Dialogue
Recommended
Dialogue and the Daring Disciple
Karen RosenbaumOne thing a reader learns from Terryl Givens’s new biography is that no one who knew Eugene England could claim to be an objective appraiser of his life. Countless individuals revered him; he had guided…
England’s Life of Paradox
David Charles GoreThe attacks of September 11, 2001 are a spectacular reminder that the struggle between religion and politics is alive and well in the twenty-first century. Eugene England’s life, which ended just weeks before those attacks,…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs:
Boycotts at BYU have reached our ears here. Considering the official and unofficial discrimination at the “Y” in the past it is not unexpected. (Actually one boycott lead er was from a black LDS family in Oakland)….
Women in Dialogue
Claudia L. BushmanWhile to all outward appearances we had nothing to complain of, the first meeting was an impassioned exchange of frustrations, disappointments and confessions. We had expected some serious confrontations because all attending are not in…
Mormon Women Claiming Power
Margaret Olsen HemmingAn Open Letter to Prospective Fiction Contributors
Jennifer QuistDialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought has been changing in 2019, including bringing on a foreigner as the new fiction editor. That’s me. None of the fiction I’ve been curating will appear before this winter,…
Editor’s Note
(author)Eugene England Essay Contest Winners
EditorWes Johnson: Visionary Historian
Robert A. ReesNOTE ON IDENTITY AND COMMUNITY
Boyd Jay PetersenLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorEditor’s Note
Boyd Jay PetersenEditor’s Note: The Continuing Importance of Dialogue
Boyd Jay PetersenSearch for an Epistemology: Three Views of Science and Religion
David O. TolmanDialogue 36.1 (2003): 89–108
A claim is frequently made that science and religion are not incompatible. The contention is that science and religion can be made to co-exist by compartmentalization, that is, by carefully limiting the scope of each so that neither intrudeson the sphere of influence of the other. Such an approach is folly.
The Possibility of Dialogue: A Personal View
Eugene EnglandProve all things; hold fast that which is good. Paul the Apostle These words are an obvious place to begin to consider the possibilities of dialogue about a Christian religion and its cultural heritage. The…
Dialogue East | Courage: A Journal of History, Thought, and Action
Robert Bruce FlandersIn the spring of 1970, with the biennial world conference of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints approaching, an acute polarization of theological positions and emotional sets seemed to have occurred in the movement over the identity, the character, and the mission of the (RLDS) church.
A Progress Report on Dialogue
Garth L. MangumWith Dialogue in its sixth year, it seems appropriate to report to you, our faithful readers, on the progress and problems of the journal. The initial response, demonstrated that Dialogue met a real need in…
A Continuing Dialogue
Robert A. ReesAlthough it has been over five years since I received the first issue of Dialogue, I vividly remember the excitement with which I opened it and devoured it in one sitting. I suddenly felt a renewal of faith in myself and in my fellow saints. I discovered that there were Mormons who shared not only my concern for the life of the mind in the Church, but who also shared some of my deepest feelings about the life of the spirit in the world, who seemed unafraid to think, to explore, to question—and unembarrassed to fast, to pray, and to testify.
Dialogues on Science and Religion
Clyde A. ParkerDialogue 8.3/4 (1973): 109–126
To answer that question we needed to create some instruments with which we could gather the data. We are currently engaged in that instrument-building phase. As one step in that process, we interviewed several well-established LDS academicians located at various institutions of higher education in the United States.
A Dialogue with Henry Eyring
Edward L. KimballDialogue 8.3/4 (1973): 99–108
Over the years Henry Eyring’s status in the first rank of scientists has become secure. He has produced a staggering volume of research publications in the fields of his interests: application of quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics, radioactivity, theory of reaction rates, theory of liquids, rheology, molecular biology, optical rotation, and theory of flame.
Seers, Savants and Evolution: A Continuing Dialogue
Duane E. JefferyDialogue 9.3 (1974): 21–37
Duane Jeffrey is to be thanked for his article, “Seers, Savants and Evolution: The Uncomfortable Interface.” It is an excellent summary of the history of thought on evolution in the Church. To illustrate its power, it made us very carefully reconsider our own anti-evolution bias and again perceive evolution as a possibility.
The Possibilities of Dialogue
Robert A. ReesIn a remarkable essay entitled “Beyond Politics” in a recent issue of BYU Studies, Hugh Nibley makes an exciting observation: God not only desires a free discussion with men, He encourages it. Further, it is an essential part of His modus operandi for our return to His presence.
Gambit in the Throbs of a Ten-Year-Old Swamp: Confessions of a Dialogue Intern
Karen Marguerite MoloneyHow does an English graduate student who wants a visit to the East Coast, instruction in the American political system and an introduction into the Mormon publishing world satisfy these three ambitions in one two-month…
“Cooperating in Works of the Spirit”: Notes Toward a Higher Dialogue
Robert A. ReesCommunication is a matter of infinite hope. It is the emotion we feel when we send these fragile words however tentatively or forcefully out to others. Even those who write secret diaries, shrouded in cryptic codes, or who shout anonymous messages on subway walls, or who carefully hide parchment and golden plates in caves to come forth several millennia later all do so with the same expectation: that someone, somewhere will read and understand.
Ten Years with Dialogue: A Personal Anniversary
Mary Lythgoe BradfordWe looked a lot like the picture in the Dialogue logo, although, of course, we didn’t know it then. Gene and Charlotte England, Karl Keller and I were taking lunch on the lawn at the…
The Pink Dialogue and Beyond
Laurel Thatcher UlrichDialogue 14.4 (Winter 1981): 28–39
Some time in June 1970,I invited a few friends to my house to chat about the then emerging women’s movement. If I had known we were about to make history, I would have taken minutes or at least passed a roll around, but of course I didn’t.
Ongoing Dialogue
Linda King NewellSince accepting the editorship of DIALOGUE last spring, we have had a num ber of close friends ask with an air of incredulity, “I think it’s wonderful, but why would you take on such an…
The Unfettered Faithful: An Analysis of the Dialogue Subscribers Survey
Armand L. MaussDuring the spring of 1984, the editors of DIALOGUE sent a short questionnaire to all of its then-2,300 subscribers plus 600 who had let their subscriptions lapse in the previous year. At that point, the journal had been edited in Salt Lake City for exactly two years.
“A Matter of Love”: My Life with Dialogue
Eugene EnglandGod sometimes seems to me quite unreasonable. I’ve thought so especially at times when it appears that the one gift he has clearly given me, the gift of dialogue, is also a source of pain…
Dialogue’s Coming of Age
L. Jackson NewellDIALOGUE: A JOURNAL OF MORMON THOUGHT begins both its twentieth volume and its twenty-first year with the publication of this issue. Launched in 1966 as a daring and earnest effort to transform the serious conversation of…
Monologues and Dialogues: A Personal Perspective
Robert A. ReesEngaging in dialogue is one of the first experiences we have as human beings. Even when our communication is only inarticulate gurgling, we are participating in some kind of communication. Entering into dialogue with another, whether human or divine, is one of the experiences we bring from the preexistence.
The Road to Dialogue: A Continuing Quest
F. Ross PetersonOnce again the editorial mantle of DIALOGUE has passed to a new leadership. The journal is in excellent shape and bears a positive impact from each editorial team. For twenty years numerous individuals have tirelessly…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: A Tribute to Dialogue
Levi S. PetersonI could justly praise DIALOGUE for many qualities . But for the sake of brevity I will concentrate upon a single overriding virtue. DIALOGUE makes my religion interesting. When I was a boy, I believed…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: To Give the Heart: Some Reflections on Dialogue
Lavina Fielding AndersonWhile I was on my mission in France, I received number 1, volume 1 of a publication I had never heard of before—a chunky little journal in a bright blue cover called DIALOGUE. It was…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: Dialogue’s Valuable Service for LDS Intellectuals
Leonard J. ArringtonMany of you will find it difficult to understand the enormous importance DIALOGUE had to my generation and to young Latter-day Saint readers at the time of its founding—those between the ages of twenty and…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: On Building the Kingdom with Dialogue
Eugene EnglandIn the Spring 1987 issue of DIALOGUE, the first of the twentieth-anniversary issues, I was referred to as “the founding editor of DIALOGUE.” That is not true. I was merely one of a group of…
Dialogue Toward Forgiveness: A Supporting View
Richard D. PollDialogue and Difference: “I and Thou” or “We and They”
Seymour CainDialogue
Ellen PearsonA Dialogue Retrospective
Allen D. RobertsA History of Dialogue, Part One: The Early Years, 1965-1971
Devery S. AndersonBearing Your Sanctimony: Monologues on Dialogue
Rebecca ChandlerA History of Dialogue, Part Two: Struggle Toward Maturity, 1971-1982
Devery S. AndersonA History of Dialogue, Part Three: The Utah Experience, 1982-1989
Devery S. AndersonEndowing the Olympic Masses: Light of the World
David G. PaceSpinning Gold: Mormonism and the Olympic Games
Jan ShippsScience and Religion: A Dialogue: Response
David O. TolmanScience and Religion: A Dialogue: What the Universe Means to People Like Me
David D. AllredShort Creek: A Refuge for the Saints
Marianne T. WatsonDialogue 36.3 (Spring 2003): 71–87
Watson shares why early fundamentalists broke off from the main church and decided to leave Utah and settle Short Creek.
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorAn Open Letter to the Dialogue Board
Nathan B. OmanLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorEditor’s Introduction: Celebrating Forty Years of Dialogue
Levi S. PetersonLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorAn Open Letter to Nathan Oman
Robert A. ReesA Lament
Molly BennionFamous Last Words, or Through the Correspondence Files
Mary Lythgoe BradfordThe Possibilities of Dialogue
Robert A. ReesRetrospection and Assessment
Levi S. PetersonLetters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor“Lord, To Whom Shall We Go?” The Challenges of Discipleship and Church Membership
Robert A. ReesPersonal Reflections on the Founding of Dialogue
Paul G. SalisburyA Forty-Year View: Dialogue and the Sober Lessons of History
Frances Lee MenloveThe Founding and the Fortieth: Reflections on the Challenge of Editing and the Promise of Dialogue
G. Wesley JohnsonLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorMaturing and Enduring: Dialogue and Its Readers after Forty Years
Robert W. ReynoldsLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorA Rigorous Examination
Letters to the EditorAppreciation for Dialogue
Letters to the EditorA Halfway Covenant?
Letters to the EditorWriting Awards for 2007
Editor“Rising above Principle”: Ezra Taft Benson as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture 1953-61 Part 1
Gary James Bergera“The Grandest Principle of the Gospel”: Christian Nihilis Sanctified Activism and Eternal Progression
Jacob T. BakerA History of Dialogue, Part Four: A Tale in Two Cities, 1987-92
Devery S. AndersonDialogue in Milan
Letters to the EditorWhat Is Dialogue’s Mission?
Letters to the EditorBest of Dialogue 2008 Awards
EditorA Year of Dialogue: Thinking Myself into Mormonism
Sam BhagwatWriting Awards for 2009
EditorLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorWhy Nature Matters: A Special Issue of Dialogue on Mormonism and the Environment
Steven L. PeckFinding the Presence in Mormon History: An Interview with Susanna Morrill, Richard Lyman Bushman,and Robert Orsi
Robert OrsiNixon Was Wrong: Religion and the Presidency, 1960, 2008, and 2012— An Interview with Shaun A. Casey
Shaun A. CaseyLetter to the Editor: Reading Scripture
(author)Letter to the Editor: Brother, Can You Spare a Book?
Letters to the EditorLetter to the Editor: Bender Responds
(author)Letter to the Editor: A Postapocalyptic Perspective?
Letters to the EditorErrata
EditorLetter to the Editor: “Apostates,” “Anti-Mormons,” and Other Problems in Seth Payne’s “Ex-Mormon Narratives and Pastoral Apologetics”
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: I am enclosing a check for $20.00 as a donation to Dialogue. I sincerely appreciate the efforts which have been made by the Dialogue staff to present such stimulating material. I will do…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: We enjoyed your recent satire on provincial Mormonism (published as a review of The Graduate by one Rustin Kaufman). H. L. Mencken could not have inserted the knife more deftly. It takes an…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: Your poemed portraits proveth much(They prove both plus and minus) So let old Ernie have his view—Give deference to his highness. Robert Baer El Cerrito, Calif. *** Dear Sirs: I have read with interest the…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: As a Dialogue subscriber, I was recently favored with a letter from the “Lloyd for Congress Committee,” asking for a contribution to support a Dr. Kent Lloyd, Ph.D., who is running for Congress…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . . I borrowed the first two issues and have read each one with a great sense of gratitude. I knew it — I knew you were there somewhere, you people…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . . Dialogue can become a source of intellectual sastisfaction that will complement and augment the spiritual satisfaction abundantly provided by the Church. To become such a source it must be…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: After Udall’s letter, what now? Despite the possible political implications of Stewart Udall’s letter, I hailed it as a welcome voice on a subject generally veiled in public silence. And yet after the…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: I enjoyed William Robinson’s article [Autumn, 1968], “Mormons in the Urban Community.” In order to expose our children to something other than our very isolated Mormon community (Utah Valley), two years ago we…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorThe letters in this issue reflect accurately the relative quantity of letters received on the different subjects as well as the various points of view. Dear Sirs: I am much interested in the cover of…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . I could not agree more with the comments and views expressed by McMurrin and Bitton (Winter, 1967). I became an ardent admirer of B. H. Roberts from the moment when,…
Letters to the Editor – Udall
Letters to the EditorDialogue 2.2 (Summer 1967): 5–7
In this important historical letter, Stewart Udall reflects on the need for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to reconsider its historical stance on race, particularly its practice of denying full fellowship to Black individuals. Udall argues that this practice, rooted in the belief in a divine curse on Black people, contradicts the principles of equality and brotherhood that the Church should embody. He concludes asserting that the time has come for the Church to abandon its racial restrictions and embrace full fellowship with Black individuals. He argues that recognizing the worth of all people, irrespective of race, is essential for the Church to fulfill its spiritual and moral ideals and to contribute positively to society’s progress toward greater human brotherhood.
Dialogue and the Daring Disciple
Karen RosenbaumOne thing a reader learns from Terryl Givens’s new biography is that no one who knew Eugene England could claim to be an objective appraiser of his life. Countless individuals revered him; he had guided…
England’s Life of Paradox
David Charles GoreThe attacks of September 11, 2001 are a spectacular reminder that the struggle between religion and politics is alive and well in the twenty-first century. Eugene England’s life, which ended just weeks before those attacks,…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs:
Boycotts at BYU have reached our ears here. Considering the official and unofficial discrimination at the “Y” in the past it is not unexpected. (Actually one boycott lead er was from a black LDS family in Oakland)….
Women in Dialogue
Claudia L. BushmanWhile to all outward appearances we had nothing to complain of, the first meeting was an impassioned exchange of frustrations, disappointments and confessions. We had expected some serious confrontations because all attending are not in…
Mormon Women Claiming Power
Margaret Olsen HemmingAn Open Letter to Prospective Fiction Contributors
Jennifer QuistDialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought has been changing in 2019, including bringing on a foreigner as the new fiction editor. That’s me. None of the fiction I’ve been curating will appear before this winter,…
Editor’s Note
(author)Eugene England Essay Contest Winners
EditorWes Johnson: Visionary Historian
Robert A. ReesNOTE ON IDENTITY AND COMMUNITY
Boyd Jay PetersenLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorEditor’s Note
Boyd Jay PetersenEditor’s Note: The Continuing Importance of Dialogue
Boyd Jay PetersenSearch for an Epistemology: Three Views of Science and Religion
David O. TolmanDialogue 36.1 (2003): 89–108
A claim is frequently made that science and religion are not incompatible. The contention is that science and religion can be made to co-exist by compartmentalization, that is, by carefully limiting the scope of each so that neither intrudeson the sphere of influence of the other. Such an approach is folly.
The Possibility of Dialogue: A Personal View
Eugene EnglandProve all things; hold fast that which is good. Paul the Apostle These words are an obvious place to begin to consider the possibilities of dialogue about a Christian religion and its cultural heritage. The…
Dialogue East | Courage: A Journal of History, Thought, and Action
Robert Bruce FlandersIn the spring of 1970, with the biennial world conference of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints approaching, an acute polarization of theological positions and emotional sets seemed to have occurred in the movement over the identity, the character, and the mission of the (RLDS) church.
A Progress Report on Dialogue
Garth L. MangumWith Dialogue in its sixth year, it seems appropriate to report to you, our faithful readers, on the progress and problems of the journal. The initial response, demonstrated that Dialogue met a real need in…
A Continuing Dialogue
Robert A. ReesAlthough it has been over five years since I received the first issue of Dialogue, I vividly remember the excitement with which I opened it and devoured it in one sitting. I suddenly felt a renewal of faith in myself and in my fellow saints. I discovered that there were Mormons who shared not only my concern for the life of the mind in the Church, but who also shared some of my deepest feelings about the life of the spirit in the world, who seemed unafraid to think, to explore, to question—and unembarrassed to fast, to pray, and to testify.
Dialogues on Science and Religion
Clyde A. ParkerDialogue 8.3/4 (1973): 109–126
To answer that question we needed to create some instruments with which we could gather the data. We are currently engaged in that instrument-building phase. As one step in that process, we interviewed several well-established LDS academicians located at various institutions of higher education in the United States.
A Dialogue with Henry Eyring
Edward L. KimballDialogue 8.3/4 (1973): 99–108
Over the years Henry Eyring’s status in the first rank of scientists has become secure. He has produced a staggering volume of research publications in the fields of his interests: application of quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics, radioactivity, theory of reaction rates, theory of liquids, rheology, molecular biology, optical rotation, and theory of flame.
Seers, Savants and Evolution: A Continuing Dialogue
Duane E. JefferyDialogue 9.3 (1974): 21–37
Duane Jeffrey is to be thanked for his article, “Seers, Savants and Evolution: The Uncomfortable Interface.” It is an excellent summary of the history of thought on evolution in the Church. To illustrate its power, it made us very carefully reconsider our own anti-evolution bias and again perceive evolution as a possibility.
The Possibilities of Dialogue
Robert A. ReesIn a remarkable essay entitled “Beyond Politics” in a recent issue of BYU Studies, Hugh Nibley makes an exciting observation: God not only desires a free discussion with men, He encourages it. Further, it is an essential part of His modus operandi for our return to His presence.
Gambit in the Throbs of a Ten-Year-Old Swamp: Confessions of a Dialogue Intern
Karen Marguerite MoloneyHow does an English graduate student who wants a visit to the East Coast, instruction in the American political system and an introduction into the Mormon publishing world satisfy these three ambitions in one two-month…
“Cooperating in Works of the Spirit”: Notes Toward a Higher Dialogue
Robert A. ReesCommunication is a matter of infinite hope. It is the emotion we feel when we send these fragile words however tentatively or forcefully out to others. Even those who write secret diaries, shrouded in cryptic codes, or who shout anonymous messages on subway walls, or who carefully hide parchment and golden plates in caves to come forth several millennia later all do so with the same expectation: that someone, somewhere will read and understand.
Ten Years with Dialogue: A Personal Anniversary
Mary Lythgoe BradfordWe looked a lot like the picture in the Dialogue logo, although, of course, we didn’t know it then. Gene and Charlotte England, Karl Keller and I were taking lunch on the lawn at the…
The Pink Dialogue and Beyond
Laurel Thatcher UlrichDialogue 14.4 (Winter 1981): 28–39
Some time in June 1970,I invited a few friends to my house to chat about the then emerging women’s movement. If I had known we were about to make history, I would have taken minutes or at least passed a roll around, but of course I didn’t.
Ongoing Dialogue
Linda King NewellSince accepting the editorship of DIALOGUE last spring, we have had a num ber of close friends ask with an air of incredulity, “I think it’s wonderful, but why would you take on such an…
The Unfettered Faithful: An Analysis of the Dialogue Subscribers Survey
Armand L. MaussDuring the spring of 1984, the editors of DIALOGUE sent a short questionnaire to all of its then-2,300 subscribers plus 600 who had let their subscriptions lapse in the previous year. At that point, the journal had been edited in Salt Lake City for exactly two years.
“A Matter of Love”: My Life with Dialogue
Eugene EnglandGod sometimes seems to me quite unreasonable. I’ve thought so especially at times when it appears that the one gift he has clearly given me, the gift of dialogue, is also a source of pain…
Dialogue’s Coming of Age
L. Jackson NewellDIALOGUE: A JOURNAL OF MORMON THOUGHT begins both its twentieth volume and its twenty-first year with the publication of this issue. Launched in 1966 as a daring and earnest effort to transform the serious conversation of…
Monologues and Dialogues: A Personal Perspective
Robert A. ReesEngaging in dialogue is one of the first experiences we have as human beings. Even when our communication is only inarticulate gurgling, we are participating in some kind of communication. Entering into dialogue with another, whether human or divine, is one of the experiences we bring from the preexistence.
The Road to Dialogue: A Continuing Quest
F. Ross PetersonOnce again the editorial mantle of DIALOGUE has passed to a new leadership. The journal is in excellent shape and bears a positive impact from each editorial team. For twenty years numerous individuals have tirelessly…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: A Tribute to Dialogue
Levi S. PetersonI could justly praise DIALOGUE for many qualities . But for the sake of brevity I will concentrate upon a single overriding virtue. DIALOGUE makes my religion interesting. When I was a boy, I believed…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: To Give the Heart: Some Reflections on Dialogue
Lavina Fielding AndersonWhile I was on my mission in France, I received number 1, volume 1 of a publication I had never heard of before—a chunky little journal in a bright blue cover called DIALOGUE. It was…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: Dialogue’s Valuable Service for LDS Intellectuals
Leonard J. ArringtonMany of you will find it difficult to understand the enormous importance DIALOGUE had to my generation and to young Latter-day Saint readers at the time of its founding—those between the ages of twenty and…
Twenty Years with Dialogue: On Building the Kingdom with Dialogue
Eugene EnglandIn the Spring 1987 issue of DIALOGUE, the first of the twentieth-anniversary issues, I was referred to as “the founding editor of DIALOGUE.” That is not true. I was merely one of a group of…
Dialogue Toward Forgiveness: A Supporting View
Richard D. PollDialogue and Difference: “I and Thou” or “We and They”
Seymour CainDialogue
Ellen PearsonA Dialogue Retrospective
Allen D. RobertsA History of Dialogue, Part One: The Early Years, 1965-1971
Devery S. AndersonBearing Your Sanctimony: Monologues on Dialogue
Rebecca ChandlerA History of Dialogue, Part Two: Struggle Toward Maturity, 1971-1982
Devery S. AndersonA History of Dialogue, Part Three: The Utah Experience, 1982-1989
Devery S. AndersonEndowing the Olympic Masses: Light of the World
David G. PaceSpinning Gold: Mormonism and the Olympic Games
Jan ShippsScience and Religion: A Dialogue: Response
David O. TolmanScience and Religion: A Dialogue: What the Universe Means to People Like Me
David D. AllredShort Creek: A Refuge for the Saints
Marianne T. WatsonDialogue 36.3 (Spring 2003): 71–87
Watson shares why early fundamentalists broke off from the main church and decided to leave Utah and settle Short Creek.
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorAn Open Letter to the Dialogue Board
Nathan B. OmanLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorEditor’s Introduction: Celebrating Forty Years of Dialogue
Levi S. PetersonLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorAn Open Letter to Nathan Oman
Robert A. ReesA Lament
Molly BennionFamous Last Words, or Through the Correspondence Files
Mary Lythgoe BradfordThe Possibilities of Dialogue
Robert A. ReesRetrospection and Assessment
Levi S. PetersonLetters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor“Lord, To Whom Shall We Go?” The Challenges of Discipleship and Church Membership
Robert A. ReesPersonal Reflections on the Founding of Dialogue
Paul G. SalisburyA Forty-Year View: Dialogue and the Sober Lessons of History
Frances Lee MenloveThe Founding and the Fortieth: Reflections on the Challenge of Editing and the Promise of Dialogue
G. Wesley JohnsonLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorMaturing and Enduring: Dialogue and Its Readers after Forty Years
Robert W. ReynoldsLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorA Rigorous Examination
Letters to the EditorAppreciation for Dialogue
Letters to the EditorA Halfway Covenant?
Letters to the EditorWriting Awards for 2007
Editor“Rising above Principle”: Ezra Taft Benson as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture 1953-61 Part 1
Gary James Bergera“The Grandest Principle of the Gospel”: Christian Nihilis Sanctified Activism and Eternal Progression
Jacob T. BakerA History of Dialogue, Part Four: A Tale in Two Cities, 1987-92
Devery S. AndersonDialogue in Milan
Letters to the EditorWhat Is Dialogue’s Mission?
Letters to the EditorBest of Dialogue 2008 Awards
EditorA Year of Dialogue: Thinking Myself into Mormonism
Sam BhagwatWriting Awards for 2009
EditorLetter to the Editor
Letters to the EditorWhy Nature Matters: A Special Issue of Dialogue on Mormonism and the Environment
Steven L. PeckFinding the Presence in Mormon History: An Interview with Susanna Morrill, Richard Lyman Bushman,and Robert Orsi
Robert OrsiNixon Was Wrong: Religion and the Presidency, 1960, 2008, and 2012— An Interview with Shaun A. Casey
Shaun A. CaseyLetter to the Editor: Reading Scripture
(author)Letter to the Editor: Brother, Can You Spare a Book?
Letters to the EditorLetter to the Editor: Bender Responds
(author)Letter to the Editor: A Postapocalyptic Perspective?
Letters to the EditorErrata
EditorLetter to the Editor: “Apostates,” “Anti-Mormons,” and Other Problems in Seth Payne’s “Ex-Mormon Narratives and Pastoral Apologetics”
Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: I am enclosing a check for $20.00 as a donation to Dialogue. I sincerely appreciate the efforts which have been made by the Dialogue staff to present such stimulating material. I will do…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: We enjoyed your recent satire on provincial Mormonism (published as a review of The Graduate by one Rustin Kaufman). H. L. Mencken could not have inserted the knife more deftly. It takes an…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: Your poemed portraits proveth much(They prove both plus and minus) So let old Ernie have his view—Give deference to his highness. Robert Baer El Cerrito, Calif. *** Dear Sirs: I have read with interest the…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: As a Dialogue subscriber, I was recently favored with a letter from the “Lloyd for Congress Committee,” asking for a contribution to support a Dr. Kent Lloyd, Ph.D., who is running for Congress…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . . I borrowed the first two issues and have read each one with a great sense of gratitude. I knew it — I knew you were there somewhere, you people…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . . Dialogue can become a source of intellectual sastisfaction that will complement and augment the spiritual satisfaction abundantly provided by the Church. To become such a source it must be…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: After Udall’s letter, what now? Despite the possible political implications of Stewart Udall’s letter, I hailed it as a welcome voice on a subject generally veiled in public silence. And yet after the…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: I enjoyed William Robinson’s article [Autumn, 1968], “Mormons in the Urban Community.” In order to expose our children to something other than our very isolated Mormon community (Utah Valley), two years ago we…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorThe letters in this issue reflect accurately the relative quantity of letters received on the different subjects as well as the various points of view. Dear Sirs: I am much interested in the cover of…
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the EditorDear Sirs: . . . I could not agree more with the comments and views expressed by McMurrin and Bitton (Winter, 1967). I became an ardent admirer of B. H. Roberts from the moment when,…
Letters to the Editor – Udall
Letters to the EditorDialogue 2.2 (Summer 1967): 5–7
In this important historical letter, Stewart Udall reflects on the need for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to reconsider its historical stance on race, particularly its practice of denying full fellowship to Black individuals. Udall argues that this practice, rooted in the belief in a divine curse on Black people, contradicts the principles of equality and brotherhood that the Church should embody. He concludes asserting that the time has come for the Church to abandon its racial restrictions and embrace full fellowship with Black individuals. He argues that recognizing the worth of all people, irrespective of race, is essential for the Church to fulfill its spiritual and moral ideals and to contribute positively to society’s progress toward greater human brotherhood.