Recent Comments

  • Kent Larsen on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Eric, I hope you have people in your life who support you and love you. FWIW, when things seem to bunch up on you, you can always blame randomness — the nature of statistics are that its likely things will sometimes happen all at once. It is NOT God ganging up on you!! [GRIN] As for the OP, while I don’t think the Church can realistically do anything about it, I wish these hymns were all available somehow. I have a lot of respect for the efforts that went into writing and composing them. AND, I don’t believe that we can really compare them. They are different, and there is no use comparing apples and oranges. [So, I think the choosing of hymns to include is basically impossible.] The world would be a better place if we learned how to honor and respect EVERYONE’s contributions, especially artistic ones. And while we’re at it, we should stop comparing, and assuming that the ones not selected were not good enough. Comparison is almost always bad.May 23, 22:15
  • Gary Bergera on Historiography and Helen Mar Kimball: “Thanks for this review, Jonathan. It’s very helpful.May 23, 09:13
  • Janice Auger Rasmussen on Hymns Officially Rejected: “I have written three hymns—words and music—they have all been performed as choir numbers or solos. I didn’t submit any because I doubted that I achieved the level expected, but each one shares my testimony and each one brings tears to my eyes. Good enough. Your submissions are very good. Thanks for sharing.May 22, 21:32
  • Dario on Ex-Member Anecdotes and Motivated Memories: “I just finished reading the book. It says a fuller description of the methodology for his survey is on his website; but, if it is, I can’t find it (even after giving up an email address to get a password). Based on the brief methodology appendix included, there are some obvious concerns: (1) the sample is nonprobability and self-selected, so it may capture people unusually motivated to discuss LDS disaffiliation rather than the broader LDS population; (2) because there is no known sampling frame or denominator, the study cannot credibly estimate how many people are leaving or the prevalence of particular reasons for leaving; (3) the excerpt gives insufficient detail about recruitment channels, response rates, duplicate prevention, and eligibility verification; (4) selection bias likely affects the findings, since quiet leavers, disengaged members, highly orthodox members, international members (i.e., MOST members), and people outside the recruitment networks may be underrepresented; (5) the study relies heavily on retrospective self-report, which is vulnerable to memory distortion, identity reconstruction, social desirability, and post hoc explanations; (6) the validity and reliability of the survey instrument are unclear, including question wording, scale construction, typology validation, and whether measures were pretested or benchmarked; (7) inferential statistics and subgroup comparisons are methodologically limited because nonrepresentative samples make population-level confidence intervals, significance tests, and generalizations potentially misleading; (8) the “AI-assisted qualitative coding process” relied on is underdescribed; (9) expert advisory review (if we accept that the unnamed advisors are experts) improves seriousness but is not equivalent to independent peer review, replication, or public scrutiny of data and methods; and (10) the findings are geographically and demographically limited, especially because international responses were excluded and the sample reportedly overrepresents women and more devout or satisfied participants, which may skew conclusions about LDS disaffiliation overall.May 22, 19:01
  • Mike Winder on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Eric Chaffey hang in there, brother! God loves you and you are in GREAT company with not getting our hymns accepted. May unseen angels continue to watch over and comfort you!May 22, 15:06
  • Mike Winder on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Rich Winsor, I think you are right. 50 new hymns from members + existing favorites from other existing sources = many great hymns that are new to the LDS hymnal, which is fantastic.May 22, 15:05
  • Mike Winder on Hymns Officially Rejected: “anoneon feel free to share it with them, and let me know if any of them want to put music to any of them! [email protected]May 22, 15:03
  • Eric Chaffey on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Got mine too. I didn’t feel particularly encouraged by it. Came at a bad time, and was a reminder of a number of other rejections from the Church. The Priesthood department a few years ago invited lgbtq people to share their story, I wrote several epistles and never heard back anything. Aged out of auditioning for the Tabernacle Choir, and being the emotional one when hymns get truncated or skipped entirely. An ignored verse (verse 4) of How Firm a Foundation saved my life one night 34 years ago. Unseen angels pulled me away from a cyclone fence separating me from a five story construction crater. They had a brutal and cruel way of dealing with lgbtq issues that did nothing to help me feel loved. This latest rejection of my hymn is just one more rejection. I’m struggling in my testimony right now and the rejection email didn’t help that. I knew it was a foregone conclusion that it would end up on the cutting room floor but just right now when my whole life is blowing apart, I needed something hopeful.May 22, 13:37
  • Bruce Forbes on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Thank you for the article. I submitted quite a few hymns, and I have yet to receive my rejection letter, so I’m enjoying what those who have received their letters have to say. Hopefully mine will come soon. It’s getting to be a harder wait than waiting for a mission call letter. :-)May 22, 10:49
  • Devan Jensen on Hymns Officially Rejected: “Mike, thanks for sharing these insights and lyrics. Daniel Carter and I wrote “Long Ago, Within a Garden” in 1999. We published it and thought we could not submit it, but someone submitted it for us. Maybe our hymn would be one of the 50 new submissions.May 22, 09:53