Missionary Builds International Interfaith Community of Faith online Half-Million Strong

Check out this recent article from BYU’s student newspaper:

https://universe.byu.edu/2022/03/29/student-interfaith-facebook-group-looks-to-broaden-impact-as-nonprofit/

Worldwide Unified, a Facebook group started by a then missionary, to help promote President Nelson’s call for a fast has grown to more than half a million members. Today it is a broad, diverse, interfaith, and international group of people uniting for faith in God.

They are looking to expand their influence, and making some fantastic steps. Make sure to check out their article.

 

 

On Key

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New Yorker’s Odd Swipe at the Church

The New Yorker published a story last week about the authorship and provenance of the 1971 book Go Ask Alice. The book is presented as the diary of a teenage girl, but a new book suggests that it was composed by Beatrice Sparks, a woman who claimed to only have found the diary and edited it. The article is a fine read, asking interesting questions about the ethics of publication, and the difficulties of identifying authorship. But near the end of the article they include this line, “As a few ex-Mormons have pointed out, Sparks was not the first Mormon to publish a text ostensibly based on an original source that the rest of the world did not get to see.” The line takes a not-quite veiled swipe at the founding of the religion that Sparks was a member of. I can’t help but wonder if Sparks was a Catholic, would the author have been as comfortable opining, “Sparks is not the first Catholic to put out a book where the original sources aren’t available.” This kind of winking attack feels more fitting on the ex-Mormon Reddit than in a major publication like the New Yorker.

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