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  • Scriptures, Social Sciences and Economics

    Moral Hazard in the Scriptures

    Frank McIntyre

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    May 23, 2008

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    16 responses

    For those hoping to find more economics in their scripture study… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Introducing Innocents to the Fallen World

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 21, 2008

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    24 responses

    Scene One: In the car. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Element Call for Student Submissions (July 15 deadline)

    Ben Huff

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    May 21, 2008

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    3 responses

    Element: The Journal of the Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology is publishing a special issue dedicated to student articles. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Revelation 1:1-3

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 20, 2008

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    19 responses

    So much for one post per chapter. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Interpretations: MSH at SVU

    Ben Huff

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    May 20, 2008

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    15 responses

    This past Friday and Saturday I attended a very enjoyable conference at Southern Virginia University, co-sponsored by Mormon Scholars in the Humanities and the Mormon Scholars Foundation. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    God Himself

    Kathryn Lynard Soper

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    May 18, 2008

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    17 responses

    Lucky me, I got to talk about Mosiah 15 in my Gospel Doctrine lesson today. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    You Should Write More Letters

    Dave Banack

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    May 18, 2008

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    8 responses

    You never know what they’ll be worth someday: “Einstein Letter on God Sells for $404,000.” Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Revelation 21:10-21

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 16, 2008

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    52 responses

    Before we begin, we need to begin at the beginning: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Faith and Fame

    Dave Banack

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    May 16, 2008

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    29 responses

    Faith and fame aren’t always an easy mix, but Mormons who hit the big time seem to be able to hold it together most of the time. At least that’s the thrust of “How Mormons Deal With Fame” at the LDS Newsroom, discussing, among other names we all recognize, the 17-year-old phenom David Archuleta. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Let’s Prognosticate

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 15, 2008

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    71 responses

    Gas prices. Food prices. Credit crisis. Recession. Iraq. Iran. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Food Storage Idea

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 14, 2008

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    26 responses

    There’s a really good conversation about food storage over at MMW and I want to throw one more idea out there, because it hadn’t occurred to me until recently that the best place to do my food storage buying was the most expensive grocery store in town. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Love Thy Neighbor … or Not

    Dave Banack

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    May 14, 2008

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    3 responses

    I don’t read to the end of many online essays anymore — either most writing is dull and pointless or I have developed blog-induced attention deficit disorder, you decide which. But I read “Love Thy Neighbor: The religion beat in an age of intolerance” at the Columbia Journalism Review start to finish (hat tip: Get Religion). Read More

  • Comparative religion

    Apostasy and the Dark Ages

    Dave Banack

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    May 12, 2008

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    69 responses

    Do these concepts have anything to do with each other? Apparently some Mormons think they do, hence Davis Bitton’s corrective essay “How Dark Were the Dark Ages?” (conveniently reposted at Meridian Magazine). Read More

  • Cornucopia

    From the Archives: My Gifts (Whitsunday Reflections)

    Russell Arben Fox

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    May 11, 2008

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    6 responses

    Today is Whitsunday on the Christian liturgical calendar, a holiday in honor of the Day of Pentecost. Not quite four years ago, in June of 2005, I wrote something about the gifts demonstrated on that day, and about those–decidedly less spetacular–gifts which I believe I have. I’m somewhat proud of it; I think it is one of the more honest things I’ve ever written about myself. The text is below; you might want to check out the comments on the original post as well. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mother’s Day is Looming

    Dave Banack

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    May 10, 2008

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    18 responses

    And for thousands of Latter-day Saints who will be delivering a Mother’s Day talk tomorrow, it is looming large. Expectations are high and scriptural sources are limited. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Heimskringla and historicity

    Jonathan Green

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    May 8, 2008

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    47 responses

    There’s a reasonable chance that all efforts to situate the Book of Mormon over the last 180 years, geographically, culturally, and chronologically, are based on the Nephite version of the Donation of Constantine. But first, let’s talk about Odin. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    IDTM

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 7, 2008

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    99 responses

    If one more Mormon tells me to see Expelled, I am going to scream. Read More

  • Life in the Church, Social Sciences and Economics

    Shortage and storage

    Frank McIntyre

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    May 7, 2008

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    38 responses

    With the recent spike in food prices, a three year old post demands new life. Here it is: Clearly, were there to be a famine, a one year food supply in the basement would look really good. What may be slightly less obvious is that the presence of food storage, even if nobody ever uses any of it for an emergency, can stop a famine from ever actually happening. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mormons and Reality Shows

    Julie M. Smith

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    May 6, 2008

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    24 responses

    Read and discuss. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Gertrud Specht

    Jonathan Green

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    May 6, 2008

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    9 responses

    Gertrud Specht had been a searcher her whole life before she found what she was looking for Read More

  • Cornucopia

    That Daguerreotype Again (2 of 2)

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    May 4, 2008

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    6 responses

    Chapters 9 and 10 of Millions Shall Know Brother Joseph Again deal with purported photographs of Joseph Smith, including the Scannel daguerreotype. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Catholic parish registers belong to humanity

    Wilfried Decoo

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    May 4, 2008

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    112 responses

    According to various news outlets the Catholic Church has ordered its dioceses to not allow Mormons access to parish registers any more. For decades, our Church has copied and preserved millions of pages of parish registers around the world, as part of the injunction to seek out ancestors and perform ordinances in their behalf. There are probably still millions of pages out there, uncopied. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    That Daguerreotype Again (part 1 of 2)

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    May 2, 2008

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    6 responses

    Jared T. at Juvenile Instructor is posting a formal, detailed, academic review of S. Michael Tracy, Millions Shall Know Brother Joseph Again: The Joseph Smith Photograph (Salt Lake City: Eborn Pub., 2008), Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Some Notes on Religious Freedom from the Former USSR

    Russell Arben Fox

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    May 1, 2008

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    20 responses

    An old friend of mine (a former bishop, for whatever that’s worth) whom I keep in touch with by e-mail has spent much of the past decade working for the U.S. government in different capacities in Russia and Ukraine. In response to some recent news items regarding limits on visas to the former Soviet Union, I asked him to comment on how the church and the missionary program is fairing there. This is what he has to say. For security reasons, he asked that I post it without his name attached. Read More

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

    Gospel culture and the others

    Wilfried Decoo

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    May 1, 2008

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    19 responses

    How do ‘we’ as Mormons learn to view ‘others’? We can try to answer this question from the angle of various approaches to the concept of “gospel culture”. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Janos Kalapsza “… went out to the Mormons”

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    April 30, 2008

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    11 responses

    1848 was a year of turmoil in Europe, with revolutions in France and Italy and Sicily and Germany and Poland and Romania and Moldavia and … and … and … the list seems nearly endless. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Ladies first?

    Kaimi Wenger

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    April 29, 2008

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    145 responses

    Some bloggernacle women were troubled by the order of the solemn assembly: First, the Priesthood voted (all the way down to the 12-year-olds); they were followed by the women’s organizations. In a comment at FMH, Exponent blog’s Maria notes, “By having women vote after the Aaronic priesthood, it seemed as if the implication was made that those 12 year old boys either preside over or are more important than the women of the RS, including the General RS presidency. Either way, the message is harmful. I worry about the way this could make women and young women in the church… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Largest Spider Web in Utah

    Matt Evans

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    April 29, 2008

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    28 responses

    Well, probably not. But it’s certainly the biggest web I’ve ever seen, and it happens to be in my front yard so I’m especially…interested.  Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Bittersweet Sixteen: Part Three

    Patricia Karamesines

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    April 27, 2008

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    43 responses

    Like many people dependent upon care from others, M can be a tyrant. For instance, sensing my anxiousness during her feedings, when it’s crucial to get enough into her to sustain her plus stimulate her slow growth curve, she’s begun extorting favors. Sometimes she’ll demand to watch her favorite video over and over or else she won’t eat. She wrings the last drop of pleasure out of these viewings then collapses back into boredom. Then she grows irritable and stops eating again. Do something to entertain me, she pouts, or I’ll starve myself. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Dennis Wendt Jr. Post*: Undercover for the Lord

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    April 26, 2008

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    23 responses

    2 August 1888: Elder Alma P. Richards, ten months into his missionary service and working without a companion, stopped at a hotel in Meridian, Mississippi and made arrangements with a porter to keep some books and clothing until the elder’s return, expected to be a few days later. Richards, on foot, left Meridian to visit friends just over the state line in Jasper County, Alabama. He was never heard from again. Read More

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