Confessions of an Ex-Mormon Recovery Journal

Confessions of an Ex-Mormon Recovery Journal

Author: Tracy Tennant

Publisher:

Published: 2016-02-14

Total Pages: 168

ISBN-13: 9780991337101

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Confessions of an Ex-Mormon Recovery Journal is a self-help writing tool for former Mormons. The journal is designed to help people separating from the LDS faith community to sort through the difficulties associated with terminating their membership in the church.


Confessions of an Ex-Mormon

Confessions of an Ex-Mormon

Author: Tracy Tennant

Publisher: From Kolob to Calvary

Published: 2017-03

Total Pages: 118

ISBN-13: 9780991337118

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Helpful guide for those leaving Mormonism and embracing biblical Christianity. The author addresses the six most common mistakes disaffected members of the LDS Church make that lead to broken relationships, misunderstandings, and rejection. The book offers readers practical suggestions on how to navigate out of Mormonism with hope and purpose.


Confessions of a Mormon Boy

Confessions of a Mormon Boy

Author: Steven Fales

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

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“What a rare and skillful thing isConfessions of a Mormon Boy,Steven Fales’ engrossing, funny and often quite harrowing tale. A fine writer and actor.”—Chicago Sun-Times A hit at New York’s Fringe Festival, Steven Fales’ true-life story has become a smash across the country. Now playing off-Broadway, it continues to dazzle audiences with its honesty and wit as the author recounts his story of being excommunicated from the Mormon church for being gay, leaving his wife and children, and his subsequent descent into the dangers of sex and drugs.


Mormonism, the Matrix, and Me

Mormonism, the Matrix, and Me

Author: Tracy Tennant

Publisher:

Published: 2014-03

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 9780991337156

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Tracy Tennant's compelling and inspirational account of raising and homeschooling ten children as a devout Mormon mother. Her story provides insight into Mormon lifestyle, practices, and beliefs. Her life as a Latter-day Saint was rich with humor and drama, as well as the mundane aspects of trying to live worthily as a temple-attending woman preparing her family for life in the future Celestial Kingdom. After discovering solid historical evidence against Joseph Smith and the teachings of the Mormon Church, Tracy faced heartbreaking rejection from many of her former Mormon friends and loved ones. While her account details her journey out of Mormonism into Biblical-based faith, she acknowledges and credits the Mormon people who made a positive impact on her life. Mormonism, The Matrix & Me is a book that is an intense walk through Tracy's life as she enters and exits a world known as Mormonism, while eloquently comparing her story to the blockbuster movie, "The Matrix." Her story will cause many to open their eyes to the world around them.


The Next Mormons

The Next Mormons

Author: Jana Riess

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2019-02-01

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 019088522X

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American Millennials--the generation born in the 1980s and 1990s--have been leaving organized religion in unprecedented numbers. For a long time, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was an exception: nearly three-quarters of people who grew up Mormon stayed that way into adulthood. In The Next Mormons, Jana Riess demonstrates that things are starting to change. Drawing on a large-scale national study of four generations of current and former Mormons as well as dozens of in-depth personal interviews, Riess explores the religious beliefs and behaviors of young adult Mormons, finding that while their levels of belief remain strong, their institutional loyalties are less certain than their parents' and grandparents'. For a growing number of Millennials, the tensions between the Church's conservative ideals and their generation's commitment to individualism and pluralism prove too high, causing them to leave the faith-often experiencing deep personal anguish in the process. Those who remain within the fold are attempting to carefully balance the Church's strong emphasis on the traditional family with their generation's more inclusive definition that celebrates same-sex couples and women's equality. Mormon families are changing too. More Mormons are remaining single, parents are having fewer children, and more women are working outside the home than a generation ago. The Next Mormons offers a portrait of a generation navigating between traditional religion and a rapidly changing culture.


The Mormon Menace: The Confessions of John Doyle Lee, Danite

The Mormon Menace: The Confessions of John Doyle Lee, Danite

Author: Alfred Henry Lewis

Publisher: Good Press

Published: 2019-12-04

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13:

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"The Mormon Menace: The Confessions of John Doyle Lee, Danite" by Alfred Henry Lewis and John Doyle Lee John Doyle Lee was an American pioneer and prominent early member of the Latter Day Saint Movement in Utah. Lee was later convicted as a mass murderer for his complicity in the Mountain Meadows massacre, sentenced to death and was executed in 1877. This book is a biography that retells the fascinating life of this strange and compelling man.


Confessions of a Latter-day Virgin

Confessions of a Latter-day Virgin

Author: Nicole Hardy

Publisher: Hachette Books

Published: 2013-08-20

Total Pages: 207

ISBN-13: 1401342906

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When Nicole Hardy's eye-opening "Modern Love" column appeared in the New York Times, the response from readers was overwhelming. Hardy's essay, which exposed the conflict between being true to herself as a woman and remaining true to her Mormon faith, struck a chord with women coast-to-coast. Now in her funny, intimate, and thoughtful memoir, Nicole Hardy explores how she came, at the age of thirty-five, to a crossroads regarding her faith and her identity. As a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Nicole had held absolute conviction in her Mormon faith during her childhood and throughout her twenties. But as she aged out of the Church's "singles ward" and entered her thirties, she struggled to merge the life she envisioned for herself with the one the Church prescribed, wherein all women are called to be mothers and the role of homemaker is the emphatic ideal. Confessions of a Latter-day Virgin chronicles the extraordinary lengths Nicole went to in an attempt to reconcile her human needs with her spiritual life--flying across the country for dates with LDS men, taking up salsa dancing as a source for physical contact, even moving to Grand Cayman, where the ocean and scuba diving provided some solace. But neither secular pursuits nor LDS guidance could help Nicole prepare for the dilemma she would eventually face: a crisis of faith that caused her to question everything she'd grown up believing. In the tradition of the memoirs Devotion and Mennonite in a Little Black Dress, Confessions of a Latter-day Virgin is a mesmerizing and wholly relatable account of one woman's hard-won mission to find love, acceptance, and happiness--on her own terms.


Nauvoo Polygamy

Nauvoo Polygamy

Author: George Dempster Smith

Publisher:

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781560852070

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Mormon Mormon polygamy began in Nauvoo, Illinois, a river town located at a bend in the Mississippi about fifty miles upstream from Mark Twain's Hannibal, Missouri. After church founder Joseph Smith married some thirty-eight women, he introduced this "celestial" form of marriage to his innermost circle of followers. By early 1846, nearly 200 men had adopted the polygamous lifestyle, with an average of nearly four women per man--717 wives in all. After leaving Nauvoo, these husbands would eventually marry another 417 women. In Utah they were the polygamy pioneers who provided a model for thousands of others who entered into plural marriages in the nineteenth century. Their story is colorful, wrapped in images of people in the next life piloting celestial worlds. Plural marriage was not initiated all at once, nor was it introduced though a smooth progression of events but rather in fits and starts, though defenses and denials, hubris and mea culpas. The story, as told here, emphasizes the human drama, interspersed with underlying historiographical issues of uncovering what has hidden--of explaining behavior that was once allowed and then denied as circumstances changed.


Recovering the Word

Recovering the Word

Author: Brian Swann

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1987-01-01

Total Pages: 660

ISBN-13: 9780520057906

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These essays by linguists, folklorists, anthropologists, literary theorists, and poets, bring to a new level of sophistication the structural analysis of Native American literary expression. Their common concern is for the appreciation and elucidation of Native American song and story, and for a historical, philosophical, psychoanalytic, and linguistic kind of commentary. The essays address the overlapping issues of presentation and interpretation of Native American literature: How to present in writing an art that is primarily oral, dramatic, and performative? How to interpret that art, both in its traditional forms and in its later, written forms. ISBN 0-520-05790-2: $60.00.