The Boldness of Christ at the Feast of Tabernacles
FEATURES
- Unprecedented: A New Temple Square Visitors’ Center that Is Unlike Any Other by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- Currents: Taylor Frankie Paul Leaves Church; Why Religious Runners Are So Fast; An AI Jesus and More by Meridian Magazine
- Holding Your Peace vs. Holding Your Ground on the Quest to Be Peacemakers by Mariah Proctor
- The Desert Is Not Empty: Living Water in Our Wilderness Wandering by Patrick D. Degn
- When We Are Up Against a Red Sea—Come Follow Me Podcast, Exodus 14-18 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- Look All the World Over—There’s Only One You by Becky Douglas
- Parked on the Covenant Path by JeaNette Goates Smith
- My Mom Cared If She Got Mail by Daris Howard
- Better and Poorer Kinds of Guidance in Parenting by H. Wallace Goddard
- The Double Disguise: How Hiding Who You Are and What You Want Is Keeping You Single by Jeff Teichert
-
Elijah, the Sealing Powers, and the Kirtland Temple
-
The Power of Validation in Latter-day Saint Communities
By Paul Bishop -
Better and Poorer Kinds of Guidance in Parenting
-
Holding Your Peace vs. Holding Your Ground on the Quest to Be Peacemakers
-
Unprecedented: A New Temple Square Visitors’ Center that Is Unlike Any Other
















Comments | Return to Story
sueJune 21, 2017
The law of Moses required that both guilty parties ( man and woman ) be brought for stoning. The Roman law did not allow stoning for adultery, so obviously one of the persons who brought her to be stoned was involved, and Jesus knew that. They would accuse him, if He followed Roman law, as well as the law of Moses. He knew!
ADD A COMMENT