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  • Hate Crimes Against Latter-day Saints

    Hate Crimes Against Latter-day Saints

    Every year the FBI publishes statistics on hate crimes against different racial/ethnic, sexual orientation, religious, and disability groups, including us. (As an aside, you know the FBI is peak woke [in the original, un-ironic sense] when they actually refer to us by the term requested by the Church [“Church of Jesus Christ”].)  So how do…

  • A Review: Divine Law: Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants

    The sixth out of the seven books in the Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants series that I read is the one by Justin Collings on Divine Law. I admit that this one left me pleasantly surprised. I was expecting some sort of lawyerly analysis of how the commandments in the Doctrine and Covenants create…

  • CFM 2/17-2/23: Poetry for “Upon You My Fellow Servants”

    CFM 2/17-2/23: Poetry for “Upon You My Fellow Servants”

    I sometimes think that when we consider the visit of John the Baptist to Joseph and Oliver (the main event discussed in this lesson), we focus on the restoration of the Aaronic Priesthood, but leave out the restoration of the ordinance of baptism. Yes, the ordinance can’t be performed without the priesthood, but then I…

  • Tidbits from Early Church Primary Sources: John Corrill’s A Brief History of the Church of Christ and John Whitmer’s History

    Tidbits from Early Church Primary Sources: John Corrill’s A Brief History of the Church of Christ and John Whitmer’s History

    A series I am going to occasionally come back to on my takes on early Church primary sources that I’m reading. We have a tendency to only read secondary takes, whether a talk, book, or commonly shared anecdote, but there are often insights buried in the primary sources that don’t make it into the collective…

  • Portuguese Panic for the Book of Mormon

    A key moment in the Church’s establishment in different locations and cultures—including among countries like Brazil, where the Church officially has over one million members—is the translation of the Book of Mormon. Especially in earlier years, the effort was performed by missionaries with rudimentary knowledge of the language working with locals to create the translation,…

  • Annotated Doctrine and Covenants, 1 – 9

    I mentioned previously that my big project for the year associated with Come, Follow Me is working on an annotated Doctrine and Covenants and closely related content. For this part of the project, I am going through the assigned reading each week and comparing every major edition of the text that I can find (including those…

  • The Apostasy and Greek Philosophy: Introduction

    So I’ve posted related to this topic, but I was thinking of putting up a few posts on this larger theme of Greek philosophy corrupting early Christianity. Like I said in this video, that was a common Protestant idea going back to the 1600s, very prominent in Smith’s day, and was even in a book…

  • The Church, Cohort Turnover, and “Change Happening One Funeral at a Time”

    The Church, Cohort Turnover, and “Change Happening One Funeral at a Time”

    The adage that change happens “one funeral at a time” actually has a bit of sociological research to back it up. To get technical for a brief moment, there is a question as to whether cultural change happens by “settled disposition” or “active updating.” In other words whether: After an initial period of young people…

  • A Review: Time: Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants

    Family. Isn’t it about … time? Yes, and so is the Gospel in general, according to Philip L. Barlow.

  • CFM 2/10-2/16: Poetry for “That You May Come Off Conqueror”

    CFM 2/10-2/16: Poetry for “That You May Come Off Conqueror”

    While the sections in this lesson address what to do after the loss of the 116 pages and what Hyrum Smith should do, elements of these sections and the lesson have a triumphalist element, pointing out that the Lord’s plans will not be thwarted because of opposition. However, this should not be read as some…

  • “We are willing to receive all truth, from whatever source it may come”

    “We believe in all truth, no matter to what subject it may refer…. We are willing to receive all truth, from whatever source it may come.” Joseph F. Smith, April Conference 1909. [1] As I see it, whatever was influencing JS was “true” if we believe Joseph Smith’s revelations were true.

  • Amish and Haredi Family Sizes

    Amish and Haredi Family Sizes

    I’ve written about the implications of highly fertile, highly religious groups such as the Amish and Haredi Jewish community before. While Latter-day Saint fertility is higher than average, it’s not even close to those levels, and probably won’t ever be unless we revert back to Haredi-levels of communal insularity (or reinstate polygamy), which is a…

  • Joseph Smith, Plato, and the Apostasy

    At a conference and later book that Jonathan and I both contributed to, Terryl Givens noted the Mormon notion of restoration was quite different than Protestants. Givens quoted Parley Pratt, “We can never understand precisely what is meant by restoration, unless we understand what is lost or taken away.” “The problems seen by other restorationists,”…

  • Cutting-Edge Latter-day Saint Research, January 2025

    Bialecki, Jon. “The Mormon Archive’s First Ten Thousand Years: Infrastructure, Materiality, Ontology, and Resurrection in Religious Transhumanism.” Comparative Studies in Society and History (2025): 1-19.

  • Lost books, golden plates, and Mosaic authorship

    Call it an archetype, call it folklore. Whatever you call it, the idea of finding something fantastical in an old book in a library, or in a book hidden away centuries ago, is one of those things that rattles around in our minds and has been rattling around our culture for centuries if not millennia:…

  • When Religions Rebrand: The Community of Christ and the Nation of Islam

    When Religions Rebrand: The Community of Christ and the Nation of Islam

      I recently finished reading a history of the Nation of Islam, and was struck by the parallels and sometimes contrasts between its recent history and that of the Community of Christ. In both cases you had a faith that was an eclectic variation on a mainstream tradition–for the Community of Christ Christianity, and for…

  • A Review: Divine Aid: Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants

    The fourth out of the seven books in the Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants series that I read is the one by Amy Easton on Divine Aid. As the title implies, the book posits that a repeated theme in the Doctrine and Covenants is divine aid, offered in a variety of ways. As with…

  • CFM 2/3-2/9: Poetry for “This Is the Spirit of Revelation”

    CFM 2/3-2/9: Poetry for “This Is the Spirit of Revelation”

    The restoration of the gospel can be seen as having two different aspects: the personal and the communitarian. While the First Vision is seen as indicating which Church to join, it is also a personal interaction between a 14-year-old boy and his God. Subsequent events in the restoration can also be seen in the same…

  • Questions about Bishop Budde’s Remarks

    Questions about Bishop Budde’s Remarks

    Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, the Episcopal Bishop of Washington DC has received a lot of attention for her remarks earlier this week at a prayer breakfast attended by the new occupant of the White House, which also drew a demand for her to apologize. The controversy raises a number of questions, I think, especially if…

  • The Impact of Julian of Norwich

    The woman known as Julian of Norwich was a mystic and a visionary who offered a theology that was focused on God’s love. She is a somewhat obscure figure, but one who is worth learning about. To that end, Fiona Givens discussed Julian of Norwich in a recent post at the Latter-day Saint history blog From…

  • When is it Okay to Criticize Another Faith?

    When is it Okay to Criticize Another Faith?

    David Miscavige, the leader of Scientology Is it ever okay to criticize a faith? One can think of extreme situations that we can all agree on. The Aum Shinrikyo New Religious Movement (like most religion scholars, I bristle at the use of the term “cult,” since it disparages religions just for being small and new,…

  • A Review: Revelation: Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants

    Continuing my reviews of the Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants series by Maxwell Institute, we come to the one on Revelation by Janiece Johnson. Of all the books in the series that I’ve read so far, this one is the one that leans the most heavily into the devotional and practical side of the…

  • CFM 1/27-2/2: Poetry for “My Work Shall Go Forth”

    CFM 1/27-2/2: Poetry for “My Work Shall Go Forth”

    How do ideas spread? If the truth has been lost, what is the best way for it to become known again? It is one thing to give Joseph Smith the First Vision and quite another for that vision to spread among large numbers of God’s children—and I suspect that how the spread of new religious…

  • The Relief Society is Not the Oldest Women’s Organization in the World

    The Relief Society is Not the Oldest Women’s Organization in the World

    It’s an old adage in Latter-day Saint circles that the Relief Society is the “oldest women’s organization in the world.” To be fair, I searched around briefly and could not find any current Church reference to it being the oldest, just “one of the oldest,” although I did find some speculation that it was the oldest.…

  • Textual changes in Joseph Smith—History

    My big project for the year associated with Come, Follow Me is working on an annotated Doctrine and Covenants and closely related content. For this part of the project, I am going through the assigned reading each week and comparing every major edition of the text that I can find (including those available through the Joseph…

  • The Adventures of Jacob Hamblin

    With American Primeval, Netflix has once again put Mormonism in its sights as the subject in a drama, this time including the Mountain Meadows Massacre (the latest in a long line of portrayals of that event). While that event casts a long shadow over nineteenth century Mormonism’s experience in the western United States, there are…

  • “But What Is Contained in the Bible”

    “I sup[pose] I am not all[ow]d to go into investing[atio]n but what is cont[aine]d in the Bible & I think is so many wise men who wo[ul]d put me to death for treason,” Joseph Smith declared in the King Follett Sermon.[1] Smith then went onto make a claim about the first phrase in Genesis, a…

  • A Latter-day Saint on Joe Rogan?

    A Latter-day Saint on Joe Rogan?

    Joe Rogan is one of the top if not the top podcaster in the world today. He commands a huge audience. In the same way that being on Johnny Carson back in the day could make a career, so too is a spot on Rogan considered a golden ticket, especially in the comedy world.  He…

  • A Review: Agency: Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants

    As I mentioned recently, I’ve been excited about the Maxwell Institute’s “Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants” series. So far, I’ve read four books out of seven, and the entry by Terryl L. Givens on Agency has been my favorite. It’s a beautiful blend of theological and devotional reflection that leans heavier into the comparative…

  • CFM 1/20-1/26: Poetry for “The Hearts of the Children Shall Turn to Their Fathers”

    The phrase “The Hearts of the Children Shall Turn to Their Fathers” has a different meaning for LDS Church members than it does in any other group that relies on Old Testament scripture. We conflate this phrase with a wide variety of theological topics, including family history, temple sealing and even, as in the current…