Category: Cornucopia

  • ‘Til We Meet Again

    I keep telling myself this, but now I really mean it: It’s time for me to make a graceful exit. Thanks for a fun 10 days, everyone. I’ve appreciated all your comments (yes, all). If I’ve left any loose ends you want to call me on, or if you’d like to contact me for another…

  • BYU Studies cinema

    A message from Jack Welch and Gideon Burton: The upcoming issue of BYU Studies, volume 46, no. 2, will be a long-awaited, double-sized issue about Mormons and film.

  • A little knowledge

    In January 2007 the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) issued new guidelines recommending first-trimester Down syndrome screening for all pregnant women, regardless of age. That means this year, 4 million American women will be offered first-trimester screening for DS, and thousands will receive a positive prenatal diagnosis. This protocol is supposed to increase…

  • Extra-ordinary

    Now working on my final guest post. Thought I’d toss a (non-related) bone in the meantime: Here are ten candid, insightful, courageous pieces from Segullah’s back issues. Enjoy!

  • Brigham Young and the history of reading in the West

    Brigham Young’s condemnation of novel reading during the last two decades of his life is a perfect example of a much-studied moment in the history of reading, the hypothesized “reading revolution” of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. But the peculiar trajectory of Brigham Young’s attitude, from wary tolerance of novel reading to blanket combination…

  • Teach me diligently

    I’ve just been called as Gospel Doctrine teacher.

  • My Love Letter to Boy Scouts

    I heard today from a great-grandchild (one of 30) of the little girl in the story below

  • What think ye…

    …about the Church’s new pamphlet on same-sex attraction?

  • Bitter, Sweet

    This essay was recently published in Literary Mama. I’m posting it here as a precursor to my upcoming post about prenatal testing for Down syndrome. I. In the beginning You can tell a great deal about people by the way they react when you tell them you’re going to have a retarded child.

  • Fields Notes #3

    Who I am is not enough. It is necessary to become more. May 3, 2007 Been out of action nearly a month due to injury from hiking in broken-down boots. Finally bought new boots. Two days ago I made it into the canyon and found it well awakened since my last visit: trees far along…

  • Book Review: Head Start with the Book of MormonBook Cover

    When I think about the curricula available to evangelical homeschoolers, I instantly become guilty of several of the deadly sins. Oh, if I were a young earth creationist, the riches that would be mine!

  • Coming Home

    Summer, 2003: I was a wreck.

  • True Confessions

    Let not any man publish his own righteousness, for others can see that for him; sooner let him confess his sins, and then he will be forgiven and he will bring forth more fruit. (TPJS 194-195)

  • Hearing Voices

    Two years ago when Segullah made its debut I fielded lots of questions. The most frequent was this: Why a new journal?

  • To the Mountains of Ephraim

    This is a talk I gave in Sacrament Meeting today.

  • From the Archives: Pioneer Children

    A week has passed since Pioneer Day. We remembered it here. In my sacrament meeting, where the speakers reminded us of President Hinckley’s meditation on the shade cast by the trees the pioneers planted and the “long shadow” they themselves cast in which we still find some shelter from the heat of the times.

  • The Hafens on Equality

    ECS wrote about this article over at FMH [1]; I’d like to take a different perspective on it–I want to tell you what I liked about it. [2]

  • (Language of) Memory of Feeling

    Memory is a poor substitute for feeling, and language is a poor substitute for memory; yet it is through those dual prisms that we translate the ephemeral raw material of emotion into something more permanent. And it is only that language of memory of feeling — awful, inadequate substitute that it is — that can…

  • Fleshy Tablets

    I have a tattoo on my left ankle.

  • Times & Seasons Welcomes Kathryn Lynard Soper

    Times & Seasons is happy to welcome our newest guest blogger, Kathryn Lynard Soper. Kathryn is a mother of seven with a passion for writing and editing creative nonfiction. Raised in Silver Spring, Maryland, she’s lived in Utah since her BYU days (BA English, 1993). Founder and president of Segullah Group, Inc., Kathryn is editor-in-chief…

  • Mormon literature: the horror, the horror?

    One of the frequent laments about Mormon literature is that so much of the Mormon experience is tied to spiritual experience, which is very difficult to describe in prose. Mormon authors facing that problem could learn a trick or two from Stephen King.

  • Chains

    We sometimes hear two related but distinct chains of reasoning about the consequences of what are perceived as womens’ natural tendencies. Chain One: Women are naturally more spiritual than men.

  • Rescued From the Dustbin of History

    And just where is the dustbin of history these days, you ask? It’s at Amazon, where the pitiless laws of supply and demand are on full display in the “used books” queue attached to every book title. That’s where I rescued a like-new copy of Claudia and Richard Bushman’s Building the Kingdom of God: A…

  • Three, Part One

    Which Dialogue articles should the savvy blog-reader have hot-keyed and ready to go? What would the top three articles be, for useful citation in blog conversation?

  • Another Pew Study

    See here.

  • Whose Woods Are These?

    We moved into our house on the first weekend of January, 1980. One reason we chose it was that it reminded us of Pennsylvania, where we did graduate work. (The other reason? It was the only house we afford because the seller gave us great terms.)

  • Mail and Fee Mail

    The postal rate for periodicals is expected to rise significantly this week, due to changes in the ways rates are calculated.

  • Hypothetical

    What would happen if there was no question in the temple recommend interview about the Word of Wisdom–but there was one about home and visiting teaching?

  • Before the cradle

    There are songs that make me feel that God is all and I am nothing, and that God has given me everything and I deserve none of it, although that is far too precise and theological a description for an experience that is almost entirely pre-rational.

  • The Problem of Counselling with Councils

    Much of church government is carried out in councils and recently they have been received new emphasis, particularly from Elder Ballard. Councils are, however, a problem.