The Greatest ‘Church History’ is Still Ahead
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
- Parked on the Covenant Path by JeaNette Goates Smith
- The Fire on the Altar: Emerson’s Longing and the Restoration’s Reply by Patrick D. Degn
- Look All the World Over—There’s Only One You by Becky Douglas
- Unraveling One Reason for Inactivity by Joni Hilton
- 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
















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FrancineJanuary 14, 2019
Have to agree wholeheartedly with the characterization of critics remaining critical even when the Church makes changes they have requested. I have heard about a lot of that just this week. While I feel that we can each learn much on our own, I am concerned about those who are not good readers or who learn better through lessons. As someone who did not grow up in a gospel home, I would have been hard pressed to learn the gospel on my own or without all the lessons and literature available. I understand the need for a change but feel like I did about the loss of song practice in Sunday School. Without it I never would have learned the songs of Zion.
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