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Sustaining and Defending the LDS Temple

Month: September 2008

Videos: Mormon Theology Seminar Conference on Alma 32

September 21, 2008 by Bryce Haymond 1 Comment

These are videos of the presentations given at the Mormon Theology Seminar’s Conference entitled “An Experiment on the Word: Reading Alma 32.”  It was held from 9am-4pm on Friday, September 19th, 2008 in B192 of the Joseph F. Smith Building on BYU campus.  I introduced my liveblogging this conference here.

Unfortunately, I did not have a good wireless signal in the conference room, and so the quality of these videos is poor, being broken into parts and some are missing.  But I learned a great deal about what to change for my next liveblogging/broadcasting to make it much better, so in that way it was beneficial.

Julie Smith:
Part 1

James Faulconer:
it failed to record, unfortunately

Adam Miller:
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5

Jenny Webb:
Part 0, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8

Joseph Spencer:
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3

Robert Couch:
Part 1

Posted in: Scholarship, Tidbits Tagged: alma the younger, blogging, BYU, conference, faith, video

New Mormon.org Website

September 18, 2008 by Bryce Haymond Leave a Comment
New Mormon.org Homepage

New Mormon.org Homepage

Check out the new Mormon.org website that was launched today.  It is very clean and well designed, a big improvement over the former website.  A great new feature of the site that I’m sure will be used a lot is that visitors from anywhere in the world will be able to chat live with missionaries online at any time of the day.

www.Mormon.org

[via NorthTemple.com]

Posted in: Tidbits Tagged: church, conversation, design, online, talk, websites

Nüwa and Fuxi in Chinese Mythology: Compass & Square

September 17, 2008 by Bryce Haymond 37 Comments
An ancient painting of Nüwa and Fuxi unearthed in Xinjiang.

An ancient painting of Nüwa and Fuxi unearthed in Xinjiang, holding the tools of creation - compass and square.

Hugh Nibley gave a lecture in 1975 on “Sacred Vestments” which was later transcribed and included in the collected works volume Temple and Cosmos (pgs. 91-132).  The entire paper is fascinating, and highly recommended reading.  One of the things he wrote about were certain Chinese artifacts which had been found depicting two mythological gods, Nüwa and Fuxi, and the tools they hold:

Most challenging are the veils from Taoist-Buddhist tombs at Astana, in Central Asia, originally Nestorian (Christian) country, discovered by Sir Aurel Stein in 1925… We see the king and queen embracing at their wedding, the king holding the square on high, the queen a compass. As it is explained, the instruments are taking the measurements of the universe, at the founding of a new world and a new age. Above the couple’s head is the sun surrounded by twelve disks, meaning the circle of the year or the navel of the universe. Among the stars depicted, Stein and his assistant identified the Big Dipper alone as clearly discernable. As noted above, the garment draped over the coffin and the veil hung on the wall had the same marks; they were placed on the garment as reminders of personal commitment, while on the veil they represent man’s place in the cosmos. (pg. 111-12)

Nibley included drawings of this depiction found on veils in the Astana Tombs in Xinjiang, China, with a caption that reads:

In the underground tomb of Fan Yen-Shih, d. A.D. 689, two painted silk veils show the First Ancestors of the Chinese, their entwined serpect bodies rotating around the invisible vertical axis mundi.  Fu Hsi holds the set-square and plumb bob … as he rules the four-cornered earth, while his sister-wife Nü-wa holds the compass pointing up, as she rules the circling heavens.  The phrase kuci chü is used by modern Chinese to signify “the way things should be, the moral standard”; it literally means the compass and the square. (pg. 115)

See the photos at the end of the post for more examples of this icon.  The veil redrawn in Temple and Cosmos is shown photographed in the second row, fourth from the left.  [Read more…]

Posted in: Artifacts, Scholarship Tagged: ancients, celestial, chinese, civilization, compass, construction, cosmology, creation, earth, heaven, hugh nibley, marks, marriage, noah, philosophy, rituals, scholar, square, symbols, universe, veil, yin yang

Make Your Home a Temple

September 15, 2008 by Bryce Haymond 2 Comments
President Thomas S. Monson

President Thomas S. Monson

President Monson spoke at a regional meeting in the Conference Center yesterday, as reported by the Deseret News.  The focus of his counsel was to put our homes in order.  This is wise counsel since the Dow dropped 500 points today, the biggest drop since 9/11.  We are living in troubled times, and I suspect that it will get worse sooner than it gets better.  The Lord’s prophets have been giving us this message for a couple decades now, to put our homes in order in a multitude of different ways.  Are we listening and doing?

Part of President Monson’s counsel was this, in words reminiscent of the temple (cf. D&C 88:119):

This, then, is your building project, brothers and sisters, to organize yourselves, prepare every needful thing, and to establish a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God.

Posted in: General Authorities Tagged: education, fasting, home, prayer, prophet, thomas s. monson

Mormon Theology Seminar Conference: Reading Alma 32 on Sept. 19

September 12, 2008 by Bryce Haymond Leave a Comment

I will have the chance to attend the Mormon Theology Seminar’s conference entitled “An Experiment on the Word: Reading Alma 32” that is coming up next Friday, September 19th, 2008.  It is being held from 9am-4pm in room B192 in the Joseph F. Smith Building on BYU campus.  More details can be found on Mormon Theology Seminar’s website, or in their PDF flyer.  You can also learn more about it from a podcast with some of the organizers.  The conference will be the culmination of a several month online seminar that took place at alma32.wordpress.com.

Here is the schedule:

  • 9am • Julie M. Smith • So Shall My Word Be: Reading Alma 32 through Isaiah 55
  • 10am • James E. Faulconer • Desiring to Believe: Philo-Sophia and the Word of God
  • 11am • Adam Miller • You Must Needs Say that the Word is Good
  • 1pm • Jenny Webb • It is Well that Ye are Cast Out: Alma 32 and Eden
  • 2pm • Joseph M. Spencer • Faith, Hope, and Charity: Alma and Joseph Smith
  • 3pm • Robert Couch • “No Cause to Believe”: Knowledge and Other Signs of Dormant Faith

Since the FAIR Conference liveblogging seemed to work so well, I’m going to see if I can liveblog this event too (I hope they have WiFi in the JFSB).  If anyone else is also attending the conference and wants to collaborate on the liveblogging, contact me and maybe we can join our efforts.  We will be using the awesome CoverItLive service.

If you want to receive an email reminder of the liveblogging we will be doing here next Friday, see the right hand sidebar on TempleStudy.com to sign up for one.

Posted in: Tidbits Tagged: alma 32, alma the younger, blogging, book of mormon, BYU, conference, faithfulness, joseph smith
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