Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mormon Stories Podcast is a podcast principally hosted by psychologist John Dehlin featuring interviews with individuals and occasionally scholars on Mormon topics.The podcasts are noted as a platform for individuals critical of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), skeptic and dissident individuals.
In early 2008, Dehlin converted Mormon Matters into a group blog and lessened emphasis on new podcast episodes. [33] Dehlin resumed the Mormon Matters podcast on March 5, 2011, with Dan Wotherspoon as the host and Joanna Brooks as a frequent co-host. Dehlin is also the co-founder of the pro-LGBT "Mormons for Marriage" website. [34]
Mormon Stories Podcast (Interview). 18 March 2014 "Episode 551: Lindsay Hansen Park's Year of Polygamy". Mormon Stories Podcast (Interview). 17 July 2015; Colvin, Gina (6 October 2016). "Episode 159: Lindsay Hansen Park— Critiquing Progressive Mormonism". A Thoughtful Faith (Interview)
A short trailer for the show was published on September 6, 2019 and the first episode was published later that month. [4] [5] The first episode of the show discusses Mormonism and women and premarital exams in particular. [6] Lee Hale was featured on the Mormon Land podcast. [7] Lee Hale interviewed a gay Mormon named Addison Jenkins. [8]
August 18: The LDS Church asks that all refer to it by its full name, and stop using nicknames including Mormon or LDS. [188] August 23: The LDS Church campaigns against a Utah ballot initiative for medical marijuana, and urges members to vote against it. The church later backs a compromise bill, but the ballot initiative passes in November.
The eight-episode Season 1, which debuted in September, racked up 410 million minutes viewed in its first week of release, ranking at No. 7 on Nielsen’s U.S. ranking of streaming originals.
When will 'The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives' season 2 be released? Hulu has renewed the series for 20 additional episodes, Variety reported on Thursday, October 3. Right now, it's unclear exactly ...
In 2001, Mormon.org was launched to "allow visitors to receive answers to their questions about the Church‘s beliefs". [2] In 2010, the LDS Church launched an update to Mormon.org that they called 'Mormon.org 4.0' that included new tools to create profiles for "explaining why they live their faith and why they are a Mormon". [ 3 ]