Category: General Doctrine

  • Hugs and Kisses

    It’s holiday season, which means more friends and family and greetings, in person or otherwise, than usual. Add to that a few weddings receptions and you can get downright sore from all the hugging and hand-wrenching. Not to mention confused by the vast array of possibilities for saying hello or goodbye or Merry Christmas or…

  • Millennial Vegetarianism

    Enjoy that Thanksgiving turkey . . . while you can. You may be a vegetarian during the millennium.

  • The Gospel and Immigration

    A High Priest I know is in crisis. He is an immigrant who, like many other Church members, came to the US without a visa, according to what I understand of the situation. After arriving here he joined the Church, and eventually fell in love and married a U.S. Citizen, a wonderful, faithful Church member.…

  • Confirm or Deny?

    The following is making the email rounds with lightning speed. It claims to be talk given recently by President Packer. Can anyone confirm or deny?

  • Compassion and Creativity

    Most everyone I’ve talked to loved President Uchtdorf’s talk at the General Relief Society Broadcast. But I have a question (and yes, men, this is for you, too—since I assume that as a son of God, you also get joy in following the Father’s example of creation and compassion):

  • Questions about Personal Responsibility and the Economic Bailout

    How should we think about personal responsibility in light of the financial bailout currently being debated in Washington, D.C.?

  • Unsubstantiated Rumor #2

    Over at MAD-Board, there is rumor about a policy change, to the effect that women may now be sealed to more than one (deceased) husband (just as men may now be sealed to more than one deceased wife). Can anyone confirm or un-confirm this one?

  • Salvation or Happiness?

    During the last few years, I’ve noticed that less often is “the plan of salvation” used in General Conference, and more often we hear “the plan of happiness.” Anyone know why?

  • What We Didn’t Discuss

    The gospel doctrine lesson on Alma 43-52 proposed four principles of war as waged by the righteous:

  • The Reality of Satan

    I heard a story on This American Life a couple of weeks ago that has had me thinking about the reality of Satan and just what that means for us in our lives.

  • Global Warming, Redefining Marriage, and Risk Aversion

    I think we can all agree that, from a risk analysis perspective, global warming and gay marriage share a lot of characteristics.

  • Revelation 3:14-22

    Previous posts in this series are available here.

  • Eve

    (I hope you haven’t discussed this before, at least not in this way.) At the height of national debate over the Equal Rights Amendment, Elder Bruce R. McConkie explained that all LDS women should look to Eve: “Eve, the mother of all living, is truly the perfect pattern for all her daughters. Oh that all…

  • Socialism and United Order

    I stumbled across a few LDS socialist stories when I was writing my MA thesis.

  • Why Bread and Water in the Sacrament?

    Why does “communion sweet” in the sacrament require both bread and water?**

  • Christ’s nativity: a solution

    From Steven Vanden Broecke, The Limits of Influence

  • Foundation and Apostasy

    What if the historical evidence for the foundation of the early Christian church is indistinguishable from evidence for its apostasy? What if the early church and its scriptures only arose through processes of decay?

  • Resurrection B.C.

    According to an article in the New York Times today, evidence of Jewish belief in a resurrected Messiah decades before Christ’s birth may have been discovered.

  • Religious Pragmatism

    Oliver Wendell Holmes famously wrote, “The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.” [1] In various writings, he expanded that claim, contrasting a natural law approach to justifying legal and ethical rules of conduct with his own more modest approach rooted in history and experience and falling under the broad…

  • Summer Seminar update

    For those interested in the BYU summer seminar, I’ve revised the post, adding the titles of and abstracts for the papers.

  • Why a Second Coming?

    It might seem that there are few Hegelians in the world today.

  • Perfection

    In Comparative World Religions (REL 151) my freshman year I was taught that the word “Holy” is derived, or related to the word “Whole.” The basic idea being that part of being a perfect Divine being is the state of being complete, whole, or finished. I’ve wondered in the past just what perfect really means…

  • Who took the LD out of LDS?

    -or- What ever happened to the good ol’ last days? -or- Where have all the millennialists gone?

  • History and Scripture

  • Joseph Smith chopped down the Sacred Grove

    Twelve years ago my family piled in a rented RV and drove cross-country to attend a wedding reception for my older brother and his wife in Minnesota. On the way we stopped at the church history sites in Missouri, including Independence, Liberty Jail, and Far West.

  • Structural apostasy

    Off the top of my head, I think that in the Church we generally mean one of three things when we use the word “apostasy”:

  • Prophecy vs. History

    Not too long ago, I stumbled across the PBS presentation of Jared Diamond’s book Guns, Germs, and Steel (2d ed. 1999). It reminded me of dealing with the book at college and enjoying the ideas presented and the sweeping take of world history that it offered. But while watching the presentation and contemplating the message…

  • Market Dominant Minorities in the Book of Mormon

    Market Dominant Minorities

  • Chance in Creation

    The most recent lesson in the Wilford Woodruff manual contains a quote from a general conference sermon given by Woodruff on April 6, 1872: The Lord never created this world at random; he has never done any of his work at random. The earth was created for certain purposes; and one of these purposes was…

  • On the Brilliance of Hollow Slogans

    Last week, a bizarre demand was thrust on me by a flier advertising a leadership training program: “BECOME YOURSELF!” the photocopied handout vigorously proclaimed. Who, I wondered, does this flier suppose that I am being right now? Obviously not J. Nelson-Seawright; otherwise, there would be no reason to request that I become J. N-S, would…