The Sharon Institute Journal of Faith and Scholarship publishes disciplined academic essays and articles that explore how the light of the Restored Gospel can bear upon scholarship. While primarily focused on the social sciences and humanities, the journal welcomes faithful and rigorous work from all disciplines that brings Latter-day Saint thought into serious conversation with questions of human life, moral meaning, culture, family, society, and discipleship.
Current Issue
Vol. 1 (2026)

Embodied Moral Agency as Foundation: Human Sexuality as a Test Case
Richard N. Williams, Edwin E. Gantt, Madeline R. Christensen, and Jacob D. Tubbs
Pages 1-22
Williams, Gantt, Christensen, and Tubbs: Illuminating The Untenable Nature of the “Born That Way” Argument
David A. Nelson
Pages 23-31
The Power in Rescuing Agency: A Response to Williams, Gantt, Christensen, and Tubbs’ Agentic Sexuality
Jenet J. Erickson
Pages 32-35
Considerations on Williams, Gantt, Christensen, and Tubbs’ Arguments for Agentic Sexuality
Christian V. Sabey
Pages 36-37
What Agentic Sexuality Is and What It Is Not
Richard N. Williams, Edwin E. Gantt, Madeline R. Christensen, and Jacob D. Tubbs
Pages 38-44
Overcoming the Vice of Pornography: A Virtue Ethics Approach to Conceptualizing and Treating Compulsive Pornography Use for Latter-day Saint Therapists
Samuel Major, Edwin E. Gantt, and Madeline R. Christensen
Pages 45-66
The Failure of the Therapeutic: A Latter-day Saint Christian Alternative
Kylie M. Burdge, Edwin E. Gantt, and Aaron R. Burdge
Pages 67-97
Unmingling the Philosophies of Men and Scripture: Philosophical and Theological Reflection for Latter-day Saint Psychologists
Edwin E. Gantt, Samuel D. Major, Jarom Hickenlooper, and Elizabeth Johnson
Pages 98-132
