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Showing posts with label Book of Mormon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book of Mormon. Show all posts

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Here be Nephites -- Sightings

I have long had a fascination with the history of the Mormon church.  It, like my own church, has its roots on the American frontier.  In fact, a number of early Mormon leaders, including Sidney Rigdon and Parley P. Pratt, were "Campbellites" prior to joining with Joseph Smith.  So, my ears perk up when I hear something new emerging from the LDS community.  In today's edition of Sightings, Seth Perry and Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago, writes about a new theory as to the identity of the Nephites -- suggesting a Heartland Theory that has Nativist tendencies -- a movement within the LDS church that has implications for its future and may even include Glenn Beck among its supporters.  Intriguing essay!

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Sightings 4/29/10



Here be Nephites
-- Seth Perry


The Book of Mormon is widely viewed as the quintessentially American scripture of a quintessentially American faith, but in strictly geographical terms this designation is more complicated than it might first appear. The Book’s modern manifestation is definitely American – Joseph Smith, New York farmer, said that he dug it out of a hill near his home. Believers regard the text as having an ancient history also, though, and here the geography is less clear. According to the text, its authors were pre-Columbian inhabitants of the New World, but its geographical terms are oblique: The characters war and proselytize over a “land northward” and a “land southward,” connected by “a narrow neck of land.” Many readers have assumed that what’s described is the Western Hemisphere – North and South America connected by the isthmus of Central America. Among other things, though, this scale is too vast for the characters’ descriptions of their travel: With the farthest cities mere days apart, the whole story seems to take place within a few hundred square miles. For some time, conventional wisdom has identified that area as Mesoamerica, stretching from modern-day central Mexico to Honduras. Mesoamerica hosted advanced pre-Columbian civilizations, the thinking goes, and the land forms fit, to a certain eye. The LDS Church has no official stance on the matter, but it has tacitly endorsed this view. Significant Church resources are committed to archaeological and ethnographic projects in Mesoamerica, and Church-sanctioned visualizations of the Book of Mormon story, replete with palm trees, do not appear to be set in, say, southern Illinois.


There is a swelling movement within the Church, though, that prefers to believe that the story took place in Illinois, among other North American locales. Bruce Porter and Rod Meldrum’s Prophecies and Promises: The Book of Mormon and the United States of America is the latest salvo in this argument. The authors’ “Heartland Model” theory hinges on the numerous Book of Mormon prophecies concerning a future “mighty nation” in the New World, “a land of liberty” (2 Nephi 1:7), “choice above all other lands” (Ether 2:7), established by “Gentiles” who will come “out of captivity” and revolt against their “mother Gentiles” (1 Nephi 13:17). This nation, the prophets recorded, would exist on “this land” – in other words, the land on which the prophets themselves were then living. Porter and Meldrum believe that the prophets, then, must have lived within the current borders of the United States, since they don’t find Mesoamerica particularly “choice”: “In what way could any Central American nation be considered a mighty nation above all other nations?”

The other side’s response has been, among other things, to demonstrate from the same texts that “this land” could just as easily mean “this continent,” which would not eliminate Mesoamerica; the debate goes on. But the fact that some people are looking for sacralization of the “heartland” in the Book of Mormon just now is interesting. Fifty-seven percent of the “quintessentially American” faith’s members now live outside the United States, and most growth is happening in those less “mighty” places, such as Central America. Scholars have long wondered how Mormonism’s American character affects its overseas growth, asking whether Mormonism can take authentic root in places where the American Constitution and apple pie are unknown. The Heartland Model, though, signals the need to wonder about the other side of the equation – how is international growth affecting Mormonism at home?

Whatever else it is, the Heartland movement looks like a ripple of nativism, a twitch of insecurity among Americans in a globalizing faith. Mormons are increasingly identified with conservative politics, and in its very name the “Heartland Model” conjures the right’s renewed rhetoric of American exceptionalism. Glenn Beck – piercingly conservative but rather quietly Mormon – shilled for an April conference put on by Porter’s company, founded to promote (and monetize) the Heartland Model. And Prophecies and Promises voices a familiar-sounding political message: Rededicating the United States as the Promised Land, the authors tell us, should give believers “a more comprehensive view of the individual responsibilities…to protect the freedoms established by the Founding Fathers who came out of captivity to create this nation in the Land of Promise.”

There is a lot more change to come if Mormonism is to be the “world religion” it aspires to be. For all of the growth overseas, for example, the vast church hierarchy is still overwhelmingly composed of white American men. When and if such features begin to shift, the impulse discernible in the Heartland Model is only likely to grow stronger.


Reference:

Bruce Porter and Rod Meldrum, Prophecies and Promises: The Book of Mormon and the United States of America (Digital Legend Press, 2009).


Seth Perry is a PhD candidate in History of Christianity at the University of Chicago Divinity School.


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In this month’s Religion and Culture Web Forum, Web Forum editor emeritus Spencer Dew explores the relationship between Jack Kerouac’s religious thought and its expressive practice in the act of writing: “Indeed, his entire oeuvre can be read as an expression of his personal religious stance, a kind of ‘fusion’ of Catholic theology with notions taken from Buddhist philosophy and practice.” Through a close reading of Kerouac’s novella Tristessa, Dew suggests that such a fusion—despite exemplifying Kerouac at his writerly best—leads to a solipsism that is ethically troubling, and likely reflective of Kerouac’s personal and professional shortcomings—especially later in his life. “Devotion to Solipsism: Religious Thought and Practice in Jack Kerouac’s Tristessa,” with invited responses from Benedict Giamo (University of Notre Dame), Nancy Grace (College of Wooster), Sarah Haynes (University of Western Illinois), Kurt Hemmer (Harper College), Amy Hungerford (Yale University), Omar Swartz (University of Colorado, Denver), Matt Theado (Gardner-Webb University), and Eric Ziolkowski (Lafayette College). http://divinity.uchicago.edu/martycenter/publications/webforum/index.shtml


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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The Word Christ

Taking the name of the Savior upon our selves. Finding eternal life only through Christ. Finding Christ. Following Christ. Being Chirst-like.

These are terms heard often in Christianity. It seems to Christians this means following the deeds, words and actions of a man called Jesus Christ, who appears in the Bible but can it mean something else as well?

To me it does.

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No doubt the man who lived and loved in the New Testament is a wonderful example to follow and I love learning more about him, praying to him and reading about him - his thoughts, words, actions and motivations. However, I recognize that not everyone feels this way, and a vast majority of the world does not choose to see him as their Savior, redeemer, guru, teacher, prophet or messiah.

So how do the words of scripture pertainging to salvation only through Christ apply to people who choose not to follow him or who have never heard of him? As a Mormon-Pagan I believe in the Universal doctorine of salvation (no one is going to hell).

I also believe strongly in the 11th article of faith as delivered by Joseph Smith from our Heavenly Parents. It reads, "We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may."

Mosiah 5:8 states, "There is no other name given whereby salvation cometh; therefore, I would that ye should take upon you the name of Christ, all you that have entered into the covenant with God that ye should be obedient unto the end of your lives."

No other name given whereby salvation cometh - you can only be saved through Christ.

Fair enough, but only through Christ or only through Jesus Christ?

Ah, here's where it gets tricky. The scriptures usually says Christ. "It is only through Christ" not specifically Jesus Christ.

The Articles of Faith are a great example of this. The first article says, "We believe in God the eternal Father, and in His Son Jesus Christ..." So it's clear that to be Mormon you would need to believe in Jesus Christ as the son of God but in the third article we find, "We believe that through the atonment of Christ, all mankind may be saved ..." So for all of humankind to be saved they must atone through Christ, but it does not say Jesus Christ.

Do you see what I mean? For Mormons it was specific, we believe in Jesus Christ, but for all of mankind it was general, through the atonment of Christ.

But there is no other Christ, you say, Jesus Christ is Christ.

Well, maybe he is the only person to whom the word Christ can be affixed and maybe he's not, it depends on what you believe. That's not to say that Christ can be applied generally to anyone. We can't just decide one day to worship Bob Christ just because we use the word Christ what I am saying is we should take a look at the word Christ itself. What does it mean? We all know it wasn't Jesus' last name.

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Come with me will you? Let's take a journey to the good folks over at onlinedictionary.com.

Christ \Christ\, n. [L. Christus, Gr. ?, fr. ? anointed, fr.
chri`ein to anoint. See Chrism.]
The Anointed; an appellation given to Jesus, the Savior. It
is synonymous with the Hebrew Messiah.
[1913 Webster]

Christ
n 1: a teacher and prophet born in Bethlehem and active in
Nazareth; his life and sermons form the basis for
Christianity (circa 4 BC - AD 29) [syn: Jesus, Jesus of Nazareth
, the Nazarene, Jesus Christ, Christ,
Savior, Saviour, Good Shepherd, Redeemer,
Deliverer]

2: any expected deliverer [syn: messiah, christ]

Christ
anointed, the Greek translation of the Hebrew word rendered
"Messiah"
(q.v.), the official title of our Lord, occurring five
hundred and fourteen times in the New Testament. It denotes that
he was anointed or consecrated to his great redemptive work as
Prophet, Priest, and King of his people. He is Jesus the Christ
(Acts 17:3; 18:5; Matt. 22:42), the Anointed One. He is thus
spoken of by Isaiah (61:1), and by Daniel (9:24-26), who styles
him "Messiah the Prince."

So the word Christ itself seems to have been the Greek word for Messiah that was applied to Jesus after it was deemed that he was the Messiah foretold of by Hebrew scriptures.

Terrific, and by the way, I believe he was. So what then does Messiah mean?

Again let's check in with the good people of onlinedictionary.com

messiah
n 1: any expected deliverer [syn: messiah, christ]
2: Jesus Christ; considered by Christians to be the promised
deliverer
3: the awaited king of the Jews; the promised and expected
deliverer of the Jewish people
4: an oratorio composed by Handel in 1742

So if a messiah is any expected deliever or specifically Jesus, then to take the name of Christ, to follow Christ, to be like Christ as our only means of salvation doesn't seem to me that one need believe specifically in Jesus of Nazareth as that person. Can one find salvation through any good deliever? Through any foretold messanger of peace and love?

I would make the argument that, yes, one could. When scriptures speak of baptisim, following Christ, taking upon the name of Christ for ourselves it is fine to see Christ as Jesus but I think that scripture is more expansive then that and allows for nearly any loving and peaceful belief structure to fufill the need to find salvation through (a) Christ in our lives.

So finding salvation through a redeemer of love and peace, through a child of God, is the only means of salvation. But what does slavation mean? Ah, that's another blog altogether my friends.

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All paintings by Liz Lemon Swindle, used for education purposes only

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Council of 12

C12_2008

Not the 12 you're use to huh? This is a photo of the council of the twelve apostles of the Church of Latter-day Saints Reorganized, also known as the Community of Christ. This photo really hit my gut - women, people of color - it's amazing.

For me, personally and spiritually I need Christ (Yeshua). I need the Prince of Peace in my life as a guide and touchstone. I need the reminder of my inner and outer Christ - that all is God. The feast is lain and everyone must stand alone. Children grow up, spouses can leave, parents die....when you stand alone in this world who is really with you? God/Nature/Divine. For me I want Christ with me as representative of that but I can't have Christ without two things; Mary Magdalene (Mariamne) and the Restoration brought through Emma and Joseph Smith. I also can't have Heavenly Father without Heavenly Mother - my spiritual life craves balance.

Just some ramblings....thanks for listening. I think I have theological OCD.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

FYI! New Mormon Groups and a way to help the FLDS Women!!

This is an informative post. Enjoy!

First to all you Mormons like me out there here are some incredible new groups and websites that are popping up:

Moroni

iMoroni Yahoo Group This group was formed to explore the question, "what if this angel, prophet, historian [Moroni] was in fact a nature divinity of the Hill Cumorah?
This is what I would like to explore, this pagan aspect of this being.This group is for like minded people whom wish to learn more."

I cannot express how excited I am about this group and concept! So join the group and the discussion!

Early Mormon History is a myspace group for Mormons who like to debate their faith

Discussing Mormonism is another liberal Mormon group with some awesome discussions going on, so sign up and express your voice too!

The John Whitmer Historical Association is like a Sunstone group for the Church or Christ (formally the Reoganized Church Latter-day Saints)

Reform Mormon is a home-based group for Mormons interested in
• rational thinking
• the importance of knowledge, intelligence, and progression
• freedom from judgement and condemnation
• eternity (an existence other than this one)
• morality and accountability
• evolution and man's ultimate destiny as an evolved being

they are

• we're pro-gay, pro-women, and pro-intellectualism
• we keep church and state separate

Now on to helping the FLDS women!

flds inbreeding

Over 400 children are being torn from their mother’s arms by the US government in the state of Texas.

Here are the facts:

No complaining victims exist and the original abuse allegations were fraudulent, pumped up in the media by anti-polygamist activists.

No pregnant girls were found at the YFZ Ranch who were under 16 (the legal marriage age in Texas, with parental consent).

10 women between the ages of 16 and 19 were listed as married to older men. Five were listed as having children.

Angie Voss from the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services has testified that the supposition that abuse may happen some day in the future justifies the removal of over 400 children of both sexes and all ages from their environment.

What kind of country are we living in that instead of a case by case investigation, the government rounds up and steals 400 children including nursing babies?!

ANY alternative lifestyle could be next! Please help by signing the online petition at

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/free-the-innocent-flds

Write to the governor of Texas Rick Perry, and voice your outrage:

Office of the Governor
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, Texas 78711-2428

Call him at: (512) 463-1782

Share this information! Get the word out to help these women :)

Friday, March 7, 2008

The Content of the B of M vs. It's Function

I found this on the blog MormonMentality.org this morning and I wanted to share, it really makes you think....

Also intriguing to me along these lines was Bushman, following Terryl Givens in By the Hand of Mormon, points out the changing role of the Book of Mormon in the Church. For the period of Joseph’s life and a significant period thereafter, the actual content of the Book of Mormon wasn’t as important as its function as a sign of his prophetic calling. As Givens writes,

Even for the book’s adherents, it has not always been deemed imperative to read it before having an opinion of it. Its strength as a pillar in Joseph’s claim to be a prophet, just like its status as a blasphemous imposition, depends upon one’s acceptance or rejection of the story of its miraculous coming forth, more than on an analysis of its theological coherence. (p.86)

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Mor'moon

Packing, sorting, random access to internet service - nothing, I have found, can keep me from blogging... tee hee...

jesus christ


So I was thinking more about the Mor'moon concept I came up with in this post.

Essentially Joseph Smith wrote as to the orgin of the word Mormon, "We say from the Saxon, good; the Dane, god; the Latin, bonus; the Greek, kalos; the Hebrew, tob; and the Egyptian, mon. Hence, with the addition of more, or the contraction, mor, we have the word MORMON; which means, literally, more good."

So I came up with Mor'moon as a play on words to simmer in the mind. Well, it's simmered and *ding* it's done, here's what it means to me.

In the Book of Mormon we are told in 2 Nephi 23:10

For the stars in heaven and the constellations thereof shall not give their light; the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to shine

So the light of the moon did not shine during the period between Christ's death and resurection. Now the implications in metaphormia abound and perhaps I'll write more on that later, but for the time being, it can be put simply that the light of the moon represents the light of the living Christ.

Hence Mor'moon can be translated as "more light of the living Christ" in particular as is seen through natural and celestial metaphor.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

The Elect Lady

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I feel called to write about Emma today.

Oh, sweet and powerful Emma, I adore and love you, my prophtess, the Elect Lady.

Emma is described to us by the revelation of Spirit in D & C 25. This revelation was given to Joseph Smith, Jr in Emma's hometown of Harmony, PA which in and of itself is a huge revalation.

Let's have a glance at the spiritual nature of Pennsylvania, the pot from which the flower that is Emma grew. The following except is from my Master's degree thesis, Heavenly Mothers and Plain Goddesses.

"[Many authors and scholars] trace the current practice of Pow Wow faith healing to the magick and herbal tradition brought by the German communities [to Pennsylvania], fused with mystical Christianity and Native American practices of the region (Guiley and Valiente). Ravenwolf, Valiente, Guiley, pagan practitioners and writers, are backed up by scholars like Barbara Louise Reimensnyder of the University of Pennsylvania, who have found elements of German paganism in what RavenWolf calls the “Avalon of the Americas”, Pennsylvania. The cloak for paganism became the reality after several generations and Pow Wow artists often pray to Jesus and Mary instead of a God and Goddess.

I like to draw from a few sources when I’m making this point which is why I brought up Ravenwolf, Valiente, Guiley and Reimensnyder. I think it’s important to keep in mind that practicing witches in the area, like Ravenwolf, can discover things and make connections that a scholar might not be able to find while scholars like, Reimensyder from the University of Pennsylvania, can bring in academic oversight to the conversation of magick.

Many German descendants practicing PowWow are female, in keeping with the German female healing tradition. Pow Wow artists have many magickal aspects to their practice including the use of a magickal knife called an athome for divination, amulets, casting of lots, pagan symbols in rosettes of their churches, traditional Hex colors or red, white and black and they use astrology to determine gardening schedules, as we will discuss in depth later in the paper (Ravenwolf, Guiley, Valiente and Reimensnyder)."

We know that Joseph used astorology, amulets, seer stones and a magickal daggers in early Mormonism. We also know that the woman called by Spirit, the Elect Lady, the wife of the prophet, was from an area reffered to as The Avalon of America.

If you're wondering about Avalon read here.

So let's review a few of my favorite passages from D&C 25.

3 Behold, thy sins are forgiven thee, and thou art an elect lady, whom I have called.

7 And thou shalt be ordained under his hand to expound scriptures, and to exhort the church, according as it shall be given thee by my Spirit.

8 For he shall lay his ahands upon thee, and thou shalt receive the Holy Ghost, and thy time shall be given to writing, and to learning much.

15 Keep my commandments continually, and a crown of brighteousness thou shalt receive

A crown of brightness. All hail Queen Emma! :)

Joseph called her "My beloved Emma—she that was my wife, even the wife of my youth, and the choice of my heart" (History of the Church, 5:107). (http://prophets.ldsblogs.com/?cat=194)

I adore you Emma, you give me strength and courage, my beloved Prophetess.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Crafting Sunday

We had a lazy crafting Sunday...
2007_02220004


St. Paddy's Day Gnomes :)

2007_02220010



Felt and hand embroidered cover for my B of M

My hormoes have been mixed up lately and I've skipped two periods (not pregnant though, at least the tests say I'm not LOL) hence I haven't had my day off in a while, so Seth did the cleaning Sunday while I relaxed and crafted. I love my man!

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Hindu and Mormon Leaders Examine Similarities

hindu

(from NewsBlaze.com)


A prominent Hindu leader met a senior leader of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) in Salt Lake City (Utah) yesterday and discussed similarities in both the religions.

Rajan Zed, prominent leader of Hindus and Indo-Americans, and Neil L. Anderson, member of the Presidency of the Seventy of LDS Church, met in LDS headquarters in Salt Lake City, and talked about various issues concerning their religions.

Similarities examined were "law of the harvest" of LDS and karma doctrine of Hinduism; life does not begin with birth nor end with death; Brahman is unlimited and pervasive, so is the Light of Christ; Bhakti in Hinduism and worshipping Heavenly Father through devotion.....

read full story here

Sunday, February 3, 2008

97 Day Challenge

2007_02080001

I've decided to take the challenge here to read the Book of Mormon in 97 days. It shouldn't be too hard, I have to read just over 5 pages per day to finish in 97 days.

2007_02080002

During this reading I'm really going to focus on the roles of women and mothers and work to develop a better sense of what I see as a tribal God(dess) set up in the scriptures (which is very intriguing to me and a line of thought I want to pursue further). I'm going to our local bookshop today to buy a special bookmark.

2007_020800092007_02080003

Who wants to join me? I'll blog regularly about what I've been reading and my take on it. Should be fun!

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Gordon B Hinckley Passed Away

Gordon B. Hinckley

Beloved Church President, Gordon B. Hinckley, Dies at 97

SALT LAKE CITY 27 January 2008
President Gordon B. Hinckley, who led The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints through twelve years of global expansion, has died at the age of 97.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Mor'moon

moon
Last night I had a brainstorm of inspiration! It must be the moon in my 5th house today, all creative 'n stuff. I was reading a letter written by Joseph Smith on where the word Mormon comes from.

Editor of the Times and Seasons:

SIR:—Through the medium of your paper I wish to correct an error among men that profess to be learned, liberal and wise; and I do it the more cheerfully because I hope sober-thinking and sound-reasoning people will sooner listen to the voice of truth than be led astray by the vain pretensions of the self-wise.

The error I speak of is the definition of the word "Mormon." It has been stated that this word was derived from the Greek word mormo. This is not the case. There was no Greek or Latin upon the plates from which I, through the grace of the Lord, translated the Book of Mormon. Let the language of the book speak for itself. ...

Before I give a definition, however, to the word, let me say that the Bible in its widest sense, means good; for the Savior says according to the gospel of John, "I am the good shepherd" and it will not be beyond the common use of terms, to say that good is among the most important in use, and though known by various names in different languages, still its meaning is the same, and is ever in opposition to bad. We say from the Saxon, good; the Dane, god; the Latin, bonus; the Greek, kalos; the Hebrew, tob; and the Egyptian, mon. Hence, with the addition of more, or the contraction, mor, we have the word MORMON; which means, literally, more good.

Yours,
JOSEPH SMITH.

Times and Seasons, Vol.4, No.13, May 15, 1843, p.194,
also History of the Church Vol. 5, p.399


So it's a saxon and ancient Egyptian combo word. I LOVE combo words. Nykki is short for Nykekkiwakan which is Hawaiian and Lakota for "scared little baby who's name begins with 'N'".

So I got to thinking about words and ancient Egyptian and so on. I'm struck how the words "mon", "moon", "good" and "god" all seems to weave around each other here. They grow and spin and barrow from one another in quite an inspiring way!

Nes pas mon ami?

So I looked it up and the Egyptian word for Moon is "Yah". Ok, now my mind's spinnnig, Yah as in Yahweh? Well, maybe sorta, it appears to be connected, an outgrowth and murging of the ancient moon God and the God of the bible.

Interesting......I'm still day dreaming about it.

So I thought about the term Morgan meaning Mormon Pagan. I love that term especially because of the link to Morgana the Celtic Goddess and the word "morgan" which means "tomorrow" in German.

I've got a new one for you Mormon, Pagan, Universalists to play with too.

Mor'moon

More, good, moon.

More, good, Yah(weh)

Let's all have fun with that one!

Blessings!

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Sunday Scriptures

Circle Round


Another Sunday has come and gone.

I tend to mark the weeks by Sundays. Sundays are suppose to be our day of rest, some weeks we end up resting a little more than others. Sundays are a great time to sit, reflect, and think about the week gone by, think about the week to come, and/or expereince the present.

One thing I try to always do on Sunday, no matter what, is read some scriptures. In our tradition we choose a Mormon scripture and a Goddess scripture. This week we read Ether 4-7 in the Book of Mormon and we read the first two chapters in Circle Round. Nykki likes Circle Round because it has pictures but suprisingly (or maybe not) he also loves the Book of Mormon.

Book of Mormon


Reading the Book of Mormon sparked a theology debate between us. Nykki believes that Jesus is the Holy Ghost. I think the Holy Ghost is the Goddess. He is very firm in his belief mostly because a woman at Primary told him so and she gave him a cookie. Women baring cookies cannot be wrong about who the Holy Ghost is - according to Nykki.

In other news...

The storms have passed us by for the most part, although it is still raining (and I'm still happy about it). We are thankful that we kept our power and that we live on a high hill and were spared any flooding. The pavement shines like silver (to quote Eponine) and the air smells fresh.

Well,I'm off to our big family bed now to cuddle with my guys.

Blessings

Saturday, December 15, 2007

My Thesis is now available!

Be one of the first to read this ground breaking work!

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"This work is written for anyone interested in the Goddess, Christo-Pagan traditions, the Mormons, the Amish, American history, home birth and natural parenting." - Ayla

Description:

Two distinct American communities kept homebirth alive throughout the 20th century while nearly all other women were coerced and/or enticed into birthing in hospitals. These two communities, the Old Order German Communities (Amish, Anabaptist) and the Mormons, are often times confused with each other by outsiders. They are known for their conservative Christian cultures and religious practices, however women within these two cultures were empowered enough to keep the birth of their children within the home and/or birthing centers.

Mormons have an almost hidden history of the divine feminine and magical practices which new scholarship has brought to light. The Old Order German Communities of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania Dutch) are comprised of the offspring of refugees of Rhineland immigrants fleeing persecution on charges of witchcraft. Here I explore those two facets of these cultures – home birth and celestial feminine/magickal practices.

"Women who have a connection with the feminine aspect of the divine whether through their deities, their earth, or their cultural traditions, I believe, are able to make more empowered choices when it comes to their births. " - Ayla

Money Matter$$

As an e-book $10
or
as a spiral bound hard copy for $30 (includes shipping)

Order now before this book goes to the publisher! You get a lower price and the author get's a higher percentage for her work! Once this book has gone to publishing it may not be available in e-book format again! Order now!

Email Ayla at nykkicreations at yahoo dot com to find out where to send your check or money order!

Goddess Pictures

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“I saw a pillar of light exactly over my head, above the brightness of the sun, which descended gradually until it fell upon me…When the light rested upon me I saw two Personages, whose brightness and glory defy all description, standing above me in the air. One of them spake unto me, calling me by name and said, pointing to the other—This is My Beloved Son. Hear Him!" (Joseph Smith--History 1:16-20 )




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Mormonism's Birth through a Sacred Triangle

I see Mormonism as a very Universalist and New Age/magically compatible
spirituality. As I see it, Mormonism was birthed through a scared
triangle of Magic, Universalism and Christ.

Joseph Smith, Jr's mother, Lucy Mack Smith, was,


"pious but unable to choose one church above another. She tried a
Presbyterian church after she married but was disappointed. Finally she
was baptized, but only by a minister who did not insist upon her
joining a particular denomination (Hullinger)."


Lucy Mack Smith was a magickal
mother. Her name Lucy is Latin from the name Lucius which means light.
This was also the origin of St. Lucia the patroness of sight for whom
there are still festivals of light held today (ww.thinkbabynames.com).
This reminds me of the Celtic triple Goddess, Brigit, who brought the
light back after the dark winter.

A resident of Palmyra was quoted in an LDS
newspaper called the “Church Section” as saying that Lucy Mack Smith,
“turned many a penny tracing in the lines of the open palm of fortunes
of the inquirer.” This statement matches other reports from early
Palmyra converts including Orrin Porter Rockwell which said that the
prophet’s mother also practiced another forms of divination which used
dreams to locate treasure digging sites (Quinn 294).



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Several generations of the Smith family were engaging in magickal practices before the 1800’s. His family was known for residing in areas of folk magick
and alchemy cultures. During the Salem witchcraft trials two of Smith’s
great-great grandparents were involved as accusers. Smith’s immediate
family had already participated in a wide range ofmagickal practices
before Smith had his first vision in the sacred grove which occurred in
a context of his families treasure digging quests (Quinn 31). Joseph
Smith and his family were not untypical of the early Americans who
practiced many different forms of Christian folkmagick (Quinn 30).

Lucy
Mack Smith specifically commented on “drawing Magic circles or sooth
saying.” She regarded this as part of the families over all activities
of reading the Bible, working hard on their farm, religious dreaming
and visioning. A medallion used in ritualmagick has been passed down
through the Smith family. Books published before the 1820s specifically
reference these types of “sacred relics” as being used in ceremonialmagick (Quinn 66).




Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket




Joseph's father on the other hand was a Universalist. According to many historical documents Joseph Sr., as well as his father, were Unitarian Universalists. According to the Unitarian Universalist website,


"If you're searching for a religious home that is guided by a quest for
truth and meaning, not by a set creed or dogma, we invite you to
discover Unitarian Universalism. We are a caring, open–minded religious
community that encourages you to seek your own spiritual path.
UnitarianUniversalist congregations are places where people gather to
nurture their spirits and put their faith into action by helping to
make our communities—and the world—a better place (uua.org)."

So let's bring this all together in the context of Mormonism by first discussing threes. We see throughout spiritualities, science, history and culture a coming together of threes.

Madain, Mother, Crone
Youth, King, Sage
God, Goddess, Holy Child
Father, Son and the Holy Ghost
Sun, Earth, Moon
Body, Mind, Spirit
Heart, Head, Hand
President, Senate, House
Mother, Father, Child
Water, Food, Shelter
Plant, Steward, Harvest
Dharma, Buddha, Sanga


All
of these "threes" bring a concept into balance and harmony. Just as a
table needs a minimum of three legs to be stable it seems that in our
lives, nature and spirituality - things are built, and held stable, on
threes.

So Mormonism was born of threes. Simply put; Magic,
Universalism, and North American Christianity. Joseph Smith was truly a
Shaman of North America. Through Joseph (and, in my opinion, his
feminine balance - Emma) our Heavenly Parents expressed their union
with magic, Universalism and Christian concepts.

The magic in Mormonism (seer stones, astrology, magic daggers, healing hankerchiefs,
temple rituals, etc) restores important, powerful, old world concepts
of our ancestors and other peoples of the world. Mormonism restores auniversalist doctrine of salvation that the Puritan based religions, especially in America, had moved far away from. While other Christians were preaching
salvation vs. damnation, the birth of Mormonism lined up with
Universalism claiming that everyone receives a glorified state after
death.

Finally Mormonism is based on the teachings of Jesus Christ. The Book of Mormon tells how Jesus visited the Americas after his resurrection.
This important spiritual event brought the ancient power of Father,
Mother and Holy child, as well as the message of the Prince of Peace to
rest of the world. The Western world at large, at the time of Joseph's
vision in the sacred grove was a heavily Christian place, restoring
gospel and faith without Christ would have been impossible.

Magic,
Christ and Universalism formed a well supported and stable birth place
for Mormonism. A powerful triangle of ancient and modern wisdom as well
as spirit surrounded Joseph the day he knelt down in the sacred grove
and prayed. Joseph Jr., was birthed literally and metaphorically into
his calling as a North American shaman supported by the earth he knelt
on, the mystic mother who birthed him and theuniversalist father who taught him.



Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket




Hullinger,
Robert N. Joseph Smith's
Response to Skepticism
, Signature Books; Salt Lake City,
1992.

Quinn, Michael D. style="font-style:italic;">Early Mormonism and the Magic World
View, Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1998.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Early People in America (thanks to Enrique!)

Here's another article to prove that the version of history we are tought is a flat out lie. Whether we're talking about Viking explores, boats to Peru from Indonesia or boats to California from China - Columbus cetainly did not "discover" America AND the peoples from Siberia who crossed the land bridge were not the only people to come over.

And on that note I have to throw in - boats from Israel *wink*


By David Alexander Mon Dec 3, 12:09 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The only surviving copy of the 500-year-old map that first used the name America goes on permanent display this month at the Library of Congress, but even as it prepares for its debut, the 1507 Waldseemuller map remains a puzzle for researchers.

Why did the mapmaker name the territory America and then change his mind later? How was he able to draw South America so accurately? Why did he put a huge ocean west of America years before European explorers discovered the Pacific?

"That's the kind of conundrum, the question, that is still out there," said John Hebert, chief of the geography and map division of the Library of Congress.

The 12 sheets that make up the map, purchased from German Prince Johannes Waldburg-Wolfegg for $10 million in 2003, were mounted on Monday in a huge 6-foot by 9.5-foot (1.85 meter by 2.95 meter) display case machined from a single block of aluminum.

The case will be flooded with inert argon gas to prevent deterioration when it goes on public display December 13.

Researchers are hopeful that putting the rarely shown map on permanent display for the first time since it was discovered in the Waldburg-Wolfegg castle archives in 1901 may stimulate interest in finding out more about the documents used to produce it.

The map was created by the German monk Martin Waldseemuller. Thirteen years after Christopher Columbus first landed in the Western Hemisphere, the Duke of Lorraine brought Waldseemuller and a group of scholars together at a monastery in Saint-Die in France to create a new map of the world.

The result, published two years later, is stunningly accurate and surprisingly modern.

"The actual shape of South America is correct," said Hebert. "The width of South America at certain key points is correct within 70 miles of accuracy."

Given what Europeans are believed to have known about the world at the time, it should not have been possible for the mapmakers to produce it, he said.

The map gives a reasonably correct depiction of the west coast of South America. But according to history, Vasco Nunez de Balboa did not reach the Pacific by land until 1513, and Ferdinand Magellan did not round the southern tip of the continent until 1520.

"So this is a rather compelling map to say, 'How did they come to that conclusion,"' Hebert said.

The mapmakers say they based it on the 1,300-year-old works of the Egyptian geographer Ptolemy as well as letters Florentine navigator Amerigo Vespucci wrote describing his voyages to the new world. But Hebert said there must have been something more.

"From the writings of Vespucci you couldn't have prepared the map," Hebert said. "There had to be something cartographic with it."

MISGIVINGS ABOUT AMERICA

Waldseemuller made it clear he was naming the new land after Vespucci, describing how he came up with the name America based on the navigator's first name.

But he soon had misgivings about what he had done. An atlas Waldseemuller produced six years later shows only part of the east coast of the Americas, and refers to it as Terra Incognita -- unknown land.

"America has gone out of his lexicon," Hebert said. "(No) place in the atlas -- in the text or in the maps -- does the name America appear."

His 1516 mariner's map, on the same scale as the 1507 map, steps back even further, showing only parts of the new continents and reconnecting the north to Asia. South America is labeled Terra Nova -- New World -- and North America is labeled Terra de Cuba -- Land of Cuba.

"Essentially he's reconnecting North America to the Asian mainland, suggesting a continual world of land mass rather than separated by those bodies of water that separate us from Europe and Asia," Hebert said.

Why the rollback? No one knows.

In writings accompanying the 1516 map, Waldseemuller comes across as if he "has seen the better of his error and is now correcting it," Hebert said.

He speculated that power politics played a role. Spain and Portugal divided the globe between them in 1494, two years after Columbus, with territory to the east going to Portugal and land to the west to Spain.

That demarcation line is oddly absent from the 1507 Waldseemuller map, and flags marking territorial claims in South America suggest Portugal controls the region's southernmost land, even though it is in Spain's area of influence. On the later map, the southernmost flag is Spanish, Hebert said.

"It is possible one could say the 1507 map is influenced strongly by Portuguese sources and conceivably the 1516 map may be influenced more by Spanish sources," he said.

Although the map conceals many mysteries, one thing is clear: it represents a revolutionary shift in the way Europe viewed the world.

"This is ... essentially the beginning or first map of the modern age, and it's one that everything builds on from that point forward," Hebert said. "It becomes a keystone map."

(Editing by Eddie Evans)

Monday, December 3, 2007

Preview for the Emma Smith movie!

Mormonism Birth through a Triangle

I see Mormonism as a very Universalist and New Age/magically compatible
spirituality. As I see it, Mormonism was birthed through a scared
triangle of Magic, Universalism and Christ.

Joseph Smith, Jr's mother, Lucy Mack Smith, was,


"pious but unable to choose one church above another. She tried a
Presbyterian church after she married but was disappointed. Finally she
was baptized, but only by a minister who did not insist upon her
joining a particular denomination (Hullinger)."


Lucy Mack Smith was a magickal
mother. Her name Lucy is Latin from the name Lucius which means light.
This was also the origin of St. Lucia the patroness of sight for whom
there are still festivals of light held today (ww.thinkbabynames.com).
This reminds me of the Celtic triple Goddess, Brigit, who brought the
light back after the dark winter.

A resident of Palmyra was quoted in an LDS
newspaper called the “Church Section” as saying that Lucy Mack Smith,
“turned many a penny tracing in the lines of the open palm of fortunes
of the inquirer.” This statement matches other reports from early
Palmyra converts including Orrin Porter Rockwell which said that the
prophet’s mother also practiced another forms of divination which used
dreams to locate treasure digging sites (Quinn 294).



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Several generations of the Smith family were engaging in magickal practices before the 1800’s. His family was known for residing in areas of folk magick
and alchemy cultures. During the Salem witchcraft trials two of Smith’s
great-great grandparents were involved as accusers. Smith’s immediate
family had already participated in a wide range ofmagickal practices
before Smith had his first vision in the sacred grove which occurred in
a context of his families treasure digging quests (Quinn 31). Joseph
Smith and his family were not untypical of the early Americans who
practiced many different forms of Christian folkmagick (Quinn 30).

Lucy
Mack Smith specifically commented on “drawing Magic circles or sooth
saying.” She regarded this as part of the families over all activities
of reading the Bible, working hard on their farm, religious dreaming
and visioning. A medallion used in ritualmagick has been passed down
through the Smith family. Books published before the 1820s specifically
reference these types of “sacred relics” as being used in ceremonialmagick (Quinn 66).




Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket




Joseph's father on the other hand was a Universalist. According to many historical documents Joseph Sr., as well as his father, were Unitarian Universalists. According to the Unitarian Universalist website,


"If you're searching for a religious home that is guided by a quest for
truth and meaning, not by a set creed or dogma, we invite you to
discover Unitarian Universalism. We are a caring, open–minded religious
community that encourages you to seek your own spiritual path.
UnitarianUniversalist congregations are places where people gather to
nurture their spirits and put their faith into action by helping to
make our communities—and the world—a better place (uua.org)."

So let's bring this all together in the context of Mormonism by first discussing threes. We see throughout spiritualities, science, history and culture a coming together of threes.

Madain, Mother, Crone
Youth, King, Sage
God, Goddess, Holy Child
Father, Son and the Holy Ghost
Sun, Earth, Moon
Body, Mind, Spirit
Heart, Head, Hand
President, Senate, House
Mother, Father, Child
Water, Food, Shelter
Plant, Steward, Harvest
Dharma, Buddha, Sanga


All
of these "threes" bring a concept into balance and harmony. Just as a
table needs a minimum of three legs to be stable it seems that in our
lives, nature and spirituality - things are built, and held stable, on
threes.

So Mormonism was born of threes. Simply put; Magic,
Universalism, and North American Christianity. Joseph Smith was truly a
Shaman of North America. Through Joseph (and, in my opinion, his
feminine balance - Emma) our Heavenly Parents expressed their union
with magic, Universalism and Christian concepts.

The magic in Mormonism (seer stones, astrology, magic daggers, healing hankerchiefs,
temple rituals, etc) restores important, powerful, old world concepts
of our ancestors and other peoples of the world. Mormonism restores auniversalist doctrine of salvation that the Puritan based religions, especially in America, had moved far away from. While other Christians were preaching
salvation vs. damnation, the birth of Mormonism lined up with
Universalism claiming that everyone receives a glorified state after
death.

Finally Mormonism is based on the teachings of Jesus Christ. The Book of Mormon tells how Jesus visited the Americas after his resurrection.
This important spiritual event brought the ancient power of Father,
Mother and Holy child, as well as the message of the Prince of Peace to
rest of the world. The Western world at large, at the time of Joseph's
vision in the sacred grove was a heavily Christian place, restoring
gospel and faith without Christ would have been impossible.

Magic,
Christ and Universalism formed a well supported and stable birth place
for Mormonism. A powerful triangle of ancient and modern wisdom as well
as spirit surrounded Joseph the day he knelt down in the sacred grove
and prayed. Joseph Jr., was birthed literally and metaphorically into
his calling as a North American shaman supported by the earth he knelt
on, the mystic mother who birthed him and theuniversalist father who taught him.



Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket




Hullinger,
Robert N. Joseph Smith's
Response to Skepticism
, Signature Books; Salt Lake City,
1992.

Quinn, Michael D. style="font-style:italic;">Early Mormonism and the Magic World
View, Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1998.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Margaret Toscano Videos!

Margaret Toscano, is an Assistant Professor of Languages & Literature at the University of Utah. She is the theology editor for the Mormon Women's Forum Newsletter, co-author of Strangers in Paradox, contributing author to Women and Authority: Re-emerging Mormon Feminism, and a founder and former co-president of the Mormon Alliance.



The Early Years








Mormon Feminisim





LDS Dissent