“But They Didn’t Win”: Politics and Integrity
April 2, 2018[…] service of others. However, to serve in a significant, moral way, we need not enter the “political” world. In fact, not much would get done if we all were in volved in that world. […]
[…] service of others. However, to serve in a significant, moral way, we need not enter the “political” world. In fact, not much would get done if we all were in volved in that world. […]
[…] Smoot: Apostle in Politics (Logan: Utah State University Press, 1990), and Harvard S. Heath, ed., In the World: The Diaries of Reed Smoot (Salt Lake City: Signature Books in association with Smith Research Associates, […]
[…] the problems associated with claiming to be a new prophet and revealing new scripture in a prophetless world with a closed canon as Price claims, why was Joseph Smith making independent new prophecies originating […]
[…] an assignment with the Community of Christ-sponsore WorldService Corps in summer 2000, that I was first struck by the enormity of the world’s problems and the horrifying conditions faced by the majority of its inhabiants.
[…] after their apologies from those who were skeptical that they would be followed by action. The good news for The Church of Jesus Christ is that it has already begun taking some of the […]
[…] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as well as lesser-known images from artists around the world. Thanks to the support of our sponsors—the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at Brigham […]
[…] 1990s were halcyon years for Mormons and Mormonism. The Church was the “fastest growing religion in the world”—at least, that’s what we told ourselves, aided by sociologist Rodney Stark’s grandiose projections. Anything that happened […]
<i>Dialogue 55.2 (Spring 2022): 37–72</i><br> Joseph Smith’s teachings on God found in his preaching at the April 7, 1844 general conference, known as the King Follett Sermon, and Smith’s Sermon in the Grove, given […]
[…] a hand on the other side. (53) By reaching through, one attains physical contact with the “other world” we seek in the sky. These two worlds “married” together are not merely that of humankind […]
[…] in something more protective. A hard case. A shell. Something that separates them more firmly from the world outside. The world that is not the temple. But then again, they are just articles of […]