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  • Cornucopia

    FHE Lesson #1

    Julie M. Smith

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    March 23, 2009

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    21 responses

    I’ve decided to start a new series of FHE lessons based on the Gospel Fundamentals book. Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    Time to Reconsolidate?

    Alison Moore Smith

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    March 22, 2009

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    120 responses

    I was only a teenager when the new-fangled consolidated schedule hit the church fashion scene. Read More

  • Church History

    (Beehive) Girls Just Wanna Have Fun – 1916

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    March 22, 2009

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    In 1916, the Beehive Girls were Latter-day Saint young women ages 14 and 15 (the 12- and 13-year-olds were still in Primary). Older teens, and even the mothers of Beehive Girls, could learn the same skills and earn the same badges of honor, if they chose to. Beehive Girls from Thatcher, Arizona Read More

  • Church History

    Jensine Hostmark Grundvig: Zionward

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    March 19, 2009

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    Jensine was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1837, her parents’ youngest child. Her father died when she was 4, her mother when she was 12; she probably spent her youth in the household of one of her much older brothers. In1857 Jensine was married to Frants Christian Grundvig, a young joiner who had come to Copenhagen a few years earlier to learn his trade. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    When Woman Means Man

    Kylie Turley

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    March 18, 2009

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    32 responses

    When I was growing up, “woman” meant “woman” and “man” meant “human.” Or “man.” Depending on the context. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    I challenge you . . . I promise you

    Kaimi Wenger

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    March 18, 2009

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    20 responses

    I challenge you — all of you, collectively — to match up your bracket against mine. (And, well, everyone else who is also matching up their bracket against mine.) Read More

  • Philosophy and Theology

    Confronting Modernity

    Dave Banack

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    March 18, 2009

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    25 responses

    I recently finished up Hans Kung’s Great Christian Thinkers, which reviews the work of seven theologians (Paul, Origen, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Schleiermacher, and Barth). From an LDS perspective, the most interesting of the bunch is Friedrich Schleiermacher, who Kung terms “the paradigmatic theologian of modernity.” The question he presents to LDS readers is how our approach to religion and doctrine deals with modernity. Is our approach premodern, modern, or postmodern (which in theology generally means some version of neo-orthodoxy)? Read More

  • Life in the Church, News and Politics

    The “anti-Mormon” label

    Kent Larsen

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    March 17, 2009

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    42 responses

    Some years ago I had the idea that Mormonism needs an “anti-defamation league”–a group that reviews news coverage and other public actions and publicly condemns those actions that clearly defame Mormons and Mormonism. But I’ve since decided that this is probably not a very workable idea. Read More

  • Church History, Images, Latter-day Saint Thought, Life in the Church, Mormon Arts

    What My Father Did

    Nate Oman

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    March 16, 2009

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    34 responses

    What My Father Did

    A few weeks ago my father retired after spending three decades working for the Church Historical Department.  I’m no doubt guilty of an excess of filial piety, but I think that the Church and Kingdom are better for the work that he did.  Read More

  • Church History, Latter-day Saint Thought

    The Salamander Letter in a nutshell

    Kaimi Wenger

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    March 16, 2009

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    32 responses

    So, what is this scary Salamander Letter that the church is hiding from everybody?    Read More

  • Cornucopia

    So you saw Big Love, then Googled to find out more about this Mormon temple weirdness, and ended up here.

    Julie M. Smith

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    March 15, 2009

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    135 responses

    Hi. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Relief Society Moment

    Kylie Turley

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    March 15, 2009

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    4 responses

    I ran across this Relief Society moment in the March 15, 1873 Woman’s Exponent. Maybe it will make you smile, too: Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    The Gospel of Gluttony and Sloth

    Alison Moore Smith

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    March 14, 2009

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    43 responses

    Some years ago, I noticed a trend among female general auxiliary leaders. With few exceptions, they all lean (no pun intended) to the slimmer side of the LDS population at large (ahem). Much as missionaries have a particular grooming code, is there an unwritten appearance requirement for “upper-level” service? Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    Why Mormons Build Temples

    Alison Moore Smith

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    March 13, 2009

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    16 responses

    The church has a channel on YouTube called Mormon Messages. Yesterday they posted a new video titled, “Why Mormons Build Temples.” (Comments and ratings are not open on this video.) How do you think this will work as a response to the upcoming airing of recreated temple ceremonies (accurate or not)? Read More

  • Church History

    Forgetting, and History

    Dave Banack

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    March 12, 2009

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    11 responses

    From Ernest Renan, a French 19th-century philosopher: Forgetting, and I would say even historical error, is an essential element in the creation of a nation, and that is why the progress of historical studies is often a danger for the nation itself. Read More

  • Church History

    Monument to the Restoration of the Aaronic Priesthood

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    March 12, 2009

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    While uncounted thousands of visual artists have contributed their skills to building Zion, the Fairbanks dynasty holds a special place in the world of Mormon art history: John B. Fairbanks (1855-1940) was one of the art missionaries sent to Paris by the Church, who came home to paint murals for the temples. His sons J. Leo (1878-1946) and Avard T. (1898-1987) have a catalog that must amount to a hundred or more Mormon-themed works: Read More

  • Guest Bloggers

    Be Mannerly

    Alison Moore Smith

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    March 10, 2009

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    34 responses

    In the spirit of President Hinckley’s six be’s, I’d like to submit some suggestions for visiting/home teaching etiquette. Here are my 12 be’s of assigned teaching. Please add your own! Read More

  • Life in the Church

    Being Orthodox in the Modern World

    Dave Banack

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    March 9, 2009

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    9 responses

    A couple of years ago, Noah Feldman published “Orthodox Paradox,” an essay in which he recounted some of the tensions of being an Orthodox Jew in the modern world (I ran across it reading The Best American Spiritual Writing 2008). Increasingly, being an orthodox anything in the modern world raises some of the same tensions. Read More

  • Admin, Guest Bloggers

    Guest Blogger: Alison Moore Smith

    Blog Administration

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    March 9, 2009

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    12 responses

    We are delighted to welcome Alison Moore Smith as a Times and Seasons guest blogger! Read More

  • Cornucopia, News and Politics

    The Miracle of Forgiveness

    Marc Bohn

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    March 9, 2009

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    8 responses

    Thursday night I heard a short piece on the radio that brought me close to tears. Part of NPR’s on-going series of personal essays called This I Believe, the segment illustrated for me the meaning of true forgiveness as perfectly as anything I’ve ever heard. The essay was delivered by two people, Ronald Cotton and Jennifer Thompson-Cannino. Ronald is a man who spent 10 1/2 years in prison for a crime he did not commit based primarily on testimony given by Jennifer, a woman who had mistakenly picked him out of a line-up as the man who had raped her. Read More

  • General Doctrine, Law

    Garment Rights?

    Kent Larsen

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    March 5, 2009

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    125 responses

    Do we have a right to wear garments? If we do, how far does that right go? What , kind of right is it? Is it a human right? Or a legal one that might disappear and reappear as we pass national boundaries? Read More

  • Church History, Women in the Church

    Laura Rees Merrill: Replacing Fear with Peace

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    March 4, 2009

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    Laura Liona Rees was born in Brigham City, Utah, in 1876, to LDS parents (her father had emigrated as a convert from England; her mother was born at Council Bluffs). With only an eighth grade, district school education, she studied for and passed the test to be licensed as a grade school teacher. Then she became one of the first women to attend Utah State Agricultural College (now Utah State University) at Logan. Read More

  • Church History

    “You Can’t Go to Heaven in Cologne Water”: A Missionary Talk by J. Golden Kimball

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    March 2, 2009

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    If you’re going to be disappointed by a J. Golden talk that doesn’t fit the swearing-elder stereotype, stop reading now. This isn’t that kind of J. Golden story. It is a talk the future Seventy gave to a small South Carolina branch in 1891 during a period when local members – including a woman – had been whipped and shot at, their homes ransacked, and the missionaries ordered out of the county at gunpoint. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mountain Meadows Panel Discussion at UVU

    Ben Huff

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    March 1, 2009

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    Richard Turley, Will Bagley, and Forrest Cuch will present a panel discussion this coming Thursday (March 5) at Utah Valley University. These panelists have very, very different perspectives on the events at Mountain Meadows, so bringing them together should make for an exciting conversation. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Life in the Church

    Provident Living Idea

    Julie M. Smith

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    February 28, 2009

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    15 responses

    Since more people are budget-minded these days, I thought I’d begin an occasional series of frugal ideas. Read More

  • Philosophy and Theology

    Theology and Conversation

    Dave Banack

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    February 24, 2009

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    11 responses

    It’s hard for Mormons to find an accessible doorway into theology. David F. Ford’s short book Theology: A Very Short Introduction (OUP, 1999) is the first I’ve found to really give me some traction with this elusive subject. Read More

  • Church History

    Confidential: Have I Got a Deal for You

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    February 24, 2009

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    The original Keepapitchinin printed this “editorial” in 1870: Confidential. We have received the following letter: ”Dear Sir: – a confidential friend having notified us that you can be relied on we send you the enclosed circular.” Read More

  • Book Reviews, Church History, Essential Texts in Mormon Studies, Law, Philosophy and Theology

    A New Book for the Mormon Canon

    Nate Oman

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    February 22, 2009

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    7 responses

    There are a number of Mormon pamphlets and books that have achieved a kind of semi-canonical status within Mormon studies. Everyone agrees, for example, that Parley P. Pratt’s Key to the Science of Theology or John Taylor’s Mediation and Atonement are key texts for understanding nineteenth Mormon thought. If any evidence is needed, both texts, I believe, are still in print. At the very least both have produced modern reprints. I have a proposed addition to the canon, George Q. Cannon’s A Review of the Decision of the Supreme Court in the Case of Geo. Reynolds v. the United States. Read More

  • General Doctrine, Latter-day Saint Thought, Lesson Aids, Scriptures

    Faith and Healing

    Kylie Turley

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    February 20, 2009

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    30 responses

    “And again, it shall come to pass that he that hath faith in me to be healed, and is not appointed unto death, shall be healed. He who hath faith to see shall see. He who hath faith to hear shall hear. The lame who hath faith to leap shall leap.” (D&C 42:48-51)   Read More

  • Cornucopia

    A Mormon History Bleg

    Nate Oman

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    February 20, 2009

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    10 responses

    Do you know of any good source dealing with Mormon attitudes toward and/or involvement in the Spanish-American War? Please give me your ideas in the comments. Thanks! Read More

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