5/11/2008

From the Archives: My Gifts (Whitsunday Reflections)

by Russell Arben Fox

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. (more…)

5/10/2008

Mother’s Day is Looming

by Dave Banack

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. (more…)

5/8/2008

Heimskringla and historicity

by Jonathan Green

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. (more…)

5/7/2008

IDTM

by Julie M. Smith

If one more Mormon tells me to see Expelled, I am going to scream. (more…)

Shortage and storage

by Frank McIntyre

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. (more…)

5/6/2008

Mormons and Reality Shows

by Julie M. Smith

Read and discuss.

How Notions of Government Inform Sexual Morality

by Adam Greenwood

This is my impressionistic take on how ideas about government influence ideas about sexual morality. (more…)

5/4/2008

Happy Birthday, Betsey Pearl

by Adam Greenwood

Today is my daughter’s 7th birthday. Happy Birthday, child. –more–

That Daguerreotype Again (2 of 2)

by Ardis Parshall

Chapters 9 and 10 of Millions Shall Know Brother Joseph Again deal with purported photographs of Joseph Smith, including the Scannel daguerreotype. (more…)

Catholic parish registers belong to humanity

by Wilfried Decoo

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. (more…)

5/2/2008

That Daguerreotype Again (part 1 of 2)

by Ardis Parshall

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. (more…)

5/1/2008

Some Notes on Religious Freedom from the Former USSR

by Russell Arben Fox

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. (more…)

Gospel culture and the others

by Wilfried Decoo

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”. (more…)

4/30/2008

Janos Kalapsza “… went out to the Mormons”

by Ardis Parshall

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. (more…)

4/29/2008

Ladies first?

by Kaimi Wenger

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 feel.”

Is it inherently harmful to have women follow men in sustaining the leader? (more…)

A word that begins with D

by Kaimi Wenger

Son1: Why don’t women get to hold the Priesthood? (more…)

The Largest Spider Web in Utah

by Matt Evans

Well, probably not. But it’s the biggest web I’ve ever seen, and certainly the biggest web I’ve ever seen in my own front yard. (more…)

4/27/2008

Bittersweet Sixteen: Part Three

by Patricia Karamesines

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. (more…)

4/26/2008

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

by Ardis Parshall

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.

(more…)

4/25/2008

Prophets and textual criticism

by Jonathan Green

The Book of Mormon poses a thorny problem for assumptions about the history of scriptural texts, especially if it isn’t true (more…)

4/24/2008

The Myth of Evolution and the Myth of the Fall

by Adam Greenwood

Noah Millman concedes that the science of evolution is not incompatible with the truth of Christianity. But, he argues, the myth of evolution is incompatible with the myth of Christianity.

I think science does have implications for the persuasiveness of specific religious doctrines, simply as a psychological matter. And I think evolution through natural selection is extremely uncongenial to the central Christian story about the nature of sin and evil in the world. Why? Because the Christian story has the entry of strife into the world come about as the result of human sin, whereas the core idea behind evolution by natural selection is that our existence – and the consciousness and ability to sin that comes with it – is a product of strife. Put bluntly: natural selection is not the mechanism that the Christian deity would use to create man in His image. Or, if it is, I’d like to see the explanation.

(more…)

4/23/2008

Bittersweet Sixteen: Part Two

by Patricia Karamesines

So there I was, staring the lavishness of my ignorance. I saw the presence it had in the world, how it could impoverish and destroy as efficiently as the most inspired scientific breakthrough could improve somebody’s standard of living. Before M was diagnosed, I saw my ignorance in a slanted light as I came to realize she wasn’t showing herself to me in a way I could understand. The light came up a little more when the nature and degree of her trouble dawned and our family found itself standing at a door we didn’t know for sure would open. But that day I began to comprehend the nature of the creature I’d unleashed, unknowingly, upon M at a perfectly vulnerable stage of her coming into being, the world changed in a blue bolt. (more…)

Orbital Sacrament

by Adam Greenwood

Kathleen Maughan Lind, Don Lind, Mormon Astronaut, Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1985. 171-172: (more…)

4/22/2008

Changing Mormon Musical Aesthetics?

by Nate Oman

I didn’t blog about it at the time, although I thought about it. But now it’s up on You Tube, so here goes. (more…)

Egyptian Brass Plates and a naming contest

by Frank McIntyre

If this is common knowledge I completely missed it. So I post this in memory of all those who also slept through indecent chunks of early morning Seminary. (more…)

4/21/2008

Bittersweet Sixteen: Part One

by Patricia Karamesines

Many parents with severely disabled children live life underground. Apart from society’s burbling mainstreams, they labor beneath the weight of exigent circumstances, dealing with mortal crises day by day. They monitor their child’s breathing, their sleeping, their every bodily function, often for years, developing a sense for delicate balances in their particular domestic environments. Grief has become part of these parents’ body chemistries. (more…)

The Two Problems with Mormon Finitist Theodicies

by Nate Oman

I have been listening to the papers that were presented at the recent conference of the Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology. At the conference there was a presentation on that perennial favorite, finisitist Mormon theodicies, in this case a nicely nuanced comparison of Mormon thinking with the process theology of David Griffin. I was disappointed, however, that the authors didn’t more squarely face the two strongest objections to Mormon finitist theodicies. Indeed, I have yet to see what I think of as adequate responses to either of these issues. (more…)

4/19/2008

Taking the Lord’s title in vain

by Kaimi Wenger

The Third Commandment tells us not to take the Lord’s name in vain. And for some reason, this practice has become strongly ingrained in Mormon social norms — I can easily name a dozen Mormons who cuss like sailors and drop “F-bombs” regularly, but who would never dream of injecting a “God” or “Lord” into the sentence.

But are we really getting it right? Is “God” really the Lord’s name, or is it just a title? And what exactly does the third commandment proscribe? (more…)

One Hundred Thousand - WINNER DECLARED

by Ardis Parshall

Within the next few hours, T&S’s spam filter is going to announce that it has spared us from 100,000 offers of recreational pharmaceuticals, links to images of anatomically correct models in morally incorrect situations, promises of guaranteed wealth, solemn pleas from 12,394 persons of good moral character who need your help kindly Christian sir to transfer funds out of war-torn countries for to do the good Lord’s most benificent charitableness, and warnings that we will surely be cast down to the uttermost depths of hell unless we renounce our false Jesus and transfer allegiance to the god of the loving soul who has so blasphemously cursed us to bless us. You know what I mean. (more…)

Thank you, Raymond

by Ardis Parshall

Thanks to Raymond Takashi Swenson for his slate of intriguing and challenging posts over the past couple of weeks. (more…)

4/18/2008

BYU Studies Chronology of Joseph Smith’s life

by Kaimi Wenger

If you’re not a subscriber to BYU Studies (why not?), make haste to the bookstore and pick up a copy of the latest edition. It’s a nearly 200-page chronology of Joseph Smith’s life (transcribing the chronology available online at josephsmith.byu.edu ). In the print version, events are color-coded by category as well as being listed by date.

To call this compilation “extremely useful” would be a vast understatement. Simply put, this is a tool that every member should have access to. The information has been available for some time online (in a relatively little known spot), but putting in in book form makes it much more accessible. You should pick extra copies up for your bishop, your father-in-law (*may not apply to John F. or Rosalynde), your home teaching companion. It’s gold. It’s very rare to see this combination of scholarship and information, on the one hand, with a presentation that is this accessible to everyday members. Kudos to the Joseph Smith Papers team for assembling the chronology, and to BYU Studies for publishing it. Very well done. (more…)

Is Fiction Inherently Immoral?

by Adam Greenwood

“The truest poetry is the most feigning.” (more…)

4/17/2008

A Branch Dies on Easter

by Adam Greenwood

I’m posting the following from Ray with his permission. (more…)

A modest, sensible, reasonable proposal that is certain to fail

by Kaimi Wenger

Utah’s NBA team needs to change its name, period. The name is silly. There is no jazz in the state of Utah. They should give the Jazz name back to the good folks of New Orleans, for whom the moniker actually makes sense, and pick a new one that actually makes sense for Utah.

Which new monikers might work? (more…)

437 Children Taken from Cohab Parents

by Adam Greenwood

By now you’ll have heard about the Mormon splinter sect in Texas that was accused of a forced, under-age marriage and how, in consequence, the state of Texas raided and took away all 416 437 kids. (more…)

4/16/2008

The Case of the Missing Pioneer

by Ardis Parshall

Most people with even a general sense of the Mormon pioneers are familiar with their “roadometer,” a set of cog wheels fastened to a wagon wheel, which measured and recorded distance traveled without the need for a human observer to count the revolutions of the wheel. (more…)

Christian photographer must shoot gay wedding rite

by Adam Greenwood

My dad and I were working outside and talking this Saturday. He brought to my attention a recent article in the Albuquerque Journal. The New Mexico Humans Rights Commission punished a Christian wedding photographer for refusing on religious grounds to photograph a commitment ceremony for two lesbian women. (more…)

A T&S feature I just invented in the last three minutes: Sidebar Smackdown

by Frank McIntyre

Perusing our sidebar this morning, I discovered the same article linked twice, along with each linker’s distinct spin on it. Well if T&S bloggers get to rampantly editorialize in the sidebar, so should you! Feel free to sound off in the comments about the article. Personally, I am opposed to mocking French people. Oh wait, no I’m not.

And as long as I’m at it, (more…)

4/15/2008

How to read an “autobiographical novel”

by Julie M. Smith

I have no idea. You tell me. (more…)

4/14/2008

Pagan Christianity: A failure of nerve

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

A new book written by two Evangelical Christians supports many of the views of Latter-day Saints about the apostacy from First Century Christianity. Frank Viola and George Barna have collaborated on an updated and expanded version of one of Viola’s earlier books, and titled it Pagan Christianity. (more…)

4/13/2008

Some Thoughts about Provident Living

by Julie M. Smith

Two questions, actually. (more…)

To see ourselves as others see us

by Ardis Parshall

A sister in Relief Society told us this morning of having toured Salt Lake’s then-newly renovated Cathedral of the Madeleine (more…)

Love and skepticism

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

When Christ was sending out his disciples to work as missionaries, he told them “Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.” (Matthew 10:16) Latter-day Saints need to be wiser when dealing with the wolves among us. (more…)

4/12/2008

Noah’s flood in light of the Restored Gospel

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

There was an interesting post in September 2007 about a Dialogue article discussing the usual interpretation of the flood of Noah as being scientifically implausible. A couple of comments touched upon, but did not fully explicate, the way that the scriptures of the Restored Gospel and other insights from Joseph Smith can suggest a more scientifically feasible interpretation of Noah’s flood. (more…)

4/11/2008

Marriott, Again

by Julie M. Smith

I know we’ve had this conversation before, but . . . (more…)

Mormons in the Military

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

About 15 years ago I wrote a short piece for a Sunstone Symposium panel on the topic of Mormons in the Military. It was focused on my personal experiences as a Latter-day Saint dealing with the armed forces rules on religion and the chaplains specifically. A number of things have developed since then, so it seems worthwhile to revisit the topic and elicit readers’ own experiences. (more…)

4/10/2008

Sorting out the virtuous and praiseworthy: Incorporating the gospel-compatible elements of an existing culture

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

As the Church’s membership has become predominantly non-American and non-English speaking, the question of how to construct a Mormon ethnic identity within the wide variety of existing cultures worldwide has become a present concern for millions of Latter-day Saints. (more…)

“Well Known Facts”

by Ardis Parshall

This week while we’re hearing lurid tales from Tom Green County, Texas, it is worthwhile to remember exactly how ugly were the lies once printed about our own people, some of them told unashamedly by federal appointees and officers of the 19th century court. (more…)

Why it’s unchristian to call Mormons “not Christian”

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

In his new book, Claiming Christ, Professor Robert Millet, in dialogue with Evangelical scholar Gerald McDermott about the commonalities and differences of Mormonism and the varieties of Evangelical Christianity, makes the observation that the notion of labeling Latter-day Saints as “not Christian” is a fashion that became widespread only about twenty years ago. (more…)

4/9/2008

Integrating Elites into the Church

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

While watching last weekend’s General Conference, with the sustaining of President Monson and the calling of new people into Church leadership, one of the things I felt is how fortunate the Church is to have as its leaders men and women who have achieved significantly in many walks of life. This is in contrast to most other denominations, where people with these skills would be excluded from formal church leadership. For example, what other church has attorneys in its most senior leadership? (more…)

What’s Wrong with Ancient Research in Mormon Studies

by Jonathan Green

Mormon Studies has become a relic area for outdated ideas about texts and their transmission. That becomes clear in reading a number of contributions to Early Christians in Disarray: Contemporary LDS Perspectives on the Christian Apostasy (FARMS, 2005) (more…)

4/8/2008

Graven Images: The hunger for an authentic image of Joseph

by Raymond Takashi Swenson

Ardis Parshall has presented in previous postings “The CSI Effect and Mormon History”, 3/20/2008, and “And Yet Another Joseph Smith Photograph”, 4/1/2008, arresting images that have, at first glance, an arguable relationship to our known historical depictions of the Prophet Joseph Smith, but turn out, on further research, to have no chance of being what we wish they were. In commenting on Ardis’ second post (#14, #48), I pointed out the reasons why there are likely to be a great many old images that resemble our mental image of the Prophet, and why it would be extremely difficult to verify any of them as a real image of Joseph. (more…)

Introducing Raymond Takashi Swenson

by Ardis Parshall

To help us compensate for the shortage of lawyers at T&S, Raymond Takashi Swenson has agreed to guest blog for a week or two. (more…)

No End to Race If You Could Hie to Kolob

by Adam Greenwood

This conference I didn’t much like the choir’s new tune for If You Could Hie to Kolob so I thought over the words instead. “There is no end to race” got my attention. (more…)

4/7/2008

The Hallmark of Monson’s Presidency?

by Marc Bohn

“Change for the better can come to all. Over the years we have issued appeals to the less active, the offended, the critic, the transgressor — to come back. ‘Come back and feast at the table of the Lord and taste again the sweet and satisfying fruits of fellowship with the Saints.’ In the private sanctuary of one’s own conscience lies that spirit, that determination to cast off the old person and to measure up to the stature of true potential. In this spirit, we again issue that heartfelt invitation. Come back, we reach out to you in the pure love of Christ and express our desire to assist you and to welcome you into full fellowship. (more…)

4/6/2008

Sunday Afternoon General Conference Open Thread

by Russell Arben Fox

As has become tradition around here, Times and Seasons is opening up a thread for comments and discussion, insights and observations, thoughts and questions, arising from Sunday afternoon’s General Conference session. Enjoy!

Sunday Morning General Conference Open Thread

by Russell Arben Fox

As has become tradition around here, Times and Seasons is opening up a thread for comments and discussion, insights and observations, thoughts and questions, arising from Sunday morning’s General Conference session. Enjoy!

4/5/2008

Thoughts on Hinckley and Monson

by Russell Arben Fox

Since Kaimi was kind enough to link to it, I thought I’d elaborate a bit on some comments of mine which Peggy Fletcher Stack used in her excellent article summarizing the accomplishments of President Hinckley, and the opportunities and challenges facing President Monson. It would be interesting to hear more from some of the other sources she made use of in putting her piece together (Melissa Proctor, Ronan Head, etc.), but for now, here is at least a little bit the context of my remarks. (more…)

Saturday Afternoon General Conference Open Thread

by Russell Arben Fox

As has become tradition around here, Times and Seasons is opening up a thread for comments and discussion, insights and observations, thoughts and questions, arising from Saturday afternoon’s General Conference session. Enjoy!

Saturday Morning General Conference Open Thread

by Russell Arben Fox

As has become tradition around here, Times and Seasons is opening up a thread for comments and discussion, insights and observations, thoughts and questions, arising from Saturday morning’s General Conference session. Enjoy!

4/4/2008

Martin Luther King in Deseret

by Ardis Parshall

On this 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, and in the pre-Conference blogging lull, perhaps there is room in your day to remember Dr. King’s visit to Salt Lake City. (more…)

4/3/2008

An Ethics of Teaching

by Dave Banack

I’m reading a short book that reviews what one might call the virtues of teaching: learning, authority, ethics, order, imagination, compassion, patience, character, and pleasure. Each virtue (which might be though of as an aspect of the character of an ideal teacher) is reviewed in its own chapter. The ethics chapter suggested an interesting question to me: Is there an LDS ethics of teaching that differs in any particulars from a Christian or secular ethics of teaching? (more…)

4/1/2008

And Yet Another Joseph Smith Photograph

by Ardis Parshall

The April 1st posting of this article may tempt you to think this is an April Fool’s prank. I wish it were. It is not. (more…)

Church Pranks

by Adam Greenwood

Cub Scout Pack meeting on April Fools day means we leaders will be having a little fun. All in good taste of course. The fake dog-doo will be moderate and restrained. (more…)

3/30/2008

History, apostasy, and faith-promoting rumors

by Jonathan Green

Mormon belief in an early Christian apostasy suggests a couple of historiographic projects that are, I think, doomed to failure, but there might be an alternative (more…)

3/28/2008

God as a Character in His Own Play

by Adam Greenwood

C.S. Lewis compared Christ’s birth to Shakespeare writing himself into one of his plays. He was attempting to explain the traditional Christian doctrine of the Incarnation. (more…)

3/25/2008

Mormon Studies This Week

by Ben Huff

This is a big week for Mormon Studies on the Wasatch Front, with events at the University of Utah, Utah Valley State College, Westminster College, and BYU. (more…)

Mormon identity and culture

by Wilfried Decoo

The following is part of a larger study on the concept of “gospel culture”, which I have been working on. In a previous post I presented the question “How American is the Church?”, which yielded very interesting comments. For the present post I excerpted some further parts on culture and Mormon identity, with various questions to the reader. (more…)

3/24/2008

Confessions of a News Junkie

by Marc Bohn

Sunday morning. Clicked off This Week with George Stephanopoulos just a couple of minutes after clicking it on. Feeling especially weary of the twenty-four hour news cycle for some reason today… the relentless intensity, the insatiable talking-heads, and a seemingly never-ending electoral season. (more…)

BYU: The Crimson or the Crimson Tide of the West?

by Jonathan Green

Actually, it’s more like the Intermountain Cornhuskers, or the Mormon Maccabees (more…)