For Ruth Bader Ginsburg, oneness never was meant to be sameness
FEATURES
- Protecting the Symbols of Christ’s Church: How a Trademark Lawsuit Aligns with Prophetic Guidance by Steve Densley, Jr.
- 746 Times: What a Word Cloud Revealed About the April 2026 General Conference by Patrick D. Degn
- Broadway’s Last Acceptable Bigotry by Joel Campbell
- Currents: Church Trademark Lawsuit; Missionary Hero in Samoa; Ben Sasse on Dying and More by Meridian Magazine
- The Physical Resurrection of Christ: Why Should Christian Theology Rely on Antiquated Views About Matter? by Jeff Lindsay
- Who Is a Mormon? by Christopher D. Cunningham
- Eggshell Relationships: Walking Gently, Standing Firm by Paul Bishop
- What Joseph Smith Saw in Exodus That We’ve Been Missing by Alvin H. Andrew
- (Re)Discovering Lorenzo Ghiberti’s “Gates of Paradise” at the BYU Museum of Art by John Dye
- “What Is Required to See the Face of God?”—Come Follow Me Podcast: Exodus 19-20, 24, 31-34 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
















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Gale PhillipsSeptember 28, 2020
Although I am not a fan of some of the SC rulings that she supported, her friendship with the late Justice Antonin Scalia should demonstrate to us that disagreements in policy/politics should not make us enemies. In the current age of social media, we hear of family and friends cancelling/ unfriending each other over differing political/social views. Ginsberg and Scalia showed us a better way to disagree.
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