exam for the U.S. Foreign Service, Mormons are required to agree that […]
[…] no problem in serving liquor to guests when his home was used for business entertainment. Apparently, in order to pass the oral exam for the U.S. Foreign Service, Mormons are required to agree that […]
Mormons, whether they know it or not, whether they like it or not, have entered the Secular City. This term, coined by Harvey Cox, expresses (in “secular”) a “this worldness”—meaning that the work of […]
[…] a psychiatrist.” For many, to visit a psychiatrist would be to admit emotional and spiritual failure. Mormons might enter psychotherapy with not only the usual fears and anxieties concerning an unknown experience that lies ahead…
The urban age—with all its complexities, opportunities, and monstrous problems—is upon us. How are Christians—and Mormons—responding to this new environment? This article will present exploratory research com paring Mormons and non-Mormons and will […]
[…] rarely one who seeks a Broadway production for his writing, an evaluation of this play seems in order. It can readily be said that as a producer, Liljenquist chose too tough an assignment in […]
[…] Joseph Smith was “about eighteen years old at this time,” which would place it in 1824. In order to maintain the integrity of Joseph Smith’s first vision story, however, Mormon writers have not only […]
[…] dedicated professionals who perform some of the most vital functions necessary for a free political system. In order to do that job, they must often be rough and skeptical, and it is the responsibility […]
[…] 400 So deepseated are the numerical values that the Arabic alphabet, which deviates radically from the Hebrew-Phoenician order of the letters, nevertheless retains the old numerical values tenaciously. For example, y is the last […]
[…] resentment in those lines. We serve the things of the world because we like the beauty and order they give to our lives. Physical beauty and order have their place—but that place is secondary, […]
[…] A central direction in modernist literature is toward the self-sufficiency of the work The idea of aesthetic order is abandoned or radically modified Nature ceases to be a central subject and setting for literature […]