new order mormon

In Defense of Apologists

August 26, 2008
By
In Defense of Apologists

The term “apologist” is often used derisively like the terms “lawyer,” “statistician,” or “telemarketer.”  Why are apologists so derided?  Is it warranted or just a bum rap?

Read more »

Virtual RS/PH #16: Revelation & the Living Prophet

August 17, 2008
By
Virtual RS/PH #16:  Revelation & the Living Prophet

Finally, a lesson that really makes you think!  This is probably my favorite JS lesson this year (no one dies or has to move to Missouri).  For those who are teaching, you may also enjoy the excellent essay at Feast on the Word blog by joespencer.

Read more »

Virtual RS/PH #15: Establishing the Cause of Zion

August 10, 2008
By
Virtual RS/PH #15:  Establishing the Cause of Zion

Okay, last week I said the death lesson was going to be tough.  Frankly, I think a Zion lesson is no picnic either.  I’m looking ahead though, and there are some better ones on the horizon, so hang in there, teachers!

Read more »

Becoming a Moderate Mormon

July 23, 2008
By
Becoming a Moderate Mormon

We’ve established that there are conservative Mormons (obviously) and there are liberal or “new order” Mormons.  Taking the politico-religious rhetoric to its next logical conclusion, I’d like to make a case for moderate (or independent) Mormonism.

Read more »

Our Foundation Stories Part II: The Meaning of the First Vision

June 4, 2008
By
Our Foundation Stories Part II: The Meaning of the First Vision

Now that we’ve discussed the nature of the First Vision, what did it mean? There are many meanings, the most vital being those which each person can discover for herself or himself. Here are those we are most familiar with, because they have been written and spoken about at length in the official media of the institutional LDS Church:

Read more »

Our Foundation Stories Part I: The First Vision or the First Visit?

May 27, 2008
By
Our Foundation Stories Part I: The First Vision or the First Visit?

Do you believe that God the Father, the Son, and maybe even the Holy Ghost visited Joseph Smith in the spring of 1820? Or did Joseph have a vision of them? Does the difference matter? Do you base your testimony, your faith in the existence of God, your continued participation in Mormonism, on a visit of Deity to a young farmboy?

Read more »

Offenders for a Word, Part 2 – Do Mormons Worship Jesus?

May 17, 2008
By

In my last post I wrote about how we are all forced to take a thought and translate it into words and that this is a sloppy and imperfect process. To make matters worse, the person that has to take those words and decode them back into a thought will fail to do so correctly in many cases because they’ll get stuck on the words used, either because they don’t realize words have many meanings or because they have incentive to misunderstand. In this post, I want to apply what we’ve discussed to a real life situation: Bruce R....

Read more »

People Who Helped Me Stay Mormon Part I: Jeff Burton

May 15, 2008
By
People Who Helped Me Stay Mormon Part I: Jeff Burton

Before John Dehlin, there was Jeff Burton.

Read more »

Liberal Mormonism III: Prognosis

April 10, 2008
By

Count up all the liberal Mormons you know. Now, compare that number to the number you knew ten years ago. Now multiply the difference between the two by the number of liberal General Authorities, then subtract from that number the number of anti-intellectual General Conference addresses you have heard in the last three years.

Read more »

What Do Joseph Smith and Gladys Knight Have in Common?

February 29, 2008
By

When I was a kid in Southern California, it was obvious to me that there were two kinds of people in the world: Mormons and the rest. As I got older, the rest became more differentiated; there were Catholics and Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Baptists, Syrian Orthodox, Church of Christers, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists and even some people who claimed to have no religion at all. I was puzzled at one family’s celebration of Christmas when they apparently didn’t really even belong to any particular religion that I could discern. As I attended high school and early-morning seminary, I began...

Read more »