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  • Latter-day Saint Thought, Life in the Church, Mormon Studies, Scriptures

    Thou-thee-thy from other angles

    Wilfried Decoo

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    May 21, 2009

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    73 responses

    In General Conference of April 2009, Elder Russell M. Nelson reminded us: Read More

  • Admin, Guest Bloggers

    Times & Seasons Welcomes Robert Ricks

    Marc Bohn

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    May 20, 2009

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    8 responses

    Times & Seasons is happy to introduce our next guest blogger, Robert Ricks.  Read More

  • Cornucopia, Guest Bloggers

    Thank You Guest Bloggers

    Marc Bohn

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    May 20, 2009

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    Times & Seasons would like to thank guest bloggers Rory Swenson and Bruce Webster for their contributions over the last few weeks. We have more great guest bloggers in the works, so stay tuned. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Sacred Space at BYU

    Nate Oman

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    May 20, 2009

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    2 responses

    Here is an updated schedule for BYU’s upcoming conference on Sacred Space on June 3rd.  This looks a really great line up if you are in Provo. Read More

  • 12 Questions, Church History, Cornucopia, General Doctrine, Latter-day Saint Thought, Mormon Studies

    12 Questions for Marvin Perkins, Part One

    Marc Bohn

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    May 20, 2009

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    32 responses

    Marvin Perkins has graciously agreed to answer a few questions from Times & Seasons. Brother Perkins is a Latter-day Saint music producer who is currently the Public Affairs Co-chair for the Genesis Group and who has worked to nurture understanding between African Americans and Latter-day Saints and attack misconceptions. As part of this effort, he has appeared on CNN, among other places. In late 2007, Brother Perkins and former Genesis Group President Darius Gray put out a DVD entitled “Blacks in the Scriptures” that contains four lecture-style scriptural presentations on Blacks and the Bible, Skin Color, Curses, Equality, Priesthood and… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    “Jerusalem”

    Nate Oman

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    May 18, 2009

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    25 responses

    One of my favorite hymns is not in the hymn book. No, it’s not “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing,” although that is one of my favorites as well. Rather, I am talking about the hymn “Jerusalem,” one of the great anthems of the Church of England when it gets low-churchy enough to sing hymns rather than letting the chior do all the work. The words are taken from a poem by William Blake: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    These used to be our playgrounds

    Jonathan Green

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    May 18, 2009

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    14 responses

    From the air, the German neighborhood where we lived until last year seems decidedly un-American Read More

  • Cornucopia

    YoutuBYU

    Frank McIntyre

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    May 18, 2009

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    10 responses

    You will all be delighted to know that youtube appears to be up and running on BYU campus again. Perhaps in part thanks to this. UPDATE:  It’s blocked again. Read More

  • Notes From All Over

    Notes From All Over – thru May 17

    Kent Larsen

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    May 17, 2009

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    51 responses

    Comment here on the Notes From All Over for the past week. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    SMPT at Claremont This Week

    Ben Huff

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    May 17, 2009

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    One response

    With the theme, “Upon All Nations—Religious Pluralism,” the Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology’s Sixth Annual Meeting begins this Thursday at 9am. SMPT’s largest conference program yet includes discussions of theological pluralism and interreligious dialogue; comparisons of Mormonism with Buddhism, Catholicism, and other strands of Christianity; and Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mormon Manners

    Kylie Turley

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    May 17, 2009

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    17 responses

    Are good manners gospel? I’m wondering Read More

  • Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought, News and Politics

    KBYU in Danger of Being Stripped of PBS Affiliation

    Marc Bohn

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    May 15, 2009

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    37 responses

    According to a Washington Post article set to appear in tomorrow’s paper, KBYU may be in serious danger of losing its PBS affiliation if it continues to air Latter-day Saint devotionals and other religious programming. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought

    Creativity as a Religious Virtue

    Craig H.

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    May 15, 2009

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    12 responses

    I usually place empathy at the top of my ladder of desirable religious virtues because I see its presence as the cause of most good and its absence as the cause of most bad. But the more I’ve thought about it, the more it seems that even empathy depends on yet another important quality: creativity. Read More

  • Guest Bloggers, Life in the Church, Mormon Arts, News and Politics

    Uber-Deep and Important Doctrinal Questions

    Bryan Hickman

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    May 15, 2009

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    18 responses

    After reading the post from a couple days ago about optimal tithing rates, I started to think about some of the unanswered questions that have come to mind while I’ve been playing Brick Breaker in Elder’s Quorum pondering the mysteries of the Gospel.  It seems like this audience might be able to offer some differing perspectives on these conundrums that, up to now, have kept me at a loss.  A lot of you seem to be much smarter than I am. Have at them. Read More

  • Book of Mormon, Mormon Studies

    DNA Delight

    Frank McIntyre

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    May 14, 2009

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    46 responses

    A recent DNA study has gotten some attention, both on our sidebar and in a post by J. Nelson-Seawright at By Common Consent. The Mormon question that inevitably comes up from such a study is does it cast any light on the question of whether Lehi really landed in the Americas long ago? J. Nelson-Seawright discusses some possible ramifications if the study (or ones like it) do matter. Let me make clear that, for those who think Lehi landed in an already populated America, this study is basically irrelevant. Read More

  • News and Politics

    Anyone Know John William Yettaw?

    Kent Larsen

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    May 14, 2009

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    57 responses

    Yettaw, who is Mormon according to several news reports, is now in detention in a Burmese jail. Worse, he has managed to get Burma‘s Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who was nearing the end of house arrest under  a 6-year sentence, arrested also. Read More

  • Life in the Church, Social Sciences and Economics

    The Economics of Service and Welfare

    Kent Larsen

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    May 12, 2009

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    70 responses

    A friend of mine suggested a few months ago that ward Elder’s Quorums should stop helping members move. Why, he asks, should we be competing with businesses in our area? Read More

  • General Doctrine, Social Sciences and Economics

    Optimal Tithing

    Frank McIntyre

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    May 11, 2009

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    28 responses

    Suppose that we had a base 8 system instead of base 10, perhaps because, in this hypothetical world, we had 8 fingers rather than 10. Would we pay 1/8 our increase, or do you think it would still be one tenth? Or, to reverse causality, what are the chances we have ten fingers so that we’d develop a base 10 system that would make it easier to count out our tithing? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    LDS Readings of Revelation 21-22

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 10, 2009

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    3 responses

    The Mormon Theology Seminar is beginning a seminar on Revelation 21-22. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    FHE Lesson #5

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 9, 2009

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    3 responses

    Lesson #5: Jesus Made the Earth Read More

  • Church History

    History and Identity

    Dave Banack

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    May 9, 2009

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    3 responses

    I recently read a short essay by Eric Hobsbawm, “Identity History Is Not Enough.” I came across it in his book On History, a collection of essays, but fortunately for you it is available online at the above link (except for the last page, for some reason). Mormonism is not mentioned, but the discussion seems to bear directly on the writing and reading of Mormon history. Read More

  • News and Politics, Notes From All Over

    Notes From All Over – for week ended May 9

    Kent Larsen

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    May 9, 2009

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    4 responses

    Comment here on the Notes From All Over for the past week. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: Classic Julie

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 9, 2009

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    3 responses

    If you haven’t yet read Mother’s Day and The Cheerio Incident by T&S’s Julie Smith, you’re missing out, big time. Go! Read! Enjoy. Read More

  • Life in the Church, News and Politics

    Protest Temples

    Kent Larsen

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    May 8, 2009

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    17 responses

    Its only been a problem once, but we didn’t expect our Temple to be like this. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Contentment in Mothering

    Kylie Turley

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    May 8, 2009

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    15 responses

    My mom sent me an LDS mothering book on contentment for a Mother’s Day present. (Yeah, I know. What’s my mom doing sending me a present for Mother’s Day? She’s really awesome like that.) I’m on chapter three and not particularly loving it, but Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: Some Favorite Conference Talks

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 8, 2009

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    2 responses

    Two that come to mind are: “Daughters of God” by Elder Ballard, April 2008 Conference. “Because She Is a Mother” by Elder Holland, April 1997 Conference. Which talks are your favorites? Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    Brotherhood. Friendship.

    Rory Swensen

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    May 7, 2009

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    7 responses

    Key to this is our ability to strip ourselves of pretense; to lay bare our faults, our doubts, and our struggles. It is a refreshing – and frightening – experience to be completely candid, to trust the others within the group to listen and respect our experiences, even as they candidly respond and criticize. It can be brutal at times, but behind that brutality is always a sense of love and friendship. Read More

  • Book of Mormon, General Doctrine, Guest Bloggers, Latter-day Saint Thought, Scriptures

    What Does My Lack of Personal Trials Say About Me?

    Bryan Hickman

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    May 7, 2009

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    33 responses

    I’ve been thinking long and hard about what I should talk about in my inaugural post on this blog.  Quite honestly, when I agreed to do a stint as a guest blogger, I thought it would be pretty easy.  But, lately, it seems that all my Mormonism-related thoughts have been trite and meaningless.  For example, I considered drafting a post complaining about one of the teachers Elders Quorum and his refusal to teach out of the manual.  But, honestly, I think that post would have just ended up being a rant about a quorum discussion outlining the evils of facial… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: Proclamation

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 7, 2009

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    One response

    Julie Ward Howe’s classic Mother’s Day Proclamation is a beautiful and inspiring aspiration, and is today’s Mother’s Day link. Read More

  • Country Profiles, Life in the Church

    Mormon Mexico

    Kent Larsen

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    May 6, 2009

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    12 responses

    For some time now I’ve been planning a series of posts looking at the LDS presence in different countries around the world. But unlike what has been done elsewhere, I want to find and present information that gives a view of what life may be like for most LDS Church members in that country. I also hope to give an idea of the development of Mormon culture in the country, mention a few of the well-known or notable citizens of that country who are Mormon, as well as a brief idea of the distribution and development of the Church in… Read More

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