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Meridian Magazine : : Home

We Are All God’s Children
Growing up in the the Bible Belt helped forge my love of Christ and an enduring sense of honor and duty.
By Page Johnson

Let Peace Begin with Me
I’m convinced that the desert of Iraq is not the battleground where the Lord would have me focus my energies and my concerns. Will any peace I create on my internal landscape contribute to peace on earth? I know peace can only come one heart at a time.
by Darla Isackson

Over the Hill or Reaching Life’s Mountaintop?
At his 80th birthday party, beloved teacher Ivan Barrett made quite an announcement. He said that the work of a reputable research team has proven that those who have the most birthdays live the longest!  That message came to me poignantly last week when a friend my age passed away three days before my birthday. I’ve never been bothered by birthdays, but this one caused me great introspection because my friend who just turned sixty a few months ago will never see sixty-one.
by Darla Isackson

Touching our Gifts with His Light
Where are our great writers? Where are our stellar actors and actresses? Where are our great artists and advertisers? Where are the musicians who will master what might possibly be the most powerful tool of communication ever revealed? If our students are going to produce creative works “whose top shall touch heaven,” they first need to be inspired. To those who teach, I would offer some suggestions about what we can do to help inspire the rising generation to greatness.
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Pulling Handcarts in Virginia
98 youth from the McLean, Virginia Stake push and pull handcarts for 10 miles over rough terrain and ponder the stark realities of pioneer life.
by Mark W. Cannon, Page Johnson, and Jim Croft

The Still Small Voice
If I were the adversary with all his centuries of practice at tempting and deceiving, I would surely have learned what works best to thwart mankind. I suspect I would choose as a primary purpose to distract people from the guiding, testifying, comforting voice of the Spirit.
by Darla Isackson

The Wild Ox and Covenant Israel—Israel's Descendants and Their Latter Day Destiny
Whenever pictures of LDS temples are shown, usually included is a photograph of the baptismal font resting on the backs of twelve oxen. Why oxen? Why not something more aesthetically appealing? Why the number twelve?
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Doing All We Can Do When a Loved One Strays
A reader shares her thoughts about the article, Children and the "Title of Liberty".
by Darla Isackson

Can We Make Sense of Suffering?
"It is important that we should understand the reasons and causes of our exposure to the vicissitudes of life and of death, and the designs and purposes of God in our coming into the world, our sufferings here, and our departure hence . . . It is a subject we ought to study . . . If we have any claim on our Heavenly Father for anything, it is for knowledge on this important subject."—Joseph Smith
by Darla Isackson

Children and the "Title of Liberty"
One of the biggest traps, that mothers of grown children particularly seem to fall into, is the idea that we somehow should have done better, should have been closer to perfection in our interactions with our children.
by Darla Isackson

Eyewitness Account of the Campinas Brazil Temple Dedication
When the Campinas, Brazil temple was dedicated on May 17, I was there in the Celestial Room. This article will describe some details of the event and also try to answer the question: why were we all blubbering like babies?
by Geoffrey Biddulph

Winning the Battle and Not Knowing It
There is a battle afoot; a great battle pitting the minions of the deceived against the armies of truth.
by Justin Hart

Winning the Battle and Not Knowing It, Part II
This is the second in a series of articles examining the recent dialogue between anti-Mormon proponents and Mormon apologists.
by Justin Hart

Winning the Battle and Not Knowing It, Part III: Let the Dialogue Begin
This series of articles is intended to inform the reader about recent trends, books and publications about the dialogue between Evangelicals and Mormons.
by Justin Hart

Winning the Battle and Not Knowing It – Part IV: The New Mormon Challenge Reviewed
This is the fourth in a series of articles examining the new stance some evangelicals are taking toward Latter-day Saints and our theology.
by Justin Hart

Winning the Battle and Not Knowing It, Part V: Part 2 of the Review
by Justin Hart

Two Hard-Earned Lessons
I've thrown away most of my parenting theories, but I am sure about two principles.
by Darla Isackson

Two-Hard Earned Lessons, Part 2: Honoring God's Law of Agency
by Darla Isackson

Becoming Whole in Fragments of Time
Feeling fragmented is a common experience in modern society—but perilous because it is symptomatic of spiritual sickness, even spiritual starvation.
by Darla Isackson

Trusting the Lord's Purposes in Adversity
Much like a road construction project, our lives often must be torn up before they can be improved, widened, made more serviceable.
by Darla Isackson

"Be Ye Therefore Perfect..."—Handling Obsession with Perfection
Displaying our humanness does not count against us.
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3

A Deeper Dimension of Trust in the Lord: "In the Shadow of Thy Wings"
God never makes mistakes or errors in judgement, never betrays, abandons, or lets us down. So why do we often find ourselves struggling through murky fields of fear rather than staying anchored on the solid rock of trust?
by Darla Isackson

Baptisms for the Dead—A Forgotten Record For Finding Early LDS Ancestry
Here's a clue for filling in some of the blank spaces in your family history.
by James W. Petty, A.G., C.G.R.S., B.S.

Trust in the Lord Can Light Up the New Year
"O Lord, I have trusted in thee, and I will trust in thee forever." (2 Nephi 4:34)
by Darla Isackson

The Real Story of Christmas
Using both the Joseph Smith Translation and the Book of Mormon, I have compiled the real story of Christmas.
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Early Morning Seminary in Australia
Growing the Church one alarm clock at a time.
by Brett Stringer

Symbols of the Savior at Christmas
At this time of year are we part of the "inn" crowd or the "stable" few?
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Turning the Heart of This Child to The Fathers - A Personal Witness
I have learned personally that doing genealogy and communicating with the world of spirits goes hand-in-hand.
by James W. Petty, A.G., C.G.R.S.

"Agents Unto Themselves"
What happens when we pray in all sincerity and do not seem
to get an answer?

by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Showing Gratitude
The Thanksgiving season is always a choice time. Besides the fading of fall leaves and change in the weather, one can almost feel a change taking place in society. Like the change in the air, our thoughts turn to others in an attitude of gratitude.
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

What Tuesday Taught Us
When Abinadi stood before the priests of King Noah, he said, "Ye have not applied your hearts to understanding; therefore, ye have not been wise" (Mosiah 12:27) The purpose of this column is to discuss the principles of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in light of the application they can have in our lives.
by W. Jeffrey Marsh

Last of the Summer Fruit
There is something about autumn that is at once ravishingly beautiful, yet also holds the threat of the coming deadness of winter. That is why the summer fruits were such a treasure to us in a place where autumn, like summer, was often too brief, and winter always too long.
by Ronnie Bray

Proclaim Peace
Novelist Dean Hughes has written a series of books called Children of the Promise that explore how World War II blasts a Latter-day Saint family from Salt Lake apart into a world where they face death and war, and tests of their own faith. His new novel, Writing on the Wall is the first of a series looking at the impact of the 60's on the children of that same family. Meridian's editors asked him, as one who has contemplated deeply, the effect of war on the human spirit, to comment on our current situation.
by Dean Hughes

Where Are the Blessings?
At times, we simply do not enjoy the blessings we feel we've earned by our obedience to a given principle of the gospel. We may ask ourselves the question, "Where are my blessings?"
by Steven D. Harrop

The Sacred Nature of Everyday Work
What appears to be drudgery may answer your toughest relationship problems.
by Kathleen Slaugh Bahr

My Home as a Temple
Is there something sacred in the everyday?
by Kristine Manwaring

You've Got Mail
His messages always come at precisely the right moment-not a nanosecond too soon, never too late.
by Karen R. Merkley

"Words Fall Short"
Our spiritual thoughts are much bigger than our words can express.
by Maurine Jensen Proctor

 

 

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