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    At times like these, I thinks it’s valuable to review one of the Book of Mormon’s most repeated prophecies. Quick review: Gentiles=white people. Remanent of Jacob=Natives. If Gentiles repent, they can join with the remnant. Read More

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    The Sound of Mormonism: A Media History of Latter-Day Saints: A Review

    A few years back, Jared Farmer gave an interesting lecture in Logan, Utah for the annual Arrington Mormon History Lecture series called “Music & the Unspoken Truth,” which focused on the relationship between sound, religion and place, with a particular focus on Music & the Spoken Word. Since then, he has expanded the text of the lecture into a book-length treatment of the subject entitled The Sound of Mormonism: A Media History of Latter-Day Saints, which has been released as a free PDF through the Utah State University libraries and as a physical book through the Utah State University Press.  Read More

  • 14 responses

    Selling Temples

    It’s no secret that some are worried that the Church is overbuilding temples. While most make some sense in terms of the Church’s goal of having a temple close and accessible to members, anecdotes abound about temples being put very proximate to other temples that are already suffering from low attendance, and in the worst case scenario the question may naturally arise about what to do with temples who through the vagaries of long-term geodemographic fate end up hardly used at all and sitting virtually empty month-by-month with perhaps a caretaker senior couple.  If the worst case hypothetical comes to… Read More

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    CFM 6/16-6/22: Poetry for “The Lord Requireth the Heart and a Willing Mind”

    What does it mean to have a “willing mind”? My first thought is that it is somehow about our attitude, how we confront or approach problems. But despite the prevalence of ‘positive mental attitude’ sayings and motivational posters, most people act as if their emotional state is something beyond their control. We act like we believe that outside circumstances determine whether we are happy or sad. But, while we act that way, the scriptures suggest we do something different, because “The Lord Requireth the Heart and a Willing Mind.” Thinking about it, that seems really difficult. Read More

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    Anti-Latter-day Saint stigma in academia is one of those things for which there is no solid data, so all that anybody has to work off of are anecdotes. However, given that 1) we know that people in general don’t really like us, 2) we are associated with a conservative ideology, and 3) there is plenty of research that suggests that academics are systematically biased against conservative applicants and papers––ipso facto nobody should be surprised at an anti-Latter-day Saint bias in academia.  But again we only have anecdotes, not direct evidence even if theoretically makes sense, so for my own contribution… Read More

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    Planting the Acorn: A Review

    One hundred years ago this December, a group of three general authorities dedicated South America for the preaching of the gospel while establishing a mission in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Given that this year is the centennial anniversary, there are a few ways in which the Church has been celebrating, such as the repeated visits by the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square to South America. The contribution of the Religious Studies Center at BYU to those celebrations is the book Planting the Acorn: The South American Mission by Mark L. Grover. Read More

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    My Take on Masonry and the Temple

    I generally consider myself pro-apologist. I think apologetics and apologists get a lot of undeserved grief in the Church (I see this as something of a pendulum swing from the 90s or so when Hugh Nibley types were rock stars that commanded huge fireside audiences). However, there have been a small handful of places where I personally found what I’ll call classical apologetics writ large to be a little coy (I’m making a distinction here between 2025 apologetics, which is more sophisticated by necessity, and, say late-20th century, “classical” apologetics). Well, actually really just two places, for all the other… Read More

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    Review: Joseph Smith: The Rise and Fall of an American Prophet

    The wait for the long-anticipated biography Joseph Smith: The Rise and Fall of an American Prophet by John G. Turner is soon over. Available through Yale University Press, this is the first major biography released about the founding prophet of the Latter Day Saint movement since the completion of the Joseph Smith Papers project. It is a notable contribution to the study of Smith’s life by someone who has never been affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. A lot of research went into the biography, and due to the smaller size of the book (464 Pages,… Read More

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    CFM 6/9-6/15: Poetry for “I Am with the Faithful Always”

    While the early saints from the time that the Doctrine and Covenants was written were not just constructing an institution and building a community, they were also doing the mental work of building testimony—and it looks to me like the process may have been a little different from what we go through today. Where many or most Church members today learn at home from parents or through classes at church — which we hope spark the mental work required to construct our beliefs and faith — the early members largely didn’t have those supports and instead were more dépendant on… Read More

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    Cutting-Edge Latter-day Saint Research, May 2025

    Simon, Hemopereki. “Decolonizing Lamanite Studies—A Critical and Decolonial Indigenist Perspective.” Religions 16, no. 6 (2025): 667. Read More

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    Worse than a crime

    The way the United States is treating immigrants is a terrible mistake. Read More

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    One of the most important initiatives using primary sources from the Church History Library has been LaJean Carruth’s efforts to transcribe George D. Watt’s shorthand records. Her work has elucidated insights into early Utah history and the speeches of Church leaders that were previously unavailable. Over the course of her work, LaJean Purcell Carruth has learned much about those leaders, particularly Brigham Young, and has worked to share what she has learned. One example is a recent post at the Latter-day Saint history blog From the Desk on Brigham Young in his own words. In the post, she shared some… Read More

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    Brigham Young was Right: Polygamy and Hypocrisy

    It’s perhaps a little unpopular to argue that Brigham Young got anything right about polygamy, but one place where I think he was onto something was to point out the all-too-common hypocrisy of many vehement anti-polygamists (see full quotes below). Mark Twain authored that famous jab about how ugly Mormon plural wives were–but maybe that’s because the women he collected were younger.  Victorian-era Church leaders were indeed onto something about how people would preen about those awful Mormon abominations against public virtue and then visit a prostitute (London alone had over 80,000 of them, and I assume they weren’t just… Read More

  • CFM 6/2-6/8: Poetry for “Anxiously Engaged in a Good Cause”

    I’ve always loved the idea of being “anxiously engaged in a good cause.” The sense of agency generally assumed from the phrase suggests that I can figure out myself good things that need doing and how to make those things happen. The idea that not everything good is planned out and my role is flexible is very appealing. Of course, that has some risk with it. Read More

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    A Lot More People are Leaving the Church Now

    I finally got around to calculating the Church leaving rates from the latest Pew Religious Landscape Survey. The PRLS is one of the few surveys that has questions about both former and current religious affiliation with a large enough sample size that it can tell us something about Latter-day Saints. So what do we find? According to the 2023-2024 PRLS, 54% of people who were raised Latter-day Saint still identify as such. So about half. However, when we run the same numbers for 2014 it was 64%. And when we run the same numbers for the 2007 wave it was… Read More

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    Tidbits from Early Church Primary Sources: Mormonism Unvailed

    A series I am going to occasionally come back to on my takes on early Church primary sources that I’m reading. We have a tendency to only read secondary takes, whether a talk, book, or commonly shared anecdote, but there are often insights buried in the primary sources that don’t make it into the collective consciousness. Mormonism “Unvailed” (not to be confused with the much later work Mormonism “Unveiled” by John D. Lee/Lee’s ghostwriter) was the first anti-Mormon book. Most of it was a basic history of the Church thickly layered with invective about those scoundrelly scoundrel dupes thrown in,… Read More

  • CFM 5/26-6/1: Poetry for “A Faithful, a Just, and a Wise Steward”

    How do we define the word ‘stewardship’? In church we use it quite a lot — maybe as much as we use the word ‘responsibility’ — but since we use both and since they are somewhat interchangeable, I wish I knew of a clear statement that distinguished how we use these two terms. As far as I can tell, ‘stewardship’ is something larger, taking in more than just specific tasks or the clear responsibilities of a role. A stewardship seems more all-encompassing — and this graphic I found, which to me resonates with the covenants in the Temple, I think… Read More

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    “Moral Luck” and Time of Death

    A common theme in Latter-day Saint circles, admittedly with some scriptural support (Alma 34), is the idea that what matters at the end of the day is where we are with God at the moment of our death. That if somebody lives a sanctified life but throws it all out the last week of her life then she’s in a worse place than somebody who conversely lived a non-gospel life and found Jesus at the end. That the moment of death is sort of a “pencils down” moment in the test of life.  In terms of Church history, perhaps one… Read More

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    What Would an “Open Borders” American Church Look Like? Affirmative Action, Munch N Mingles, and Polyglot Patriarchs

    I am for open borders (more or less, with some exceptions we needn’t go into here). I was even quoted in a conservative newspaper’s article headlined “Illegal immigrants have a friend in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” based on a Deseret News article I wrote  (although it didn’t exactly help my thesis that a lot of the comments were along the lines of “get out of my country Mexicans”). You could take John Corrill’s and others’ accounts of how we were treated as impoverished never do-well immigrants and they would not look out of place in some… Read More

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    Guest post by Joseph Green I’ve been reading with interest the new book on evolution published by BYU’s College of Life Sciences, The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ and Evolution. (While the print version has yet to be released, a free copy of the PDF is available now on the college’s web site.) As someone who accepts the science of evolutionary biology, I fully concur with the editors’ thesis that evolution is compatible with the restored gospel. However, because I have a degree in biblical studies, I’m also interested in how the authors interact with scholarship regarding the various creation… Read More

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    CFM 5/19-5/25: Poetry for “That Which Is of God Is Light”

    If “that which is of God is light,” then we all want to be enlightened; that is, brought into God’s presence and to His understanding. While sections 49 and 50 of the Doctrine and Covenants were written to ‘enlighten’ Leman Copley and others, we might also find in them other light, addressing issues for us today in addition to the unenlightened ideas that they held onto. What other enlightenment can we find in these sections? Read More

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    A Review: Prepare Me for Thy Use

    Prepare Me for Thy Use: Lessons from Wilford Woodruff’s Mission Years, by Kristy Wheelwright Taylor is a wonderful, concentrated dose of Wilford Woodruff’s life for devoted Latter-day Saints. Taylor is able to draw upon her work as board secretary for the Wilford Woodruff Papers Foundation and knowledge of the sources available through the Wilford Woodruff Papers project as well as other publications about Wilford Woodruff in compiling this book. As the title suggests, the historical narrative of the book focuses on the missionary journeys taken by Woodruff between 1834 and 1847, following a roughly chronological approach. The chapters, however, are… Read More

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    Pornography, Rape, Child Abuse, and the Future of Sexuality

    Bound feet. This will become relevant later. Obviously all sorts of content warnings here, as the kids say.  In the Friends episode “The One With Free Porn” Joey and Chandler accidentally start receiving free porn through their cable service, and don’t turn off the TV for fear that they’ll lose it. The running joke throughout the episode is that their sense of reality and expectations about sexuality in daily life are warped, being surprised and dismayed that the pizza girl just drops off the pizza and the bank tellers just deposit their money.  Not to suddenly go dark, but on a… Read More

  • 13 responses

    There has been some recent excitement in the Latter-day Saint scholarly community about the recent publication of BYU Life Sciences, The Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ and Evolution. It’s a publication that’s been years in the making, and highly anticipated during the last few years, so it’s good to see it come to fruition. Co-editor Jamie Jensen recent discussed the book in an interview at the Latter-day Saint history and theology site, From the Desk. What follows here is a copost to the full interview. Read More

  • The Doctrine and Covenants very rarely mentions women. In fact, it only mentions two contemporary women by name: Emma Hale Smith and Vienna Jaques. The former is by far the better known of the two, but Vienna Jaques is remarkable, for a few reasons. In a recent interview at the Latter-day Saint history blog From the Desk, biographer Brent Rogers discussed her life and role in the Church’s history. What follows here is a copost to the full interview Read More

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    “The Savior Welcomes All” — Shouldn’t We?

    This past Sunday I was struck by a question in Sunday School. After the teacher had explained that the early Church had been forced to move from place to place until it reached Utah, a man who was baptized a few years ago asked, “Why were church members forced to leave so many places? I mean, the members here are so nice!” The subsequent discussion was wonderful, as well-informed members pointed out the need for gathering, how gathering can feel like a threat to outsiders, how members often didn’t act as they should — they weren’t always nice. One example… Read More

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    “Bounds Set to the Heavens”

    A prophet looking into a curved universe One of the more curious asides in modern revelation is D&C 121 when God tells Joseph that he was living in a time “Which our forefathers have awaited with anxious expectation.” When all sorts of truths would finally be revealed: And also, if there be bounds set to the heavens or to the seas, or to the dry land, or to the sun, moon, or stars—All the times of their revolutions, all the appointed days, months, and years, and all the days of their days, months, and years, and all their glories, laws,… Read More

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    Monogamy is the Rule, Part 5: The Rule of One

    In the previous two posts in this series, I discussed an 1886 dictated revelation from John Taylor. A related claim to this document that I am addressing here is that when fundamentalist Latter-day Saint groups began to become a religious movement in their own right during the 1910s and 1920s, the leadership of the majority group claimed to have been given authority to perform plural marriages in perpetuity by President John Taylor. It’s uncertain what John Taylor said and did in this regard, but the position of the revelations and praxis of church presidents both before and after Taylor indicate… Read More

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    This is about six years too late to count as a book review, but Don Bradley’s The Lost 116 Pages: Reconstructing the Book of Mormon’s Missing Stories is excellent. It is a rare combination of scriptural investigation and historical whodunit that is both fascinating and insightful. Read More

  • CFM 5/12-5/18: Poetry for “Seek Ye Earnestly the Best Gifts”

      I get the idea of seeking good things, even gifts, but somehow it feels a little like being a child, pining away for the popular toy of the moment as a Christmas gift. If it’s a gift, shouldn’t it be something unexpected? Or at least shouldn’t we be humble enough to accept the gifts that are right for us instead of what we desire? Read More