When You Don’t Have a Valentine to Love
FEATURES
- “Crawling Over, Under, or Around Section 132”: The Debate Over Joseph Smith and Polygamy by Daniel C. Peterson
- A Mother’s Memories: Those Things Happen by Maurine Proctor
- The Quiet Voice of Heaven: A Legacy of Listening to the Spirit by Tanya Neider
- The Man Who Entered Alone: How Israel’s High Priest Pointed to Christ by Patrick D. Degn
- Gathering Israel: Special Moments Need to be Shared by Mark J. Stoddard
- What Are the Most Cited, Recited, and Misunderstood Verses in Deuteronomy? by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw
- Your Hardest Family Question: How can I say “no” and still be Christ-like? by Geoff Steurer, MS, LMFT
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- The Fiction of Self-Knowledge by C.D. Cunningham
- The Intellectual Life of A Stay-at-Home Mother by Public Square Staff
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Your Grand Connections Are Both Powerful and Tender
By Mary Bell -
Becoming Brigham, Episode 17 — Was Zion’s Camp Formative or a Failure?
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New Video Offers Rare View Into Missionary Training Center
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The Parable Project, Episode 5
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“Crawling Over, Under, or Around Section 132”: The Debate Over Joseph Smith and Polygamy
















Comments | Return to Story
RachelMarch 11, 2014
In 8th grade my friends and I decided to bring a potluck lunch to share on Valentine's Day. We decked out our table with paper hearts, balloons, and fancy food. Everyone in the whole cafeteria wanted to see what was going on. It was a fun way to focus on friendship and not worry about romance.
JaceFebruary 11, 2014
I think the holiday is silly. Basically a concoction perpetuated by the retail industry to sell stuff and gives people a skewed view of love and romance. Add it to the long list of silly "days" on our calendar that I will not miss if they go away
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