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Editor’s Note
the world is our campus
JARED W . LUDLOW (jared_ludlow@byu.edu) IS THE PUBLICATIONS DIRECTOR OF THE BYU RELIGIOUS STUDIES CENTER .
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As I write this note at the end of the summer, it still feels too hot to be starting a new academic year. In fact, Utah set a record for the most days over 100 degrees, and it still may not be over. Despite the heat, many religion faculty and students took advantage of the summer to learn, travel, and excavate.
• Religion faculty members helped in archaeological excavations in
Israel at places like Huqoq, Tell es-Safi, and Tel Shimron, and in Jordan at a site highlighted in this magazine issue: ‘Ataruz.
These experiences—though hot, dirty, and labor intensive—gave students invaluable field experiences and glimpses into the ancient world. • The BYU Jerusalem Center reopened for the spring/summer semester for the first time since
COVID shut it down in March 2020. Several religion faculty members helped shepherd students through great learning experiences in the Holy
Land, Jordan, and Greece. More students and a new rotation of faculty will continue at the
Jerusalem Center in the fall. • Church history trips for faculty and students to significant
Restoration sites from New York to Nauvoo helped strengthen their testimonies of the amazing heaven-opening experiences that occurred there. Besides sharing some of these experiences, in this issue we also discuss the significant Latter-day Saint / Community of Christ dialogues that have been ongoing and have led to one of our recent publications, Restorations: Scholars in Dialogue from Community of Christ and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints. We also review the development of the Church History