For heart and mind and soul

For heart and mind and soul 2020-10-07T17:04:09-06:00

 

The Kyiv Ukraine Temple
The Kyiv Ukraine Temple (Wikimedia Commons public domain)

 

Three new items went up today on the website of the Interpreter Foundation:

 

Interpreter Radio Show — September 27, 2020

The 27 September 2020 broadcast of the Interpreter Radio Show featured Steve Densley, Matthew Bowen, Mark Johnson, and Daniel Peterson. In this episode, the discussion focused on humility and academic integrity, with some reference to Peterson’s recent Interpreter essay “Reckoning with the Mortally Inevitable” and his recent Ensign article “The Book of Mormon and the Descent into Dissent.” The second portion of the show was a roundtable focused on the upcoming Come Follow Me lesson #43 (Mormon 7-9).   This episode of the Interpreter Radio Show has now been shorn of commercial interruptions and archived for your listening enjoyment and for the good of your soul.  Unfortunately, it proved impossible to remove all of Peterson’s comments.  So it’s free.

 

Audio Roundtable: Come, Follow Me Book of Mormon Lesson 40 “Ye Are the Children of the Covenant”: 3 Nephi 20-26

Martin Tanner and Dan Peterson joined for this Interpreter Radio Roundtable that was devoted to Come, Follow Me Book of Mormon Lesson 40, “Ye Are the Children of the Covenant” on 3 Nephi 20-26.  The roundtable was extracted from the 6 September 2020 broadcast of the Interpreter Radio Show. The complete show — free of charge and free of commercial distractions — may be heard at https://interpreterfoundation.org/interpreter-radio-show-september-6-2020/.

 

Generously provided by Jonn Claybaugh:

Come, Follow Me — Study and Teaching Helps: Lesson 40, October 12-18: 3 Nephi 20-26 — “Ye Are the Children of the Covenant”

 

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And please don’t forget the upcoming Fifth Interpreter Matthew B. Brown Memorial Conference: The Temple on Mount Zion, which will be held on Saturday, 7 November 2020.  It’s free and open to the public.

 

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Of course, when I say that these things are free, I’m. not saying that they don’t cost money.  The Interpreter Foundation has no salaried employees, its leadership draws no pay, its authors aren’t compensated, and most of its work is done by volunteers.  But it does have expenses, and those must be covered.

 

If you’re interested in donating to support the work of the Interpreter Foundation — and if you’re not interested, you should be! — please have a look at the information provided here:

 

“Donating to The Interpreter Foundation”

 

And here’s something — kindly explained by my friend Tom Pittman —  that you should simply do, and do now, whether for the Interpreter Foundation or for some other worthy cause.  There is just no good reason not to do it.  Heck, there’s scarcely a bad reason not to do it:

 

As we approach the Christmas giving season — to my horror, I’ve already heard Christmas-oriented commercials — AmazonSmile becomes ever more important.  As of September 2020, thanks to friends of the Interpreter Foundation who signed up to make their Amazon.com purchases through AmazonSmile at no extra charge to themselves — Amazon has contributed $4,696.15 to Interpreter.

 

Posted from Park City, Utah

 

 


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