Ex-Brother Bundy and the Gift of Discernment

Family Bro Evening: “Ex-Brother Bundy and the Gift of Discernment”

In this thought-provoking episode, the hosts of Family Bro Evening dive deep into one of the Church’s most notorious members, Ted Bundy, and the circumstances surrounding his time in Utah. The discussion extends to the role of the gift of discernment in our lives, both in the context of Bundy’s rampage and as a broader concept in faith and personal growth. It’s a gripping exploration of the intersection between faith, discernment, and the darkest aspects of human behavior.

About the authors

Chelsea Johnson

Chelsea Johnson, M.S., is a licensed marriage and family therapist and president of Gender Harmony Institute.
On Key

You Might Also Like

The January 6 Hearings Are Not Just a Political Stunt

A hallmark of polarized America is an eagerness to hear anything confirming our biases and total rejection of those things that don’t. If that’s what you’re doing with the January 6th hearings, you’re missing something important.

Why Faith Matters for the Long Game

Burnout can limit the effectiveness of many noble efforts and worthy social causes today. The deeper solution to such exhaustion may come from combining the empowerment of activism with the renewing energy of faith.

Hebrew Summer Camps, Utah Jazz, and a Helplessly Biased “Journalist”

Last week the Times of Israel asked, “Why do the Utah Jazz, in the Mormon capital, play ‘Hava Nagila’ after wins?” The answer is complicated. The song was first written in 1918, and the author soon moved to Cincinati where he played a role in planning Jewish summer camps, where the song quickly became associated with athletics. By the 1970s the song was being played at professional sporting events. Having been in the sports milieu for more than 50 years, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that so many sports team use the song, and that some of them use the song regularly as the Jazz do. The complicated history could be an occasion to celebrate our multi-cultural nation. But Emily Kaplan took it another way. Kaplan has tried to represent herself in the past as a neutral journalist interested in covering Latter-day Saints. Her first effort left much to be desired, marginalizing most Latter-day Saint voices in favor of her own narrative about a regressive church. When confronted by these critiques Kaplan grew very defensive, doubling down on her right to repurpose Latter-day Saint faith, culture, and history, to fit her narrative. So it might come as some surprise her response to the question Times of Israel proposed: Not only does Kaplan descend into outright insults “garments in a twist” she concludes that the Jazz’s use of the song is somehow part of a weakness of Latter-day Saints rather than related to the larger sports culture, where it’s inspiration clearly comes. Kaplan’s effort to shoehorn a criticism against Latter-day Saints complete with slurs in a place where it doesn’t belong, firmly establishes that she is not the neutral journalist about Latter-day Saints she attempted to portray herself as. I agree that something offensive and absurd has happened here, I just don’t think it has much to do with sports anthems.

A Better Conversation about HB 11

The problem with HB 11 was not its failure to reach compromise on the question of transgender athletic participation, but limiting its scope to a single question, where only one set of competing interests could be served in the end.

Subscribe To Our Weekly Newsletter

Stay up to date on the intersection of faith in the public square.

You have Successfully Subscribed!