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  • Cornucopia

    Stump the Missionaries

    Gordon Smith

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    October 15, 2006

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    69 responses

    This afternoon, we had a family from our ward over for dinner. The missionaries were here, too. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Primary Lesson #37 Supplement

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 15, 2006

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    One response

    Read More

  • Church History, Women in the Church

    Geertruida Lodder Zippro: The Extra Mile

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 15, 2006

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    13 responses

    Much of the attention of the Relief Society Conference of October, 1945, was devoted to efforts to assist surviving members of the Church in the former war zones of Europe. Contact had been reestablished with some of the European branches, and reports of their experiences and especially of their needs were read to the sisters assembled in Salt Lake City: Read More

  • Women in the Church

    Christina Olsen Rockwell: Visiting Teacher

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 13, 2006

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    21 responses

    Christina Olsen was a Norwegian convert to the Church who emigrated to Zion before the arrival of the railroad. She was in her early 30s when she married the legendary Orrin Porter Rockwell, a man more than 20 years older than she was. Christina began her short married life by dividing her time between an isolated ranch in Rush Valley, Tooele County, and a home in Salt Lake City. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    What’s the Worst Halloween Candy?

    Rosalynde Welch

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    October 13, 2006

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    109 responses

    I’m pretty sure I discovered it at Big Lots yesterday: Tweeterz, which consist (according to the packaging) of candy-coated triangular shaped bits of Twizzlers. Any contenders for the title? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Why study old books?

    Jonathan Green

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    October 13, 2006

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    10 responses

    Most German classes taught by most German professors have little to do with the professor’s academic specialty and a lot to do with teaching college students to speak and write better German. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Gender Pairs in Luke’s Gospel

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 12, 2006

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    8 responses

    When two very similar stories–very similiar, that is, except that one is about a man and another is about a woman–are found in a Gospel, they are called a gender pair. While gender pairs occur in all the gospels, they are particularly prominent in Luke: Read More

  • Church History

    Secrets from the Research Library

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 12, 2006

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    17 responses

    My Utah history columns for the Salt Lake Tribune have a limit of 650 words; the Relief Society articles need to fit a single page. The brevity of these accounts may mask the complexity of the work behind them, so put on your deerstalker caps and I’ll recreate the process, using Frances Swan Clark as the example. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    From Charisma to Bureaucracy in Two Pages

    Nate Oman

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    October 11, 2006

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    33 responses

    About two weeks ago I went to the University of Richmond to do some research on Mormon history. Thanks to Terryl Givens, Richmond has acquired a set of the Selected Collections DVDs that were released a while ago by the Church Archives. Hence, I found myself in a library carrel in Virginia reading Orson Hyde’s handwritten 1834 minutes for the Kirtland High Council. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    What’s Up with Phebe?

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 11, 2006

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    32 responses

    Kaimi wanted the rest of the story. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Book Review: Jesus Christ and the World of the New TestamentBook Cover

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 10, 2006

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    33 responses

    It looks like a coffee table book but it reads like top-notch scholarship. . . . Read More

  • Women in the Church

    Frances Swan Clark: A Kindness Remembered

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 10, 2006

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    2 responses

    Many of Utah’s early pioneers did not remain long in the Valley. In defiance of counsel, some rushed to the California gold fields. A few went to California as missionaries, and the two apostles who founded a ranching colony in San Bernardino found no shortage of volunteers to accompany them there. Read More

  • Women in the Church

    Catherine Garber Laine: The Role of Her Lifetime

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 9, 2006

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    11 responses

    This story and the other women’s stories to follow were written for my ward’s Relief Society newsletter, as a formal calling for which I was set apart. The assignment was to write about a faith-promoting incident involving a woman; I added the detail “… whom no one has ever heard about.” Read More

  • Church History

    On the Road to Mountain Meadows

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    October 9, 2006

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    31 responses

    Two years ago I wrote an article entitled “‘Pursue, Retake & Punish’: The 1857 Santa Clara Ambush.� You can read it here if this essay triggers your interest; the short version is this: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Hello, Goodbye

    Rosalynde Welch

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    October 9, 2006

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    7 responses

    Actually, goodbye first. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Ye Have the Poor with You Always

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 9, 2006

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    54 responses

    In a discussion at the ExII blog on the Church’s recent decision renovate downtown Salt Lake, a commenter named Dave justified his support of the Church’s position this way: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Pilgrimage

    Jenny Webb

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    October 8, 2006

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    4 responses

    October. Growing up the month meant, above all, sand and water. The leaves turned; we packed the station wagon with coolers and towels and kites and puzzles; we drove out of the city, past Mt. Rainier, through woods, and toward the coast. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Homeless

    Russell Arben Fox

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    October 8, 2006

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    15 responses

    Yesterday was the first day of Sukkot, the Jewish Festival of Tabernacles, or Festival of Booths; the holiday continues for seven days, during which observant Jews will build and take some of their meals in, perhaps even sleep in, a sukkah, a small home within (or outside) their home. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Temples and Leprous Houses

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 8, 2006

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    38 responses

    Upon seeing this title, my husband asked, “Was that the ancient Hebrew equivalent of Better Homes and Gardens?” Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Around the Blogs: Life

    Kaimi Wenger

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    October 8, 2006

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    One response

    The premise for the new Day in the Life series at Feminist Mormon Housewives is simple: Selected contributors (guests and regulars) write about their daily routines. The beauty comes from seeing how a series of diverse and differently situated women negotiate the often mundane challenges of life and of lived Mormonism. Kudos to Lisa and her cohorts for putting together this series, and to the participants for the bravery and frankness that allows us to peek into their routines and see pieces of our own lives — fears, joys, burdens, hopes — mirrored back at us. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The JST of Mark 14:8

    Julie M. Smith

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    October 7, 2006

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    8 responses

    At first blush, the Joseph Smith Translation for Mark 14:8 doesn’t appear to do anything: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Write Question

    Jenny Webb

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    October 7, 2006

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    13 responses

    A question that keeps coming back to me: does God write? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas

    Jonathan Green

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    October 6, 2006

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    20 responses

    This post is not two months early. It’s two weeks late. Around here, Christmas cookies and candy and multiple varieties of Stollen have been available in grocery stores since the last week of September, and the local hypermarket has a whole aisle devoted to Christmas decorations. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Psalms

    Jenny Webb

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    October 6, 2006

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    6 responses

    Julio stood behind the blue door, waiting. Blanca stood there too. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Karl Llewellyn and Joseph Smith on the Couch

    Nate Oman

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    October 4, 2006

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    8 responses

    Do you ever have one of those odd moments when you are seeing something unfamiliar and suddenly it becomes extremely familiar? Or perhaps you see something very familiar but it suddenly reminds you of something equally familiar but totally different? I had one of those experiences today. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    We have nothing to apologize for–but should we do it anyway?

    Margaret Young

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    October 4, 2006

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    151 responses

    I’ve been thinking about President Packer’s Sunday talk–mostly centered on the idea that we have nothing to apologize for in LDS history and should proudly defend our heroic, pioneering past. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Substrate : Superstrate

    Jonathan Green

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    October 4, 2006

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    10 responses

    Contact between religions is a lot like contact between languages. One way for two language communities to interact is through invasion. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    They will never forget you ’til somebody new comes along

    Kaimi Wenger

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    October 3, 2006

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    3 responses

    Some of our readers may have felt like this cartoon when Dave Landrith’s last blog met a(n un?)timely demise. Fortunately for those readers, Dave has now made like this cartoon — the resemblance is uncanny, really — and started a new party blog. Fellow inmates travelers include a random John, John F., annegb, danithew, and Proud Daughter of Eve. The blog’s tagline suggests that it is written by peculiar people; truer words, I am relatively sure, were never spoken. Also, it looks really spiffy. Welcome (back) the bloggernacle, folks! Read More

  • Cornucopia, Lesson Aids

    Sunday School Lesson #40

    Jim F.

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    October 3, 2006

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    2 responses

    Lesson 40: Isaiah 54-56, 63-65 Read More

  • Cornucopia

    At Play

    Jenny Webb

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    October 3, 2006

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    8 responses

    My daughter loves to play on the hardwood floor next to the stone hearth behind the wooden rocking chair. She is one. I keep on thinking this is an accident waiting to happen and tend to move the chair, spread the toys away from the hearth, and sit down beside her just in case. Read More

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Times and Seasons is a place to share ideas of interest to faithful Latter-day Saints.

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