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  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Music and Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 58-59: Timing of Blessings, Sabbath Day

    Kent Larsen

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    May 24, 2021

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    The end is always a new beginning. The arrival of the first Latter-day Saints in Independence, Missouri was both an end and a beginning. They accomplished the goal of gathering to Zion, but then realized that now they had to actually build Zion—a process that has, in a variety of ways, continued ever since. For the Saints at that time, the revelations contained in D&C 58 and 59 show the process of realizing that the new beginning of Zion contained a new set of struggles, and struggles that were very different from what they expected. For us today, these sections… Read More

  • Church History, From the Desk Co-posts

    The American Apocalypse

    Chad Nielsen

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    May 22, 2021

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    4 responses

    The end of the world is a pretty dramatic scene.  Perhaps it is because of that drama that the idea has captured the imagination of human beings for thousands of years and continues to do so today.  It is not an uncommon topic of conversation among Latter-day Saints that I have known, including the occasional discussion of dreams or visions about the End Times.  These types of discussions interested Christopher Blythe, who has “always had a deep interest in apocalypticism” and felt that “much of the scholarship on Latter-day Saint last days beliefs seem to focus on official doctrine rather… Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Music and Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 51-57 — Temporal Zion

    Kent Larsen

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    May 21, 2021

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    One response

    By going in order through the Doctrine and Covenants, the Come Follow Me lessons sometimes show the concerns of the Church at a particular point in time. The seven sections included in this lesson are quite varied, but all demonstrate temporal concerns — where to put all the immigrants arriving in Kirtland, how members should share what they have, how should church members fulfill the command to gather to Missouri and who should be doing the printing of Church publications. But despite these temporal concerns, in these sections there are clearly spiritual lessons which are germane to the temporal needs… Read More

  • Church History, Come Follow Me Currculum, Scriptures

    “Whoso forbideth to abstain from meats”

    Chad Nielsen

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    May 17, 2021

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    7 responses

    It’s a well-known grammar joke that punctuation can save lives, since there is a difference between saying: “Let’s eat, Grandma!” and: “Let’s eat Grandma!”  Punctuation and grammar do make a difference, as Oakhurst Dairy found out the hard way a few years ago.  In a legal case about overtime for drivers and a state law in Maine, the debate centered on the grammar of the law, which required time-and-a-half pay for each hour worked after 40 hours, with exemptions for: The canning, processing, preserving, freezing, drying, marketing, storing, packing for shipment or distribution of: (1) Agricultural produce; (2) Meat and… Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ruf aus der Wüste 4.15-16: Hyde on washing of feet

    Jonathan Green

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    May 12, 2021

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    3 responses

    I think this is more about foot washing than I’ve ever read anywhere before. Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 49-50 — Marriage, Falsehood & Edification

    Kent Larsen

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    May 10, 2021

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    Poetry for this week’s Come Follow Me lesson, D&C sections 49-50, addressing marriage, identifying falsehood & edification through spiritual gifts. Read More

  • News and Politics

    Happy Mother’s Day: A Review of Carol Lynn Pearson’s *Finding Mother God: Poems to Heal the World*

    David Evans

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    May 9, 2021

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    2 responses

    Happy Mother’s Day: A Review of Carol Lynn Pearson’s *Finding Mother God: Poems to Heal the World*

    I started listening to Carol Lynn Pearson read her latest poetry collection — Finding Mother God: Poems to Heal the World — and I could not stop. And now I’m listening to it a second time. It’s vibrant and healing. I find Pearson’s words in this volume (and, in the audiobook, her delivery) irresistible. Pearson eloquently, insightfully, and powerfully captures a longing for a closer connection to a Heavenly Mother—and the promise of what that connection may bring—throughout, “so that God Herself and God Himself, who were always one, can join on earth to bless the confused billions” (from “Message… Read More

  • Church History, From the Desk Co-posts, Mormon Studies

    “It is given to some to speak with tongues”

    Chad Nielsen

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    May 8, 2021

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    9 responses

    I served my mission in the Midwestern United States, and we had a decent amount of contact with groups, such as the Pentecostals, who were enthusiastic about charismatic gifts of the Spirit.  I remember on one occasion, that a missionary serving in the same district approached me about an investigator they she been working with who believed that speaking in tongues (in the sense of spouting out what sounded like gibberish while under the power of the Holy Spirit) was a very important part of Christianity and a sign that God was involved in a Church.  The missionary, on the… Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 46-48 — Welcome, Spiritual Gifts, History and Sharing

    Kent Larsen

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    May 7, 2021

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    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 46-48 — Welcome, Spiritual Gifts, History and Sharing

    Poetry for this week’s Come Follow Me lesson, D&C sections 46-48, addressing being welcoming, spiritual gifts, keeping a history and sharing the lands we own. Read More

  • News and Politics

    Translating the faith healer

    Jonathan Green

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    May 6, 2021

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    5 responses

    Was I comfortable with the topic? the prospective client on the other end of the video call wanted to know. Read More

  • Book of Mormon, From the Desk Co-posts

    Daniel Becerra on 3rd and 4th Nephi

    Chad Nielsen

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    May 5, 2021

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    Within the Book of Mormon, 3rd and 4th Nephi are arguably some of the most important portions of the book, with their focus on the in-person ministry of Jesus Christ among the children of Lehi and what followed because of that ministry.  Daniel Becerra, author of the book 3rd, 4th Nephi: A Brief Theological Introduction, recently sat down with Kurt Manwaring to share some of his insights from the process of writing his theological introduction to the books.  What follows here is a co-post to the interview, with excerpts and some discussion, but if you want to read the full… Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ruf aus der Wüste 4.13-14: Hyde on the Sabbath

    Jonathan Green

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    May 2, 2021

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    One response

    Article 13 On prayer and on the manner of worship. Prayer is one of the primary obligations of the Christian, and he is reliant on it for any consideration that might stir his ambition or instill it in him, for it is just as necessary for his growth and thriving as rain is for the fields. Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Music and Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 45 — Standards and Zion

    Kent Larsen

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    April 29, 2021

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    Poetry for this week’s Come Follow Me lesson, D&C section 45, addressing the raising of gospel standards and establishing Zion. Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Lesson Aids, Scriptures

    “Provide for him food & raiment”

    Chad Nielsen

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    April 25, 2021

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    6 responses

    As a missionary, I occasionally found myself in the uncomfortable experience of listening to my companions talking about how proud they were to be part of a Church where every calling is performed on a voluntary basis, with no compensation—from the top leaders on down to the local level.  My discomfort was caused because, in general, the missionaries in question were not aware that general authorities do receive a stipend—something that Church members became more aware of in light of the 2017 MormonLeaks documents, which indicated that the living stipend for Church leaders was up in triple-digit figures.[1]  There are… Read More

  • Book Reviews

    Hear the words of the Church’s first lady — a review of Jennifer Reeder’s *First: The Life and Faith of Emma Smith*

    David Evans

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    April 24, 2021

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    3 responses

    Hear the words of the Church’s first lady — a review of Jennifer Reeder’s *First: The Life and Faith of Emma Smith*

    “I have many more things I could like to write but have not time.” Thus wrote Emma Smith in a letter to her husband, Joseph Smith. I wish she did have the time! Jennifer Reeder’s biography of Emma Smith — First: The Life and Faith of Emma Smith — left me wanting even more of Emma’s words. Emma Smith was a remarkable woman, and Reeder clearly feels a deep affection for her subject, despite their chronological separation of roughly one and a half centuries. Reeder isn’t blind to Emma’s flaws, but neither does she judge. Despite the fact that Emma… Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ruf aus der Wüste 4.12: Baptism for the dead

    Jonathan Green

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    April 24, 2021

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    6 responses

    Orson Hyde blazes the trail for every Temple and Family History consultant ever since. Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 41-44 — Law, Consecration and Revelation

    Kent Larsen

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    April 23, 2021

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    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 41-44 — Law, Consecration and Revelation

    Poetry for this week’s Come Follow Me lesson, D&C sections 41-44, addressing the law, consecration for supporting the poor, and the role of revelation. Read More

  • Church History, From the Desk Co-posts

    Know Brother Joseph

    Chad Nielsen

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    April 17, 2021

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    4 responses

    What did Joseph Smith think?  What was he like as a person?  Questions like these are interesting to think about and are important considerations when you’re a part of a religion that draws so heavily on one person’s writings and ministry for its foundation.  In a recent interview with Kurt Manwaring, R. Eric Smith, Matthew C. Godfrey, and Matthew J. Grow discussed some of their insights into Joseph Smith’s mind and life gained through both their work with the Joseph Smith Papers Project and in editing the recently-published Know Brother Joseph: New Perspectives on Joseph Smith’s Life and Character (Deseret Book,… Read More

  • Church History

    Ein Ruf aus der Wüste 4.11: Orson Hyde on lay clergy

    Jonathan Green

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    April 16, 2021

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    One response

    If I were writing about the benefits of lay clergy in a missionary tract, I would probably spend less time on dusting one’s feet. Read More

  • Church History, Come Follow Me Currculum, Lesson Aids, Scriptures, Temples

    “Endowed with power from on high”

    Chad Nielsen

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    April 14, 2021

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    6 responses

    The revelations we are studying this week continue with themes found in revelations from throughout 1830, such as an imminent Second Coming and the gathering, but also set up an expectation for an endowment of power that would be an important theme for much of the remainder of Joseph Smith’s ministry. After the conversion of a significant number of people in Kirtland and the subsequent arrival of Sidney Rigdon and Edward Partridge in New York to meet Joseph Smith in December 1830, a set of revelations were recorded that indicated that the headquarters of the Church should shift to Ohio… Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 37-40 — Gathering, Fears and Cares

    Kent Larsen

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    April 12, 2021

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    Poems about the Gathering, preparation in order to ally our fears, and the cares of the world, to accompany the Come Follow Me lesson for April 12 to 18. Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ein Ruf aus der Wüste 4.10: Orson Hyde on continuing revelation

    Jonathan Green

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    April 11, 2021

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    6 responses

    The teachings are familiar, but the images are surprising. Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum

    “The time of my coming”

    Chad Nielsen

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    April 10, 2021

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    4 responses

    “The time of my coming”

    For several days odd signs had been showing—the sky was yellow and the sun was red.  Suddenly, the sky darkened further.  Animals ran for cover.  When seen, the moon was red and soot was seen to be floating in the river.  By noon it was dark, forcing people to light candles and wonder—was the great and terrible day of the Lord’s return at hand?  With all the signs at hand, it was proposed that the Connecticut legislature be adjourned in case the Second Coming of Jesus Christ was going to occur.  One of their members, Abraham Davenport, opposed the move,… Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, Poetry, SS Lesson – Doctrine and Covenants

    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 30-36 — Missions and Family Relationships

    Kent Larsen

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    April 9, 2021

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    Lit Come Follow Me: D&C 30-36 — Missions and Family Relationships

    The seven sections of the Doctrine and Covenants covered by this week’s Come Follow Me lesson discuss, in general, missionary work and the subsequent benefits of membership in the Kingdom. The first five of these sections include missionary calls to David Whitmer, Peter Whitmer Jr., John Whitmer, Thomas B. Marsh, Parley P. Pratt  and Ziba Petersen and advice on how to preach is given to Ezra Thayre, Northrop Sweet and Orson Pratt. The final two sections are Sidney Rigdon’s call to act as scribe for Joseph Smith in translating the Bible, and a blessing given to Edward Partridge.   L.… Read More

  • Come Follow Me Currculum, General Doctrine

    Lit Come Follow Me: Easter

    Kent Larsen

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    April 3, 2021

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    While no Come Follow Me lesson will be taught at church this coming Sunday, there is a lesson in the manual, meant for home study. So, I’m providing some poems to go with that lesson, which focuses on three aspects of the mission of Jesus Christ: that he was resurrected (i.e., He Lives), that because of him we will all be resurrected, and His atonement. Of course, these are not strange concepts in our poetry; they appear many times in our hymnal alone. So I’m presenting a few poems that are less familiar. Read More

  • From the Desk Co-posts

    Richard Turley on Dallin H. Oaks

    Chad Nielsen

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    April 3, 2021

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    2 responses

    Richard Turley on Dallin H. Oaks

    Recently, President Dallin H. Oaks’s biographer, Richard E. Turley, Jr. sat down with Kurt Manwaring to discuss the recently-published book In the Hands of the Lord: The Life of Dallin H. Oaks.  What follows here is a co-post to the one at Kurt Manwaring’s site, with quotes from and discussion about the full interview, which can be read here. As part of the discussion, Richard Turley discussed some of the documents he had available to him to draw upon in writing about President Oaks.  He stated that: He is one of the most documented Church leaders in history. I used… Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ein Ruf aus der Wüste 4.9: Orson Hyde on blessing and baptizing children

    Jonathan Green

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    April 2, 2021

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    8 responses

    This short sections feels quite familiar. Read More

  • Images, News and Politics, Temples

    Counterpoint: A Feeling of Loss–On Murals and Temples

    Chad Nielsen

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    March 31, 2021

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    4 responses

    I lived a significant portion of my life in Logan, Utah and frequently attended the temple during the time that I lived there.  I had a lot of beautiful and sacred experiences while doing so, but I also rarely attended that temple without experiencing some feelings of loss.  In the late 1970s, in order to introduce the use of filmed endowments to that temple, the building was gutted and almost all of the paintings, stained glass, chandeliers, furniture, and other furnishings were stowed away in archives in Salt Lake City or Provo, sent to other temple and Church office buildings… Read More

  • News and Politics

    Point: It’s just art

    Jonathan Green

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    March 30, 2021

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    29 responses

    Hezekiah didn’t consult with artists or historians before destroying the bronze snake Moses had made. He didn’t even try to preserve it somewhere else for its cultural value. Read More

  • News and Politics

    Ein Ruf aus der Wüste 4.8: Orson Hyde on confession and disfellowship

    Jonathan Green

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    March 28, 2021

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    5 responses

    On the confession of sin and the treatment of members acting contrary to law Read More

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