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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Other Protestant & Nonconformist Churches > General
Finding Father is a collection of stories about Mennonite fathers
by their daughters. Written by well-known and first-time writers,
these stories illuminate the often close and sometimes troubling
relationships that exist between one of humanity's most precious
bonds. From battles over relationships and sexuality, to debates
over chores and church, these stories also hold the shared
intimacies of driving side by side with dad, laughing, and headed
down the road.
In 2009, the Good News Club came to the public elementary school
where journalist Katherine Stewart sent her children. The Club,
which is sponsored by the Child Evangelism Fellowship, bills itself
as an after-school program of Bible study. But Stewart soon
discovered that the Club's real mission is to convert children to
fundamentalist Christianity and encourage them to proselytize to
their unchurched peers, all the while promoting the natural but
false impression among the children that its activities are
endorsed by the school. Astonished to discover that the U.S.
Supreme Court has deemed this--and other forms of religious
activity in public schools--legal, Stewart set off on an
investigative journey to dozens of cities and towns across the
nation to document the impact. In this book she demonstrates that
there is more religion in America's public schools today than there
has been for the past 100 years. The movement driving this agenda
is stealthy. It is aggressive. It has our children in its sights.
And its ultimate aim is to destroy the system of public education
as we know it.
The official journal of the Brigham Young pioneer company is made
available for the first time in this book. The arrival of
Latter-day Saints in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake is one of
the major events in the history of the LDS church and the West.
Thomas Bullock, the author of this account, was the official
journal keeper of that party of pioneers.Bullock was the "Clerk of
the Camp of Israel," an English scribe who is perhaps more
responsible than any other person for the vast documentary record
of the LDS church in the the mid-nineteenth century. Though he
wrote thousands of pages ultimately released under other men's
names, he remains a relatively obscure figure in Western History.
An intensely personal document, Bullock's account rises above its
status as the "official" journal. He shares his doubts, his
complaints, his personal assessments of his fellow travelers
throughout the pages of the journal. This remarkable record
presents in detail the daily reality of a journey that has become
an American legend. From Nauvoo to Salt Lake and back to the
Missouri River, Bullock's journals from September 1846 to October
1847 paint a colorful and personal picture of both the Mormon Trail
and the suffering of the poverty-stricken Saints during their
struggle across Iowa in 1846. They tell the legendary tale of
Brigham Young's pioneer company-the beginning of a great exodus
across the Plains and Rockies to the Great Basin Kingdom. Life at
Winter Quarters, the renowned "miracle of the Quail" at the Poor
Camp on the Mississippi River, detailed accounts of buffalo hunts,
dances and celebrations, and other trail events are recorded. Jim
Bridger's famous meeting with Brigham Young and other leaders of
the pioneer party was described in detail by Bullock. Bridger's
comments on the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, the Indians,
agriculture and the West in general show the breadth of knowledge
of mountain men like Bridger. The interview also gives evidence of
the unanswered questions still plaguing the Saints as they neared
their destination. With maps, illustrations, bibliography and
index, this work is a major contribution to the history of overland
migration, the LDS church, and the wider West. The book provides
insight into the impressions of a devout European immigrant of the
great American West. An appendix containing biographical data on
Mormon pioneers is included.
Both the Prophet Joseph Smith and his Book of Mormon have been
characterized as ardently, indeed evangelically, anti-Masonic. Yet
in this sweeping social, cultural, and religious history of
nineteenth-century Mormonism and its milieu, Clyde Forsberg argues
that masonry, like evangelical Christianity, was an essential
component of Smith's vision. Smith's ability to imaginatively
conjoin the two into a powerful and evocative defense of Christian,
or Primitive, Freemasonry was, Forsberg shows, more than anything
else responsible for the meteoric rise of Mormonism in the
nineteenth century.
This was to have significant repercussions for the development
of Mormonism, particularly in the articulation of specifically
Mormon gender roles. Mormonism's unique contribution to the Masonic
tradition was its inclusion of women as active and equal
participants in Masonic rituals. Early Mormon dreams of empire in
the Book of Mormon were motivated by a strong desire to end social
and racial discord, lest the country fall into the grips of civil
war. Forsberg demonstrates that by seeking to bring women into
previously male-exclusive ceremonies, Mormonism offered an
alternative to the male-dominated sphere of the Master Mason. By
taking a median and mediating position between Masonry and
Evangelicism, Mormonism positioned itself as a religion of the
people, going on to become a world religion.
But the original intent of the Book of Mormon gave way as
Mormonism moved west, and the temple and polygamy (indeed, the
quest for empire) became more prevalent. The murder of Smith by
Masonic vigilantes and the move to Utah coincided with a new
imperialism -- and a new polygamy. Forsberg argues that Masonic
artifacts from Smith's life reveal important clues to the precise
nature of his early Masonic thought that include no less than a
vision of redemption and racial concord.
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