The Only Way to Heal Our Marriages
FEATURES
- He Comes as Help: The Blessing Is His Presence by Patrick D. Degn
- There Are Angels Among Us by Anne Hinton Pratt
- Brigham Young’s 225th Birthday: Remembering When He Outwitted Mark Twain by Daniel C. Peterson
- Crossing Our Own Jordan by Paul Bishop
- Aliens and Latter-day Saint Theology by C.D. Cunningham
- A Mother Remembers: On Losing Confidence by Maurine Proctor
- Against Wind and Tide: Wilford Woodruff’s Call to the British Capital by Steven C. Wheelwright and Kristy Wheelwright Taylor
- The Invisible Ledger- Five Smooth Stones: Essays on Faith for Latter-Day Saints by Paul Bishop
- Are You Saying “Telephone Prayers”? by Ted Gibbons
- The Counsel of Early Church Leaders About Anger by H. Wallace Goddard
















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Penny DouglasApril 13, 2016
The author said we tend to blame circumstances when we are personally unable to have done something. I think that at least half the time I blame myself and flaws in my character for not having accomplished something. In my personal (albeit anecdotal) experience this is often true of women, who blame themselves for perceived shortcomings- more of the men I know offer environmental excuses for themselves, sometimes justified and sometimes just excuses.
DonaldApril 11, 2016
The 12 steps of the recovevry program of the Church, corespond to what your suggest to us, i think (sorry for my poor English)... excellent program to ill our shortcomings in our journey to eternity...
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