2019-07-07T15:47:23-06:00

    Doug Ealy kindly shared a poem by the great G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) with me a few hours ago.  I enjoyed the poem so much — curiously, I can’t recall reading it before, although I’m an unabashed Chesterton fan — that I think I’ll share it with you.  It’s titled “The Aristocrat”:   The Devil is a gentleman, and asks you down to stay At his little place at What’sitsname (it isn’t far away). They say the sport... Read more

2019-07-07T09:35:43-06:00

    Later this morning, I’ll be teaching a Gospel Doctrine lesson on Acts 1-5.  In that context, a column that I published in the Deseret News back on 17 November 2011 is directly relevant:   Virtually all historians, of all religious opinions, agree that Jesus was crucified. The New Testament says that he died just prior to Passover. One of his inner circle of 12 apostles betrayed him, nine fled at his arrest, and another — Peter — pretended... Read more

2019-07-06T21:00:52-06:00

    From time to time, I read online that I’m a young-earth creationist.  This is helpful to me, because, had I been left to my own resources on that topic, I would have assumed that I’ve never been one.  I can’t recall a time when I thought that the Earth was only a few thousand years old or denied the existence of dinosaurs.  In fact, one of my childhood dreams was to become a paleontologist.  (Plainly, all of this... Read more

2019-07-06T14:23:19-06:00

    I received a note the other day from my friend, former student, and former colleague Glen M. Cooper.  He had just returned from Istanbul, where he was invited as a senior scholar to present a paper and to participate otherwise at an important three-day international conference there dedicated to the memory of a very distinguished Turkish scholar who recently passed away.  Dr. Cooper was well received at the conference, as he deserved to be, and he was widely recognized,... Read more

2019-07-06T11:56:22-06:00

    These beloved hymn lyrics, written by Eliza R. Snow (1804-1887), are very familiar to Latter-day Saints:   O my Father, thou that dwellest In the high and glorious place, When shall I regain thy presence And again behold thy face? In thy holy habitation, Did my spirit once reside? In my first primeval childhood Was I nurtured near thy side? For a wise and glorious purpose Thou hast placed me here on earth And withheld the recollection Of... Read more

2019-07-06T10:56:45-06:00

    The protagonist of George Orwell’s great dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, Winston Smith, is an employee of the Ministry of Truth — which, along with the Ministry of Love (which includes the Thought Police and carries out torture and liquidations), the Ministry of Plenty (which directs the economy and doles out rations), and the Ministry of Peace (which oversees the armed forces and conducts their perpetual wars), is one of the four divisions of the government of Oceania under “the Party.”... Read more

2019-07-05T22:29:10-06:00

    My thanks to Matthew Wheeler for calling the following to my attention:   “July 4th: Muslims have been an integral part of the United States of America since her birth”   ***   Nearly two years ago, this press release appeared:   MORMON SCHOLARS FILE BRIEF ATTACKING TRUMP’S MUSLIM BAN   August 18, 2017 – Earlier today, a group of 21 scholars of Mormon history filed a brief in the United States Supreme Court attacking President Trump’s ban... Read more

2019-07-05T22:30:27-06:00

    In the eighth issue of Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship, which appeared in 2014, A. Keith Thompson, a legal historian who hails originally from New Zealand but who has lived and traveled extensively worldwide and who now resides and works in New South Wales, Australia, published an article titled “Fashion or Proof? A Challenge for Pacific Anthropology”:   Abstract: This article is a call to Pacific anthropologists to write the story of the origin of mankind in... Read more

2019-07-05T22:32:46-06:00

    A new article has just appeared in Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship under the title of “Compassion as the Heart of the Gospel.”  It was written by perhaps the least qualified person on the planet even to so much as utter the word compassion:   Abstract: The Greek philosopher Aristotle, clearly one of the world’s great geniuses, created the concept of the “unmoved mover,” which moves “other things, but is, itself, unmoved by anything else.” This... Read more

2019-07-05T22:33:38-06:00

    Hales Swift continues with his helpful and interesting videos for the Interpreter Foundation:   “The Spirit is Poured Out: A Video Supplement for Come, Follow Me Lesson 26: “Ye Shall Be Witnesses unto Me””   ***   For the 30 June 2019 edition of the Interpreter Radio Show, Martin Tanner, Kevin Christensen, John Welch, and Jeannie Welch discussed Book of Mormon Central as well as the Welches’ new book on the New Testament parables. In the second hour of the... Read more

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