A vital subject in an increasingly secular world
The struggle to live ethically without God has left us not with the just and moral order we imagined but with disorder and confusion. Something has gone radically wrong with secularism. The problem has more than its share of irony, for secularism, in the end, has converted itself into a kind of religion.
Secularism’s Blind Faith by Peter Marin
On some matters the general knowledge of mankind regresses as some important truths are distorted or ignored and eventually forgotten. . . We would be wiser if we could restore the knowledge of some important things that have been distorted, ignored, or forgotten. This also applies to religious knowledge. It explains the need for the gospel restoration we proclaim.
Apostasy and Restoration by Dallin H. Oaks
Whether they be false friends or unrighteous teachers, artists or entertainers, commentators or letter writers to local newspapers, seekers of power or wealth, beware of those who stir us up to such anger that calm reflection and charitable feelings are suppressed . . .
Have we who have taken upon us the name of Christ slipped unknowingly into patterns of slander, evil speaking, and bitter stereotyping? Have personal or partisan or business or religious differences been translated into a kind of demonizing of those of different views? Do we pause to understand the seemingly different positions of others and seek, where possible, common ground?
Instruments of the Lord’s Peace by Robert L. Wood
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
