There are at least five core elements that are used in the ordinance of the sacrament. Back on June 16th…
Browsing: Parallels
Did you know that you can “read” temples? What if all of the temples around the world today constituted a…
Well, I guess this is “brother-in-law” day today at oneClimbs! I owe this post to Brad who emailed this to…
I have been having a great time digging through Avraham Gileadi’s book “The End From the Beginning” which analyzes Isaiah’s…
It always amazes me how we acknowledge the historical certainty of the rise and fall of nations in the past,…
All of the notes below are taken directly from the Temple Institute which is an organization seeking to rebuild the…
Below is a transcript of a presentation by Don Bradley on some temple-related themes that may have been present in…
This Christmas I had some thoughts about the gifts that were given to the young Jesus by the wise men.…
Set aside a good 3 hours and 43 minutes for a mind-bending tour laced with unbelievable parallels that defy coincidence.…
To some of you, this article might just be the most disgusting parable that you’ve ever read, but please, bear…
If you are familiar with the articles here at oneClimbs, you’ll probably see a “climbing” analogy from time to time.…
Did you know that Moses had to veil his face around the Israelites? Read the account is taken from Exodus…
My father has worked for most of his life in residential marine construction and I used to spend a lot of…
The symbol of a mountain is a common archetype in religious traditions and is it any wonder? Their everlasting stability,…
Below is an excerpt of Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” with a few minor edits I’ve introduced. [Socrates] And now, I…
LDSSymbols.com is a new site that I just launched today to help anyone become more literate in the alphabet of…
A look into the “Five Ks” of Sikhism and how the practice of this tenet of faith relates to LDS theology.
The veil was one of the core elements of the Hebrew temple. It was the dividing line between this world…
What does it mean to “sustain” another? Most often we think of sustaining in terms of indicating our approval of an individual by an uplifted hand.
Alonzo L. Gaskill, an assistant professor of Church history and doctrine at BYU, brilliantly debunks the “Seal of Melchizedek” myth while sustaining the idea that, yes, we can create our own new meanings for symbols in our day.
An interesting correlation between a somewhat recent scientific discovery and D&C 130