Your Hardest Family Question: How loyal should we be to our friends?
FEATURES
- You Mormons Are Ignoramuses: Appreciating the Restoration Doctrine That Adam and Eve “Fell Up” by H. Craig Petersen
- Currents: Marie Osmond on Alan Osmond’s Death; Most of the Cast of “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County” Are Not Members; Radical Left Podcaster Justifies Murder and Looting; and More by Meridian Magazine
- Why the Fertile Crescent Matters: A Map That Unlocks the Bible’s Geography and History by Daniel C. Peterson
- Finishing Exodus, Furnishing a Home – Why Exodus Ends with Upholstery by Patrick D. Degn
- A Country Doctor’s Healing Encounters with the Hereafter by Daniel C. Peterson
- The Stranger Who Stopped: The Good Samaritan by John Dye
- Where Did George Lucas Get His Idea? by Robert Starling
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- “You Can Have What You Want or Something Better”–Come Follow Me Podcast #20: Num. 11-14, 20-24, 27 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- How Has Retention Changed over Time? by Deseret News
















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JoanAugust 26, 2016
I, too, give a lot to my friends. However, what I give is a gift, not an investment that I will require an equal or greater amount back for. Record or scorekeeping doesn't seem to me like a real expression of love and concern for another's welfare. It seems an attempt to place another in debt to you because you feel they'll never love you otherwise.
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