LDS

What’s going on in Isaiah 29? Part 1

I just came back from vacation in Oregon.  Tonight, about a half hour before our inductive study, I read Isaiah 29 (KJV), the new chapter of concentrated study for our church family in Ammon, Idaho.  As I quickly perused the chapter, some of the phrases in the text looked very familiar to me, though I have never had anyone before teach me this chapter, line upon line, precept upon precept. (more…)

Late summer angles on evangelical/mormon interaction

Nitsav over at Faith Promoting Rumor introduces Heiser in his discussion with LDS on the divine council of gods.  Sometime in the future, I would like to interact with the material within the latest FARMS volume.

In another sphere, evidently, Bill and Eric over at Mormon Research Ministries are breaking rules again over what is proper dialogue in the intermountain West, and John Morehead is defending the philosophy of Standing Together Ministries with LDS friends.  Obviously, there is a whole new evangelical coalition out there who thinks MRM is archaic and unproductive. (more…)

As a pioneer, would you travel on the Sabbath?

My family is hanging out at a Best Western up here in Hermiston, Oregon.

After making our way this morning across the Snake River Plain of Idaho, we spent a good part of our afternoon at National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center on the outskirts of Baker City, Oregon.

I have always gained much pleasure in tracking pioneer history.  And I learned some more about the colorful character named Jason Lee, a western missionary back in the early days of the 1830’s,  a period abounding with great religious fervor.

But my title question has been sparked by two sources:  1)  I am reading BYU prof. Craig Harline’s book, Sunday (Doubleday, 2007), and 2)  I saw an emigrant’s entry today hanging high in the hallway of the Oregon Trail museum.

On May 9, 1852, Esther McMillan Hanna wrote,

I am sorry to see that some of our company are disposed  to travel on the Sabbath. . . . We will not have any further dealing with them.

What do you think about this?

Dead Sea Scrolls for Latter-day Saints – Two Weeks Left!

Ten years ago, Brigham Young University’s Museum of Art in Provo, Utah, put on display a two-part exhibit titled, Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls and The Story of Masada:  Discoveries from the Excavation.  In that same year, 1997, Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies produced a colorful souvenir booklet, Ancient Scrolls from the Dead Sea:  Photographs and Commentary on a Unique Collection of Scrolls, edited by M. Gerald Bradford. (more…)

Three LDS Authors

This week, my family is headed to the Oregon Coast for a Wood reunion.  It is time for some reading on the beach.  My eyes are set on getting to know the works of three LDS authors while playing in the sand for a few days.

First, what is up with Stephenie Meyer?  This past week, an article in USA Today, shared with me how her latest teenage book, Eclipse (2007), is blowing away the seventh book of the Harry Potter series.  For a little background, I checked an early discussion she had on the Motley Vision blog (in an earlier blog format).  And this past week, Paradox over at Enduring to the End speaks of Eternity when thinking of Meyer’s books. (more…)

Does God Have A Wife? – My Irony over the FARMS Review

Alyson Skabelund Von Feldt, a highly engaged LDS mother, writes in the latest FARMS Review (vol. 19, no. 1, 2007),

Does God have a wife?  Yes.  Or so members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have understood since Joseph Smith’s time (81).

This is how she begins her 38-page review of William G. Dever’s book, Did God Have a Wife?  Archaeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel (Grand Rapids:  Eerdmans, 2005).  For a counterpoint perspective, please read the book review, “Did God Really Have a Wife?” by Shmuel Ahituv in Biblical Archaeological Review (September/October 2006). (more…)

A Good Samaritan on my 150 Miler “LotoJa” Training

The day before yesterday, my initial plan was to ride an approximate 200 miles from Idaho Falls to Swan Valley, then over the Pine Creek pass to Victor, to agonizingly plod up the Teton pass and zip down to Jackson Hole, then to circle south to Hoback Junction, through Alpine Junction, back west to Swan Valley, and on to home.

About 6:00 a.m. and 24 miles east of Idaho Falls, I got a flat tire.  Stupid me.  I knew I should have tried to pump up that back tire to its 120 psi recommendation.  But I was an even greater dimwit.  I willfully decided to not carry a tire pump on this solo ride.  I know.  Just label this action as impertinent, reckless pride. 

Circumstances have a way of purging one of never trying such stunts again.  I had my thumb in the air, but no one picked me up.  For about an hour, I walked back to Idaho Falls, periodically adjusting my floppy back tube and tire so that it would even turn.  But at 7:00 a.m., a Good Samaritan pulled over.  As a fellow biker, he empathized completely with my predicament.  I laughed in sheer relief.  This particular Samaritan grew up in Idaho Falls, went to school in Utah, presently lives in Boise, and is a lawyer working for Frank Vandersloot in southeastern Idaho.  I am filled with gratitude for this helper who rescued a highway straggler.  (Reminds me of two months ago when my car broke down on the I-15 freeway, and a kind LDS husband and his wife, a graduate from BYU-Hawaii, saved me from being stranded.  But that is another incredible story.) (more…)