Item Detail
-
6515
-
20
-
0
-
English
-
What the Church Means to People Like Me
-
Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought
-
Winter 1967
-
2
-
107-17
-
Author sees two types of involved members in the Church--'Iron Rods' and 'Liahonas.' Iron Rods look for answers and questions in the gospel. Liahonas are preoccupied with questions and skeptical about answers. Basically a question of certainty versus uncertainty concerning the question of life and God's and the Gospel's role in it. Author explains his Liahonaism by the doctrine of free agency and man's purpose on this earth.
-
A Brief History of the John Whitmer Historical Association
"All Find What They Truly Seek" : C. S. Lewis, Latter-day Saints, and the Virtuous Unbeliever
Americanist Approaches to the Book of Mormon
Contemporary Mormonism : Social Science Perspectives
Explorations in Mormon Social Character : Beyond the Liahona and Iron Rod
Faith and intellect : The lives and contributions of Latter-day Saint thinkers
Maturing and Enduring : Dialogue and Its Readers after Forty Years
Mormonism and the Emotions : An Analysis of LDS Scriptural Texts
My Many Selves : The Quest for a Plausible Harmony
Paradox and Discipleship
People of Paradox : A History of Mormon Culture
Quintessential Mormonism : Literal-mindedness as a Way of Life
Revisiting Thomas F. O'Dea's The Mormons : Contemporary Perspectives
The Angel and the Beehive : The Mormon Struggle with Assimilation
The Art of Scripture and Scripture as Art : The Proclamation on the Family and the Expanding Canon
The Columbia Sourcebook of Mormons in the United States
The Expanded Canon : Perspectives on Mormonism and Sacred Texts
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
Thomas F. O'Dea and Mormon Intellectual Life : A Reassessment Fifty Years Later
Women and Mormonism : Historical and Contemporary Perspectives