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  • 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

  • Church History

    A Mormon in the Family Tree

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    May 6, 2009

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    Family Tree Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: Double Feature – Haglund & Harris

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 6, 2009

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    Read the sermon by the Reverend Canon Susan Harris, halfway down. And read Kristine’s thoughts about the value of motherhood, and how she (gasp) mostly agrees with Julie Beck. Read More

  • Cornucopia, General Doctrine, Latter-day Saint Thought, Life in the Church, News and Politics

    Obama’s Mom, Holocaust Survivors and Proxy Temple Work

    Marc Bohn

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    May 5, 2009

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    55 responses

    The Mormon practice of proxy ordinance work has once again made its way into the news, this time involving someone no less prominent than our U.S. President’s late mother. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: My talk

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 5, 2009

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    23 responses

    It’s hard to strike the right balance, between affirming Moms who really need to be told that they made a good decision; and letting others (especially women) know that they’re okay, too. Last year, I gave this talk. It worked well in my ward, I think. It shows one way of trying to navigate the tension. Read More

  • Admin, Guest Bloggers

    Times & Seasons Welcomes Bryan Hickman

    Marc Bohn

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    May 4, 2009

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    5 responses

    Even as our current guest bloggers, Rory Swenson and Bruce Webster, are still wrapping up their guest posting stints, Times & Seasons is happy to introduce our next guest blogger, Bryan Hickman. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day: The Sea all Water

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 4, 2009

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    4 responses

    “Motherhood rose around me like a tide in the weeks after my daughter’s birth,” begins Rosalynde’s 2005 post The Sea All Water. “Each night advanced toward me, implacable as a wave, my panic and dread rising like froth up a beach until the moment of submersion, when, wondrously, I found I could float. Few things in life have come to me as arduously as motherhood came, and nothing else has revealed itself as suddenly.” (more…) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Week of Mother’s Day

    Kaimi Wenger

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    May 4, 2009

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    3 responses

    For the week leading to Mothers Day, I’m going to post a variety of links, talks, and other related materials. We welcome your comments as we try to highlight some discussions about mothers, motherhood, and Mother’s Day. Read More

  • Latter-day Saint Thought, News and Politics

    When Should the News Mention Religious Affiliation?

    Kent Larsen

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    May 3, 2009

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    48 responses

    When I was a youth (pre-1978), a magazine article about the Church hit the newsstands in Washington D.C., and we, local members, were ecstatic with what we considered great coverage of the Church. So I was very surprised at the negative reaction of the missionaries in our ward. It seems that the article had a few negative things to say that we thought were minor (and accurate), and the missionaries felt were major derogatory statements that put the Church in a bad light. While the situation isn’t the same, I read a similar reaction yesterday, objecting to the mention in… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    FHE Lesson #4

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 3, 2009

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    2 responses

    Lesson #4: We Are Free to Choose Read More

  • Cornucopia, News and Politics, Notes From All Over

    Notes From All Over — for Week Ended 2 May

    Kent Larsen

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    May 2, 2009

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    6 responses

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

  • Bloggernacle+, General Doctrine, News and Politics

    Compassion for the Unworthy

    Kent Larsen

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    May 1, 2009

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    55 responses

    Can I remind us of something? The rhetoric here and elsewhere on the bloggernacle, the Internet, and evidently in the personal lives of some of us, seems all too often to be based on the idea that there is a worthiness test for compassion. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Life in the Church

    Strawberries on Sale? How to . . .

    Kylie Turley

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    May 1, 2009

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    15 responses

    “Make Strawberry Wine” (Woman’s Exponent, “Household Hint,” May 1, 1873) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Sacred Space at BYU

    Nate Oman

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    April 30, 2009

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    14 responses

    A conference announcement that makes me wish I were closer to Utah: Read More

  • Bloggernacle+

    To Tweet or Not to Tweet

    Dave Banack

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    April 29, 2009

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    34 responses

    When I first heard about Twitter, I thought it was one of those truly dumb ideas that couldn’t possibly catch on. Now it is an infotsunami, sweeping over the world in a growing horde of 140-character snippets [see “People Are Flocking to Twitter” at LDS Media Talk for a quick update]. So do you join the wave or run for high ground? Read More

  • Guest Bloggers, News and Politics

    Musings on Drifting Faith

    Rory Swensen

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    April 27, 2009

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    24 responses

    The question becomes not if our policies and teachings will adapt, but rather how. And further, what statements are we making today – strident and bombastic – for which we will be judged tomorrow? Statements and positions that our future generations will be pressed to reconcile, to explain, or to disavow? Read More

  • Book Reviews, General Doctrine, Guest Bloggers, Latter-day Saint Thought, Nature and Environment, News and Politics

    Four sources of the Apocalypse

    Bruce F. Webster

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    April 27, 2009

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    46 responses

    With the past two months, I have read — for various reasons — four different novels laying out apocalyptic events within the United States. Here are the novels, in the order I read (or re-read) them, and with the reasons why I read them: — Lucifer’s Hammer by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle (1977): a comet fragments and strikes the Earth in numerous places, collapsing much of world civilization, including the United States. I’ve read this several times before; I saw it cited on a blog (Samizdata) in a discussion on “the best end-of-the-world novels”  and decided to dig it… Read More

  • Admin, Guest Bloggers

    Times & Seasons Welcomes Bruce Webster

    Dave Banack

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    April 27, 2009

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    10 responses

    Even as our current guest blogger continues to post, Times & Seasons is happy to welcome Bruce Webster as our next guest blogger. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Another Reason Why Church Members Should Support Comprehensive Immigration Reform

    Marc Bohn

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    April 26, 2009

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    104 responses

    Last year, several General Authorities, including Elders M. Russell Ballard and Marlin K. Jensen, waded into the immigration debate in an attempt to influence and moderate the policies being discussed. Given the large number of undocumented immigrants in the Church, especially out West, and the dramatic effect that immigration crackdowns have on our membership, the reason for such action is understandable. In recent weeks, additional developments underscore why, in my mind, Church members ought to support comprehensive immigration reform that, while seeking to better secure our borders and enforce immigration law, also allows otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants who are currently… Read More

  • Cornucopia, Law, News and Politics

    Bye-bye, Bybee?

    Kaimi Wenger

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    April 25, 2009

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    114 responses

    A week ago, the New York Times joined the growing chorus of commenters calling for Judge Jay Bybee’s impeachment. Is impeachment really going to happen? And what should we think about the issue? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Notes from All Over thru April 25th – Comments

    Kent Larsen

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    April 25, 2009

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    27 responses

    Here’s the place to make your comments on our ‘Notes from All Over’ for last week. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Future of Religious Liberty

    Dave Banack

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    April 24, 2009

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    84 responses

    Does it have a future? Some people view religious liberty as a civil and constitutional right; increasingly, others see it as a problem to be dealt with. The Mirror of Justice post “Securing Religious Liberty in an Age of Growing Intolerance” is a short reflection on what this means for the future of religious liberty. Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    Speaking of Faith

    Rory Swensen

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    April 23, 2009

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    7 responses

    Religion can be divisive. We read of historical confrontations and we witness the divisiveness in the world around us – between major world religions and among the sectarian branches they foster. But while religion and faith claims can be divisive, it needn’t be this way. There are ways to approach faith and differences of faith in constructive, expanding ways. One example is carried on over 200 public radio stations each week, a program called Speaking of Faith. The host, Krista Tippett, explores faith in a narrative approach that draws out the complexities of, the power in, and the wisdom gained… Read More

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