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EmilyCC
EmilyCC lives in Phoenix, Arizona with her spouse and three children. She currently serves as a stake Just Serve specialists, and she recently returned to school to become a nurse. She is a former editor of Exponent II and a founding blogger at The Exponent.

Announcements: Exponent II Call for Submissions

Announcements: Exponent II Call for SubmissionsIs your New Year’s Resolution to get something published this year?

This is just a reminder that submissions for the Spring issue of Exponent II are due January 15th. There is not a specific theme for the next issue but we’re always looking for personal essays, poetry, art and photography on all topics of interest to our audience.We also have recurring columns featuring writing on the following topics:

Sabbath Pastorals: exceptional Sacrament sermons from women or about women

Awakenings: personal essays exploring moments of awakenings be they spiritual, feminist or otherwise

Women’s Theology: essays which employ close readings of scripture, doctrine and theology

Reconciliations: a conversation between two people in which they talk about how they’ve reached an understanding on a difficult topic

Global Zion: reflections on Mormonism from outside the United States

If you have something you would like to submit, please send it to https://exponentii.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/[email protected].

We hope to hear from you soon!
Aimee Hickman and Emily Clyde Curtis
Co-Editors Exponent II

Read more posts in this blog series:

EmilyCC lives in Phoenix, Arizona with her spouse and three children. She currently serves as a stake Just Serve specialists, and she recently returned to school to become a nurse. She is a former editor of Exponent II and a founding blogger at The Exponent.

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Managers of the LDS Church are consciously well-intentioned and convinced of their moral uprightness. Yet they suffer from distorted thinking about women’s spiritual autonomy that is comparable to that of the clergy hundreds of years ago. Hundreds of years from now, will Latter-day Saints look back at patriarchal rhetoric as irrational, anxiety-driven and oppressive? Will feminists be exonerated like Joan of Arc, who was canonized in 1920? Or, will the Saints still be convinced of the divinity of misogynistic thinking for centuries to come and dwindle in numbers? All I know is that there is a lot of cautionary content for our Church in the European history of witch trials.

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