Chris Haleua

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The shopping around for more satisfying spiritual nourishment has long been a heritage of the Protestant Reformation—so much so that in 1559, the Act of Uniformity required all English people to attend their own parish churches. Today that requirement is little more than a quaint memory of a time before religious association and attendance became products of market forces. Mormon practice has achieved what the English parliament could not. With the rarest of exceptions, Mormons attend the ward where they find themselves
The Crucible of Doubt: Reflections on the Quest for Faith
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