Latter Day Radio, now podcasting from The Intersection of Faith & Freedom.

gmjarrard
Latter Day Radio, now podcasting from The Intersection of Faith & Freedom.

Martin Tanner and GM Jarrard first joined forces in 2018 on KLO AM1430 in 2018 producing a weekly three-hour program on matters of faith and freedom; It was a tricky tightrope to balance on, keeping one foot ahead of the other, carefully mixing topics about religion and politics, faith and freedom as the secular world grew ever bolder in their attacks on traditional values on which this country was founded. Today, it is clearer than ever as Christ said, "ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." That is what you can expect when you listen to a Latter Day Radio Podcast.

  1. Jonathan Neville Reveals Location of Book of Mormon Lands

    31/08/2022

    Jonathan Neville Reveals Location of Book of Mormon Lands

    In this Latter Day Radio podcast, first broadcast on KLO Radio in Salt Lake City, attorney, author and researcher Jonathan Neville makes the case that the events described in the Book of Mormon took place in North America, primarily the northeastern U.S. states of Ohio, New York and Michigan and the surrounding areas. Neville bases his theory on Oliver Cowdery's "Letter 7" that was published in 1842 to counter claims from enemies of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that Joseph Smith "borrowed" content from other sources, such as Solomon Spaulding. His studies led him to conclude that Benjamin Winchester under the direction of William Smith, the youngest brother of Joseph Smith, wrote accounts in the early LDS publication, "The Times and the Seasons," that led many researchers to "go on a snipe hunt" in Central America for clues and evidence to confirm the claims in the Book of Mormon. In Neville's view, statements made by Joseph Smith, Oliver Cowdery and other early Church leaders that the final battle between Nephites and Lamanites did indeed take place in the area of the Great Lakes and not in Guatemala nor Mexico. He asserts that his research of both documents and of archaeological sites in and around Ohio confirms his theory. Neville has written several books on the subject that are described on his website, MoronisAmerica.com.  GM Jarrard is the host for this podcast that was first heard on KLO in 2018.

    39min
  2. Their Long Journey Back to Mongolia

    06/06/2022

    Their Long Journey Back to Mongolia

    A Long Journey Back to Mongolia: A "No More Strangers" Podcast It’s no secret that students who attend Brigham Young University very often leave with more than just a college degree. For many, they leave with a spouse, too. Such was the case for our current guests in this Latter Day Radio podcast episode. Oh, those single wards on campus! The expressed purpose of “single wards” is to take a varied assortment of members of the Church from places with strange-sounding names and pair them up. Think of it as a sock drawer! You just can’t leave socks as a loose collection of footwear; your job (if you’re the bishop, for example) isn’t done until they’re all rolled up together. And, sometimes those socks would never have been paired up if they hadn’t been dropped into the same drawer! Such is the case of Nadmid Namgur and Mayumi Yamanaka. They are both returned missionaries; Nadmid is a native Mongolian, and he served in San Diego, California, arriving in the mission field hardly speaking English. Mayumi hails from Kobe, Japan, and served her mission in Tokyo. So, when they met, they were forced to use English–their second language–as their primary means of communication. But, they had one thing in common: a commitment to live the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ. That was their glue. She joined the Church as an eight-year-old when she and her mother were baptized; Nadmid’s conversion came later as a young college student in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia, the world’s second largest land-locked country sandwiched between Russia and China. Its altitude is about the same as Salt Lake City (4,300 feet) and sits astride the Tuul River with a population of 1.3 million, nearly half of the country’s 3 million inhabitants. Nadmid explains that it was the appearance of two young Americans in white shirt and ties, speaking–for them–a very foreign tongue that attracted his attention. His was no quick conversion; as he explains in the podcast, a new green missionary who spoke very little Mongolian made an impression that eventually led him to the waters of baptism and then to his surprise, a call to serve in the California San Diego mission. Opportunities, scholarships and the Hand of the Lord gave Nadmid and Mayumi an opportunity to travel to Mongolia with their two small sons where he, with his newly minted MBA from BYU, was offered a job with Rio Tinto and a chance to serve as branch president in Ulaanbaatar. A few years later, they found themselves back in Utah raising their two sons, David and Daniel, in the Daybreak “settlement” of South Jordan, Utah, in a nice, cozy cottage within walking distance of the Oquirrh Mountain Temple. Oh, and a new dog. Currently, Nadmid works in the Temple Department in the Church Office Building in downtown Salt Lake City. They both can be counted on to serve in any calling they are given; he’s on the High Council of the South Jordan Eastlake Stake, and Mayumi works in the Relief Society…that is, until July 1st. That’s when Elder Nadmid Namgur and Sister Mayumi Yamanaka Namgur and their boys, 14-year-old David and 11-year-old Daniel, will relocate…back to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, where “President Namgur” and “Mission Mother Namgur” will preside over this far-flung mission once the province of Genghis Kahn and his Empire. This podcast is the first of many to come in a new category that we’re calling “No More Strangers,” patterned after a series of books written a generation ago by Elder Hartman Rector, Jr. We hope you’ll like our first one, featuring Nadmid and Mayuni Namgur, leaving soon for the Mongolian Mission. You can learn more about their long journey by pressing the “Play” button on your smart phone or computer. And, in three years, we will are planning on their appearance again on Latter Day Radio. gm jarrard

    45min
  3. 29/03/2022

    From an Orphanage in Ukraine to a Cottage in Daybreak, South Jordan, Utah

    Just a block west of the imposing Oquirrh Mountain Temple set against the backdrop of the Wasatch Mountains is a neat little cottage facing a tree-lined park in the Daybreak development of South Jordan, Utah.. On any weekday morning, a cheery young woman can be seen kissing her teenage girls goodbye as they leave for Herriman High School or college. It seems ordinary enough, this cozy setting taken right off the cover of a family magazine. But, the lady of this house wasn’t raised in a comfortable suburban American home. She wasn’t even raised in a home. Her earliest memories are of the Shkola Internat #3 Orphanage in Kyiv, Ukraine, where she stayed until a decision to take an English class taught by two young college-age American women changed her life. She is a long way from her roots, but that doesn’t mean she has forgotten them. In fact, she is busier than ever doing her best to help family, friends and fellow Ukrainians cope with the tragedy that has befallen her beloved homeland. Her name is Yuliya Anatoliivna Pernyatina Aukschun. And how she got from THERE to HERE is the story of this Latter Day Radio podcast. Her bubbly, happy personality is infectious. Maybe that’s because her personal experience of remembering where she came from and where she is today gives her context and appreciation for God’s blessings in her life. That first life-changing event occurred in 1993 when she jumped at the chance to learn from two young sister missionaries, Sister Jackson and Sister Fairbanks; she recalls that they “were not supposed to preach about their religion,” but that did not stop Yuliya from wanting to hear more of their message; within a week or so, she had taken all the discussions and had entered into the waters of baptism. After that, she experienced a number of life-changing events. She began attending branch activities in Kyiv, including socials, dances and the like. Then, about a year later, an American judge, who had been traveling to Ukraine on and off to help the newly emerging democracy learn about American jurisprudence, had met Yuliya and then inquired at the orphanage about the teen-age convert. He offered to adopt her and take her to the United States; she jumped at the chance, and sometime later, found herself in a suburb of Seattle, Washington, enrolled in high school, walking the halls after her ESL classes with an English-Russian pocket dictionary in her hand. Then, another member offered to pay her tuition to LDS Business College in Salt Lake City. She accepted that offer as well. At the college, she had been befriended by her Religion professor, Linda Aukschun, who told her son, Brad, about the young Ukrainian student, and when Yuliya dropped in to see her teacher, Brad was sitting at his mother’s desk working on her computer. Then, Professor Aukschun walked in, and after Yuliya left, Linda Aukschun asked Brad, “Did you get her number?” He shook his head and his mother retrieved Yulija, and unlike the storyline from “Fiddler on the Roof,” this time the parent’s desire was realized: 22 years later, the Cinderella story is being played out in South Jordan, Utah. Linda and Yuliya Aukschun have been close ever since, and in fact, a few years ago, they were able to attend a session at the Kviv Temple, this time with Yuliya helping with the translation. The most recent events have also been remarkable, with Brad and Yuliya Aukschun working tirelessly to help her younger sister and a childhood friend from the orphanage escape their war-torn country. With Brad’s round-the-clock effort and with the help of Google Translate, they managed to help the two women and their children catch flights to Brussels and find refuge in Belgium. In fact, today (March 28th), Yuliya’s friend’s six-year-old daughter starts school in Belgium. Yes, amidst all the tragedy of war with millions of refugees seeking safety, miracles still happen…in this case, miracles that began when a girl enrolled an English class in Ukraine.

    46min
  4. Lessons from Churchill and The Blitz

    01/03/2022

    Lessons from Churchill and The Blitz

    About This Episode In a previous podcast, “Wokeism and Teaching Kids,” we promised to follow up on our discussion of that subject. We discussed the looming problem, likely growing and wondered out loud where it’s headed. The question we try to answer in this podcast is: What are we going to do about it? And who is going to step out and hold themselves up to ridicule?  Latter-day Saints recognize that free agency is essential to salvation. And, to be truly free, we must be able to choose between clearly defined opposites. But, when the powers that be prevent people from learning the truth, our spiritual growth is stunted. So, the question is, what are you, as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, going to do about it? Will you simply recite the 12th Article of Faith and simply say “We believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers and magistrates, in obeying, honoring and sustaining the Law”? Is being compliant to government–even when it errs–the same as being obedient to God? Consider Christ standing before Pilate; the Savior informs the Roman governor that “to this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is of the truth hearth my voice.” In reply, the dumbfounded Pilate–like so many people in power today–asked, “what is truth?” Truth is, indeed, a rare commodity. Prophets before Christ, like Him, paid the price of telling the truth with their lives. Prophets and apostles after Christ met the same fate. But, sharing the truth, if the burden is broadly supported is rarely fatal today, but there is a cost. In this podcast, we put it into historical context, quoting Joseph Smith, John Adams and Winston Churchill. During the darkest days of the Battle of Britain, Churchill exemplified “The Art of Being Fearless and provides an icon to follow for Latter-day Saints who today share the burden of testifying of the truth, and in this case, helping preserve the U.S. Constitution.

    54min

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Martin Tanner and GM Jarrard first joined forces in 2018 on KLO AM1430 in 2018 producing a weekly three-hour program on matters of faith and freedom; It was a tricky tightrope to balance on, keeping one foot ahead of the other, carefully mixing topics about religion and politics, faith and freedom as the secular world grew ever bolder in their attacks on traditional values on which this country was founded. Today, it is clearer than ever as Christ said, "ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." That is what you can expect when you listen to a Latter Day Radio Podcast.

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