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lds church sues wyoming city: The Mormon Handcart Migration Candy Moulton, 2019-04-25 In 1856 the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints employed a new means of getting converts to Great Salt Lake City who could not afford the journey otherwise. They began using handcarts, thus initiating a five-year experiment that has become a legend in the annals of Mormon and North American migration. Only one in ten Mormon emigrants used handcarts, but of those 3,000 who did between 1856 and 1860, most survived the harrowing journey to settle Utah and become members of a remarkable pioneer generation. Others were not so lucky. More than 200 died along the way, victims of exhaustion, accident, and, for a few, starvation and exposure to late-season Wyoming blizzards. Now, Candy Moulton tells of their successes, travails, and tragedies in an epic retelling of a legendary story. The Mormon Handcart Migration traces each stage of the journey, from the transatlantic voyage of newly converted church members to the gathering of the faithful in the eastern Nebraska encampment known as Winter Quarters. She then traces their trek from the western Great Plains, across modern-day Wyoming, to their final destination at Great Salt Lake. The handcart experiment was the brainchild of Mormon leader Brigham Young, who decreed that the saints could haul their own possessions, pushing or pulling two-wheeled carts across 1,100 miles of rough terrain, much of it roadless and some of it untrodden. The LDS church now embraces the saga of the handcart emigrants—including even the disaster that befell the Martin and Willie handcart companies in central Wyoming in 1856—as an educational, faith-inspiring experience for thousands of youth each year. Moulton skillfully weaves together scores of firsthand accounts from the journals, letters, diaries, reminiscences, and autobiographies the handcart pioneers left behind. Depth of research and unprecedented detail make this volume an essential history of the Mormon handcart migration. |
lds church sues wyoming city: No Going Back Jonathan Langford, 2009-10 A gay teenage Mormon growing up in western Oregon in 2003. His straight best friend. Their parents. A typical LDS ward, a high-school club about tolerance for gays, and a proposed anti-gay-marriage amendment to the state constitution. In No Going Back, these elements combine in a coming-of-age story about faithfulness and friendship, temptation and redemption, tough choices and conflicting loyalties. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Dispensation Angela Hallstrom, 2016-01-08 Dispensation: Latter-Day Fiction anthologizes the best Mormon short stories written near the turn of the twenty-first century. Each of the extraordinary twenty-eight stories in this volume represents a potent individual voice, from popular and nationally acclaimed authors Brady Udall and Orson Scott Card, to well-respected Mormon literature veterans Douglas Thayer and Margaret Blair Young, to talented up-and-coming writers Lisa Madsen Rubilar and Todd Robert Petersen, and many more. Taken individually, each story is an example of the surprise and power and even joy readers can find in a finely wrought piece of short fiction. Considered collectively, these stories herald a new era of excellence in Mormon literature. As Margaret Blair Young writes in her introduction, In Dispensation, Angela Hallstrom has assembled twenty-eight gems—each a star in a brilliant constellation. This particular collection is a pinnacle. The following authors have stories appearing in this landmark 482-page volume: Lee Allred Matthew James Babcock Phyllis Barber Orson Scott Card Mary Clyde Arianne Cope Darin Cozzens Lisa Torcasso Downing Brian Evenson Angela Hallstrom Jack Harrell Lewis Horne Helen Walker Jones Bruce Jorgensen Laura McCune-Poplin Larry Menlove Coke Newell Todd Robert Petersen Levi Peterson Paul Rawlins Karen Rosenbaum Lisa Madsen Rubilar Eric Samuelsen Darrell Spencer Douglas Thayer Stephen Tuttle Margaret Blair Young Brady Udall |
lds church sues wyoming city: Barefoot to Billionaire Jon Huntsman, 2014-10-01 An inspiring autobiography by “one of the finest human beings, industrial leaders, and philanthropists on the planet” (Stephen R. Covey). The company Jon Huntsman founded in 1970, the Huntsman Corporation, is now one of the largest petrochemical manufacturers in the world, employing more than 12,000 people and generating over $10 billion in revenue each year. Success in business, though, was always a means to an end for him—never an end in itself. In Barefoot to Billionaire, Huntsman revisits the key moments in his life that shaped his view of faith, family, service, and the responsibility that comes with wealth. He writes candidly about his brief tenure in the Nixon administration, which preceded the Watergate scandal but still left a deep impression on him about the abuse of power and the significance of personal respect and integrity. He also opens up about his faith and prominent membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. But most importantly, Huntsman reveals the rationale behind his commitment to give away his entire fortune before his death. In 1995, Huntsman and his wife, Karen, founded the Huntsman Cancer Institute and eventually dedicated more than a billion dollars of their personal funds to the fight for a cure. In this increasingly materialistic world, Barefoot to Billionaire is a refreshing reminder of the enduring power of traditional values. |
lds church sues wyoming city: No Man Knows My History Fawn M. Brodie, 1995-08-01 The first paperback edition of the classic biography of the founder of the Mormon church, this book attempts to answer the questions that continue to surround Joseph Smith. Was he a genuine prophet, or a gifted fabulist who became enthralled by the products of his imagination and ended up being martyred for them? 24 pages of photos. Map. |
lds church sues wyoming city: MPLA Newsletter Mountain Plains Library Association, 1986 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Dispirited Luisa M. Perkins, 2012-03 Cathy sees things that are invisible to everyone else. Her new stepbrother's bizarre behavior. A ghostly little boy. An abandoned house in the woods. But she doesn't see how they're all connected. And what she doesn't see might just kill her. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Upon Destiny's Song Mike Ericksen, Sage Steadman, 2013 Chapters alternate between a novelization of the life of Ericksen's Danish Mormon pioneers and Ericksen's memoirs of his own life in the present day. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Rift Todd Robert Petersen, 2009-09 Jens Thorsen's retirement is not what his wife, Lila, was expecting. Rather than tending to things around the house, Thorsen has thrown himself into a life of charity: visiting the sick, the widowed, and the incarcerated. Between these acts of service, Thorsen finds the time to nurse his feud with local bishop Darrell Bunker. The two have hated each other for as long as anyone in Sanpete, Utah, can remember. Even though the valley is much too small for the both of them, Thorsen and the bishop have managed a tense ceasefire that allows daily life to carry on. But when the bishop's daughter moves home, there are suddenly too many egos in one place, and Sanpete starts to pull apart at the seams. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Big Wonderful Kevin Holdsworth, 2020-08-03 What begins with simple observations from a Utah transplant to Wyoming becomes an ode to family and place, and perhaps an elegy for it all.” —Jeffe Kennedy, author of Wyoming Trucks, True Love, and the Weather Channel In this unconventional memoir, Kevin Holdsworth vividly portrays life in remote, unpredictable country and ruminates on the guts—or foolishness—it takes to put down roots and raise a family in a merciless environment. Growing up in Utah, Holdsworth couldn’t wait to move away. Once ensconced on the East Coast, however, he found himself writing westerns and dreaming of the mountains he’d skied and climbed. Fed up with city life, he moved to a small Wyoming town. In Big Wonderful, he writes of a mountaineering companion’s death, the difficult birth of his son, and his father’s terminal illness—encounters with mortality that sharpened his ideas about risk, care, and commitment. He puts a new spin on mountaineering literature, telling wild tales from his reunion with the mountains but also relating the surprising willpower it took to turn back from risks he would have taken before he became a father. He found he needed courage to protect and engage deeply with his family, his community, and the wild places he loves. Holdsworth’s essays and poems are rich with anecdotes, characters, and vivid images. Readers will feel as if they themselves watched a bear destroy an entire expedition’s food, walked with his great-great-grandmother along the icy Mormon Trail, and tried to plant a garden in Wyoming’s infamous wind. Readers who love the outdoors will eagerly partake, as “Holdsworth invites us to sit down at his literary campfire and listen to vivid, unforgettable stories” (High Country News). |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Fading Flower & Swallow the Sun Mahonri Stewart, 2012-05 The Fading Flower: Emma Smith had brought up her children to honor the memory of their father Joseph Smith, the martyred Mormon Prophet. Yet when her son David Hyrum Smith starts investigating the mysteries behind his father's involvement in polygamy and goes West to mingle with the Brighamite faction of Mormonism, Emma must confront a chapter in her life that she would have preferred to have left closed. Swallow the Sun: Before he became one of the world's greatest defenders of Christianity and the beloved author of The Chronicles of Narnia, C. S. Jack Lewis was a staunch atheist. This is is the stirring and powerful story of his early life as he journeyed from entrenched skeptic to one of modern Christianity's most eloquent and courageous advocates. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Wasatch Douglas Thayer, 2011-11 Douglas Thayer's third collection presents a dozen of his career-best stories, including several that have never before appeared in print. Wasatch is the next chapter in Thayer’s recent literary success, preceded by Hooligan, his landmark memoir about growing up Mormon in Provo, Utah, and by his acclaimed novel The Tree House, about the trials and redemption of missionary and soldier Harris Thatcher. |
lds church sues wyoming city: On the Road to Heaven Coke Newell, 2007 From the author of Latter Days: A Guided Tour Through Six Billion Years of Mormonism comes this exuberant and groundbreaking autobiographical novel about the modern Mormon convert experience. Revealing the author's hard-won path to meaning, faith, and forgiveness, On the Road to Heaven is a love story about a girl and a guy and their search for heaven—a lotta love, a little heaven, and one heck of a ride in between. In a style reminiscent of and offering homage to Jack Kerouac, On the Road to Heaven traces an LSD-to-LDS pilgrimage across the geographic and cultural landscape of two continents in the late twentieth century. From the 1970s hippie heyday of the Colorado mountains to the coca fields of Colombia, it's a journey through Thoreau ascetics, Ram Dass Taoism, and Edward Abbey monkey-wrenching to the mission fields of one of the world's fastest-growing—and most trenchantly conservative—religions. Few stories have ever described a more unusual road to redemption. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Moroni and the Swastika David Conley Nelson, 2015-03-02 While Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist government was persecuting Jews and Jehovah’s Witnesses and driving forty-two small German religious sects underground, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints continued to practice unhindered. How some fourteen thousand Mormons not only survived but thrived in Nazi Germany is a story little known, rarely told, and occasionally rewritten within the confines of the Church’s history—for good reason, as we see in David Conley Nelson’s Moroni and the Swastika. A page-turning historical narrative, this book is the first full account of how Mormons avoided Nazi persecution through skilled collaboration with Hitler’s regime, and then eschewed postwar shame by constructing an alternative history of wartime suffering and resistance. The Twelfth Article of Faith and parts of the 134th Section of the Doctrine and Covenants function as Mormonism’s equivalent of the biblical admonition to “render unto Caesar,” a charge to cooperate with civil government, no matter how onerous doing so may be. Resurrecting this often-violated doctrinal edict, ecclesiastical leaders at the time developed a strategy that protected Mormons within Nazi Germany. Furthermore, as Nelson shows, many Mormon officials strove to fit into the Third Reich by exploiting commonalities with the Nazi state. German Mormons emphasized a mutual interest in genealogy and a passion for sports. They sent husbands into the Wehrmacht and sons into the Hitler Youth, and they prayed for a German victory when the war began. They also purged Jewish references from hymnals, lesson plans, and liturgical practices. One American mission president even wrote an article for the official Nazi Party newspaper, extolling parallels between Utah Mormon and German Nazi society. Nelson documents this collaboration, as well as subsequent efforts to suppress it by fashioning a new collective memory of ordinary German Mormons’ courage and travails during the war. Recovering this inconvenient past, Moroni and the Swastika restores a complex and difficult chapter to the history of Nazi Germany and the Mormon Church in the twentieth century—and offers new insight into the construction of historical truth. |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Stop Child Molestation Book Gene G. Abel, Nora Harlow, M. D. Abel, 2001-12-01 The Stop Child Molestation Book has been called groundbreaking, hard-hitting, and a must-read for every family in America. What makes this a break-through book is its plan of action to put an end to child molestation. Using new facts from their study of 16,000 people, Gene G. Abel, M.D.and Nora Harlow urge families to take three powerful steps to protect their children. We want to stop child molestation in the United States before we die. Only a few years ago that goal seemed laughable. Now, the breakthroughs in testing, medicine, and therapies will stop the people who molest children. Child molestation — with its at least 39 million adult survivors and more than three million child victims — can end. The problem we face is getting the word out. Everything you need to know is in this book. We ask you to read it. We ask you to tell others. And, we ask you to become a hero and step forward to protect the children closest to you. -Gene G. Abel, M.D. and Nora Harlow |
lds church sues wyoming city: Joseph Smith for President Spencer W. McBride, 2021 By the election year of 1844, Joseph Smith, the controversial founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, had amassed a national following of some 25,000 believers. Nearly half of that population lived in the city of Nauvoo, Illinois, where Smith was the mayor and the commander-in-chief of a militia of some 2,500 men. In less than twenty years, Joseph Smith had transformed the American religious landscape and grown his own political power substantially. Still, the political standing of the Mormon people remained unstable. Unable to garner federal protection or the support of President Martin Van Buren or any of the major presidential candidates, Smith took the bold step of launching his own presidential campaign. While many scoffed at the notion that Smith could come anywhere close to the White House, others regarded his run as a threat to the stability of the young nation. Hounded by mobs throughout the campaign, Smith was ultimately killed, becoming the first presidential candidate to be assassinated. Though Joseph Smith's run for president is now best remembered for its gruesome end, the renegade campaign was historic in the proposals it put forward. He called for a total abolition of slavery, the closure of the country's penitentiaries, and the reestablishment of a national bank to stabilize the economy. But most important was Smith's call for an expansion of protections for religious minorities. In a time when the Bill of Rights did not apply to individual states, Smith called for the federal government to be empowered to protect minorities when states failed to do so. In this book, Spencer W. McBride tells the story of Smith's campaign and how his calls for religious freedom through constitutional reform are essential to understanding how the American political system evolved to what we know today. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Yank , 1943 |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Aber Bulletin , 1976 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Protecting Religious Freedom After Boerne V. Flores United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee on the Constitution, 1998 |
lds church sues wyoming city: LDS Preparedness Manual Christopher Parrett, 2008-10-01 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Called to Laugh Bruce E. Dana, 2019-03 A mission is full of spiritual highs, discouraging lows, and moments when you can't help but laugh out loud. From doctrinal misunderstandings and language barriers to encounters with wild animals and love-struck investigators, this collection of hilarious true stories and comics celebrates the lighthearted side of missionary work. Each anecdote testifies that while God takes His work seriously, He isn't above brightening His servants' day with a little humor. |
lds church sues wyoming city: AECT Membership Directory and Data Book Association for Educational Communications and Technology, 1980 |
lds church sues wyoming city: History Of Utah's American Indians Forrest Cuch, 2003-10-01 This book is a joint project of the Utah Division of Indian Affairs and the Utah State Historical Society. It is distributed to the book trade by Utah State University Press. The valleys, mountains, and deserts of Utah have been home to native peoples for thousands of years. Like peoples around the word, Utah's native inhabitants organized themselves in family units, groups, bands, clans, and tribes. Today, six Indian tribes in Utah are recognized as official entities. They include the Northwestern Shoshone, the Goshutes, the Paiutes, the Utes, the White Mesa or Southern Utes, and the Navajos (Dineh). Each tribe has its own government. Tribe members are citizens of Utah and the United States; however, lines of distinction both within the tribes and with the greater society at large have not always been clear. Migration, interaction, war, trade, intermarriage, common threats, and challenges have made relationships and affiliations more fluid than might be expected. In this volume, the editor and authors endeavor to write the history of Utah's first residents from an Indian perspective. An introductory chapter provides an overview of Utah's American Indians and a concluding chapter summarizes the issues and concerns of contemporary Indians and their leaders. Chapters on each of the six tribes look at origin stories, religion, politics, education, folkways, family life, social activities, economic issues, and important events. They provide an introduction to the rich heritage of Utah's native peoples. This book includes chapters by David Begay, Dennis Defa, Clifford Duncan, Ronald Holt, Nancy Maryboy, Robert McPherson, Mae Parry, Gary Tom, and Mary Jane Yazzie. Forrest Cuch was born and raised on the Uintah and Ouray Ute Indian Reservation in northeastern Utah. He graduated from Westminster College in 1973 with a bachelor of arts degree in behavioral sciences. He served as education director for the Ute Indian Tribe from 1973 to 1988. From 1988 to 1994 he was employed by the Wampanoag Tribe in Gay Head, Massachusetts, first as a planner and then as tribal administrator. Since October 1997 he has been director of the Utah Division of Indian Affairs. |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Mormon People Matthew Bowman, 2012-01-24 “From one of the brightest of the new generation of Mormon-studies scholars comes a crisp, engaging account of the religion’s history.”—The Wall Street Journal With Mormonism on the nation’s radar as never before, religious historian Matthew Bowman has written an essential book that pulls back the curtain on more than 180 years of Mormon history and doctrine. He recounts the church’s origins and explains how the Mormon vision has evolved—and with it the esteem in which Mormons have been held in the eyes of their countrymen. Admired on the one hand as hardworking paragons of family values, Mormons have also been derided as oddballs and persecuted as polygamists, heretics, and zealots. The place of Mormonism in public life continues to generate heated debate, yet the faith has never been more popular. One of the fastest-growing religions in the world, it retains an uneasy sense of its relationship with the main line of American culture. Mormons will surely play an even greater role in American civic life in the years ahead. The Mormon People comes as a vital addition to the corpus of American religious history—a frank and balanced demystification of a faith that remains a mystery for many. With a new afterword by the author. “Fascinating and fair-minded . . . a sweeping soup-to-nuts primer on Mormonism.”—The Boston Globe “A cogent, judicious, and important account of a faith that has been an important element in American history but remained surprisingly misunderstood.”—Michael Beschloss “A thorough, stimulating rendering of the Mormon past and present.”—Kirkus Reviews “[A] smart, lucid history.”—Tom Brokaw |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Mormon Handcart Migration Candy Moulton, 2019-04-25 In 1856 the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints employed a new means of getting converts to Great Salt Lake City who could not afford the journey otherwise. They began using handcarts, thus initiating a five-year experiment that has become a legend in the annals of Mormon and North American migration. Only one in ten Mormon emigrants used handcarts, but of those 3,000 who did between 1856 and 1860, most survived the harrowing journey to settle Utah and become members of a remarkable pioneer generation. Others were not so lucky. More than 200 died along the way, victims of exhaustion, accident, and, for a few, starvation and exposure to late-season Wyoming blizzards. Now, Candy Moulton tells of their successes, travails, and tragedies in an epic retelling of a legendary story. The Mormon Handcart Migration traces each stage of the journey, from the transatlantic voyage of newly converted church members to the gathering of the faithful in the eastern Nebraska encampment known as Winter Quarters. She then traces their trek from the western Great Plains, across modern-day Wyoming, to their final destination at Great Salt Lake. The handcart experiment was the brainchild of Mormon leader Brigham Young, who decreed that the saints could haul their own possessions, pushing or pulling two-wheeled carts across 1,100 miles of rough terrain, much of it roadless and some of it untrodden. The LDS church now embraces the saga of the handcart emigrants—including even the disaster that befell the Martin and Willie handcart companies in central Wyoming in 1856—as an educational, faith-inspiring experience for thousands of youth each year. Moulton skillfully weaves together scores of firsthand accounts from the journals, letters, diaries, reminiscences, and autobiographies the handcart pioneers left behind. Depth of research and unprecedented detail make this volume an essential history of the Mormon handcart migration. |
lds church sues wyoming city: A History of the Rectangular Survey System C. Albert White, 1983 |
lds church sues wyoming city: John Watts Berrett family, 1831-1978 LaMar C. Berrett, 1980 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Oswald and Oswalt in Nebraska, Utah and Wyoming Bill Lee, 2008 One of eleven full-name indexed books containing thumbnail sketches of county courthouse records for the surnames OSWALD and OSWALT. This book includes abstracts of marriage records, civil and criminal court records, probate records, birth records, and interesting articles from newspapers and local histories from the states of Nebraska, Utah and Wyoming. Designed for the serious OSWALD and/or OSWALT researcher, one will not find more information on the surnames OSWALD and OSWALT for the states researched in any one place, and most assuredly will provide some missing links to your special family history for either of these two names, or related families. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Tincher V. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc , 1996 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Improvement Era , 1954 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Model Mormon Rosemary Card, 2018 When sixteen-year-old Rosemary Card left Salt Lake to become a model, she had no idea what awaited her in New York City. As her career took her around the globe, Rosie often had to follow promptings to keep her out of physical and spiritual danger. Now she's telling her inspiring true story of how staying attuned to the Spirit can bless you with opportunities you never could have imagined! |
lds church sues wyoming city: Carthage Conspiracy Dallin H Oaks, Marvin S Hill, 1979-05 Carthage Conspiracy deals with the general problem of Mormon/non-Mormon conflict, as well as with the dramatic story of Mormon prophet Joseph Smith, his brother Hyrum, and their alleged assassins. It places the infamous event at the Carthage jail (1846) and the subsequent murder-conspiracy trial in the context of Mormon and American legal history, and deals with the question of achieving justice when crimes are politically motivated and popularly supported. |
lds church sues wyoming city: The Word of Wisdom Steven C. Harper, 2008-01-01 This book authoritatively defines the Word of Wisdom as much more than a simple health code while answering questions about the circumstances that led to its revelation and providing explanations on how it answered both current questions in Joseph Smith's day, and critically important issues in ours. The author tackles the question of Joseph Smith's own adherence to the Word of Wisdom and vividly traces both the consistent and the changing ways it has been taught and applied throughout LDS history. |
lds church sues wyoming city: A History of Cache County Frank Ross Peterson, 1997 Covers history of Cache County from before settlement to 1996 and was written for the Utah centennial. |
lds church sues wyoming city: The American Family Powelson Gladys Powelson Jones, 1988 Powel Powelson was baptized 17 October 1716 in the Raritan Church in Somerville, New Jersey. He married Lena (Magdalena) Smock ca. 1750. Powell was a private in the Middlesex Co., New Jersey Militia and marched under Colonel Nathaniel Heard to Staten Island, New York 15 February 1776. Later, he moved with his family to Bucks Co., Pennsylvania ca. 1785. He was the father of twelve children. Descendants lived primarily in Virginia, Pennsylvania and elsewhere. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Utah Historical Quarterly J. Cecil Alter, 2010 List of charter members of the society: v. 1, p. 98-99. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Outstanding Young Men of America , 1980 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Navajo Times , 1973 |
lds church sues wyoming city: Ancestral Lines , 1998 Samuel A. Bayer was born in Germany in the early 1700s. He married Maria. Their children included Anna, Blasius, Johann Philip, Johannes, Hans, Anna, Johann Heinrich, Andreas, Anna Maria (who died young), Anna Maria, and Maria Barbara. Their descendant, Samuel Boyer was born in Philadelphia in 1751. He married Maria Catherine Kuser. Their children included John, Hannah, Elizabeth, Jacob, Maria, Henry, Eva and Rachel. |
lds church sues wyoming city: Yank , 1967 |
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May 30, 2025 · For the discussion of spirituality -- from LDS and non-LDS sources 1017 Topics 11831 Posts Last post ...
The Urantia Book (hell, Mormon, Egyptian, LDS) - Religion and ...
May 16, 2025 · In a way, like LDS - if I don't believe Chjristianity, what does the LDS update even matter?Discussion of the Golden Plates or the Book of Abraham is actually academic, but I …
Spiritual Challenges - StayLDS.com
May 14, 2025 · My family line is mostly from Italy and Sweden - the refugees between 1880's and 1924, with 1 line coming to America as bona-fide LDS pioneers from Wales. It doesn't matter …
Help with a Sacrament Talk - StayLDS.com
Jul 27, 2017 · That is the traditional LDS view and understanding of covenant path. You might take it into another direction and talk about the path of the covenant as the path of discipleship …
How do I report a corrupt Mormon? - StayLDS.com - Stay LDS / …
Mar 14, 2010 · I am not going to name names, but I have heard tell of a Mormon politician (not in USA!) who has been involved in some shady dealings.
Difference between Godhead and Trinity? - StayLDS.com - Stay …
Mar 20, 2011 · Is the trinity really very different from the current LDS Godhead concept? Also called Blessed Trinity, Holy Trinity. the union of three persons (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) in …
Introductions - StayLDS.com
Apr 11, 2025 · I'm here to stay LDS « by Broken60 » 14 Oct 2020, 11:34. 4 Replies 13860 Views Last post by Doubter 05 ...
StayLDS reference center - StayLDS.com
Apr 21, 2015 · *As you come across talks and articles that you wish to add, please consider the source and attach it if possible. Please try to keep the material close to LDS reliable sources, …
LDS Daily - 5 Crucial Questions - StayLDS.com
Oct 7, 2010 · The LDS Daily Watchlist "highlights the best videos from Latter-day Saint creators and organizations. From inspiring messages to uplifting music and vlogs, this collection shares …
History of the Temple Recommend - StayLDS.com
Jan 24, 2016 · It would appear that over time we trend away from the cray-cray. I like to think of myself as living according to the temple recommend requirements of the year 2164.
StayLDS.com - Index page
May 30, 2025 · For the discussion of spirituality -- from LDS and non-LDS sources 1017 Topics 11831 Posts Last post ...
The Urantia Book (hell, Mormon, Egyptian, LDS) - Religion and ...
May 16, 2025 · In a way, like LDS - if I don't believe Chjristianity, what does the LDS update even matter?Discussion of the Golden Plates or the Book of Abraham is actually academic, but I …
Spiritual Challenges - StayLDS.com
May 14, 2025 · My family line is mostly from Italy and Sweden - the refugees between 1880's and 1924, with 1 line coming to America as bona-fide LDS pioneers from Wales. It doesn't matter …
Help with a Sacrament Talk - StayLDS.com
Jul 27, 2017 · That is the traditional LDS view and understanding of covenant path. You might take it into another direction and talk about the path of the covenant as the path of discipleship to …
How do I report a corrupt Mormon? - StayLDS.com - Stay LDS / …
Mar 14, 2010 · I am not going to name names, but I have heard tell of a Mormon politician (not in USA!) who has been involved in some shady dealings.
Difference between Godhead and Trinity? - StayLDS.com - Stay …
Mar 20, 2011 · Is the trinity really very different from the current LDS Godhead concept? Also called Blessed Trinity, Holy Trinity. the union of three persons (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) in one …
Introductions - StayLDS.com
Apr 11, 2025 · I'm here to stay LDS « by Broken60 » 14 Oct 2020, 11:34. 4 Replies 13860 Views Last post by Doubter 05 ...
StayLDS reference center - StayLDS.com
Apr 21, 2015 · *As you come across talks and articles that you wish to add, please consider the source and attach it if possible. Please try to keep the material close to LDS reliable sources, i.e. …
LDS Daily - 5 Crucial Questions - StayLDS.com
Oct 7, 2010 · The LDS Daily Watchlist "highlights the best videos from Latter-day Saint creators and organizations. From inspiring messages to uplifting music and vlogs, this collection shares faith …
History of the Temple Recommend - StayLDS.com
Jan 24, 2016 · It would appear that over time we trend away from the cray-cray. I like to think of myself as living according to the temple recommend requirements of the year 2164.