Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Courageous Theodore M. Burton



My brothers, sisters, and friends, when the First Presidency invited me to speak at this conference, I asked myself: “What message do the people of Europe most need to hear?” These conference messages will be broadcast and this is my opportunity to speak to them. At the same time it appeared to me that their most basic need might well coincide with the fundamental need of people all over the earth.\The basic need in Europe is for the people to be taught true principles of love. I speak of love as meaning a lack of personal selfishness. True love is the exact opposite of the present philosophy of selfishness which seems to permeate the world. Selfish interests color people’s dealings with each other and even color person-to-person contact within the family.Monday 8/7,9pm, Hello Brandon, This talk was so awesome it needs to be diluted! Way too true and too strong to read all at once. After hearing a truth like this it takes your ears and mind to regain their equilibrium before you can comprehend and feel any further. @ I feel for you Brandon. I can't imagine being tucked away for a decade or so! I always feared that would b e my lot in life. I just knew I would be stuck in a prison camp or jail somewhere. It looks like it might not happen to me but it has happened to you. @ Hal Demke lost his cool in hpgroup yesterday. It was over something I said to help get the lesson going. It sure got him going. I shared how frustrated I felt having the Saviour (English spelling) expect us to live the 8 beatitudes and that I felt such reassurance last year to realize they were a blue print/ a road map to the celestial kingdom. He declared he disagreed and that they are the law! Etc.. I couldn't help but point out that those were the words of an apostle. “I don't care whose words they are. He was just watering it down. These are the demands of the Savior.” Boy, did he turn red. As I pondered the interaction last night I considered a come back of: “why is it he didn't say them in the tone you are expressing it?” @ You may remember Art Jones fell victim to anger with me also last week. @@ So what did I do next? I pulled away from the lesson. I tried to focus on writing in my journal. Yep, I was hurt, but it really wasn't me he was attacking, and, AND when people respond like that it is because of personal issues. So, water under the bridge. He has two CD's I gave him. One, of GC, I noted he return. He also believes in competition in heaven and that was a huge concept I had to reformat/ abandon/ paradigm shift with my Mark Clayton 5 years of therapy. I am so much happier now. @ Haynie's brought me an 8inch steak sandwich and potatoes and avocado and strawberries and watermelon to break my fast yesterday. He said eat it now while it is hot. I effused gratitude but I put it in the fridge. I ate it tonight and I have never tasted a sandwich like it. Quite a novel experience. Delicious. If I still had kids I would love to exchange a meal with them so my kids could experience some variety unknown to them. I had already eaten my homemade cold pizza pie and apples. I brought home 10 more apples from the temple apartments tree again today. They are just going wasted. The pruners really knew what they were doing when they formed that tree! Perfect head height apples all around you when you stand under it. Once again something I have never seen before. @ I have a brother on his death bed -Scott'77 and a sister who asks me to fast and pray for her because she is so ill-Gayelinn'72. Argh! I am so glad I can pray and leave it in HF's hands. Tyhf. @True love is based on personal unselfishness, but our modern world does not seem to understand this. Modern man has lost his capacity to love. Jesus warned us that one of the principal characteristics of the last days would be that love among the people would gradually die. Jesus said, “Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold” (JS—M 1:10; see also Matt. 24:12). My thesis is that the iniquity of which he spoke is based on personal selfishness. That is the reason why love among the people is dying.\Jesus warned that iniquities in the last days would become so great “that, if possible, they shall deceive the very elect, who are the elect according to the covenant” (JS—M 1:22; see also Matt. 24:24). I understand this to mean that eventually even the most faithful of the Lord’s covenant Saints will become contaminated and threatened by modern-day philosophies. I believe it is for this reason that unless these days are shortened none of us could long remain unaffected by such trends.\It may well be that the present attitude of personal selfishness is the cause of most of the unhappiness with life among the people of the world. It shows up even in our daily occupations. For instance, when a person is offered a job, he seldom asks what opportunities the job offers to be of service to others. His first question is “What is there in this job for me?” The salary offered is too low. Having to move to or live in a given city is not convenient. He does not want to travel. He does not want to be confined to a desk, or he does not want to work such long hours. Before he even begins to work he asks, “What retirement benefits will I receive?” He is not interested in challenges, but only in security.\May I first speak to young people about personal selfishness in courtship? Actually, what is the main purpose for dating? Isn’t it to get to know another person well enough to know what kind of a partner that person would be? Isn’t it to learn to know that other person’s character, interests, talents, and abilities? Or is dating merely an opportunity to satisfy one’s passions? Each person will have to answer that question for himself. However, a sure guide would be to follow the words of the Savior: “Again I say unto you, let every man esteem his brother as himself” (D&C 38:25).\@Tuesday 8/8,2:20 pm Good afternoon Brandon, I get to watch anything I want on Youtube at night. That is my playtime. I watched the career, 32 years, of a forensic autopsy investigator from New York or back east last night. It reminded me of my family, my parents. Have you ever been choked or knocked out? Somehow or other as a little kid I figured out how to put a choke hold on someone using one arm. Weird huh! See what watching those kinds of shows can stir up from your memories? When you are a kid and playing in a gully like the one we had you never know who you will run across. There was this extremely mean kid we saw down there a couple of times and he would leave his cave digging in the cliff and come and fight anyone who irritated him. All these years later I realize he was probably mentally ill. But as a little kid you can’t tell. In fact as an adult I look at all these young special service missionaries who don’t qualify to go out in the field and wonder what restricts them to Familysearch as missionaries. Elder D. Ricketts is part of the FM group. Facilities Management and Elder Wade said he worked with him yesterday scrubbing out a baptismal font. We have a bunch of special service missionaries at FS. And then if you add to that the special old folks who come in who eventually lose all their faculties. . . we have the strangest profile of people here! You won’t believe this next story. My 3rd school was PVMS. I taught there from ‘87-’99. I started teaching in ‘80, Niwot HS, Longmont CO, biology n chemistry. Brandon, I was not raised to be a teacher. I had none of the natural teacher skills. I just learned on my mission what a thrill it was to teach the gospel and wanted to come home n teach seminary like my 1st mission president. I had never experienced such satisfaction and excitement. I hated junior high. Ugly, awful, mean, disoriented place! And after 2 years of HS that was where I got stuck, because I didn’t coach. Coaching is the most important if you want to teach HS. I did not think I was up to college or university but to tell you the truth I think I would have fit there a million times better. College professors have to publish. I had no idea that I would enjoy publishing. That seemed way too scary and beyond my ability. Hugh Baird was my BYU hero and science teaching advisor my last 2 years at BYU. He became my next role model. I wrote him spread over a number of years after I started teaching school wishing to maintain a relationship and connection but he never responded. HF knew my atrocious background and emotional handicaps because of it. Watching forensic evidence last night reminded me of a time I should have been fired. Handicapped students are hard to work with at times, especially behaviorally handicapped. Johannes would misbehave regularly. After writing his initials on the board and giving him check marks I called home for him to make up time before or after school. Sort of like Jail. It was difficult to call parents. They didn’t know what was wrong with their crazy 8th grader and oftentimes couldn’t believe or accept they needed discipline. Doesn’t this sound like a fun part of teaching? Johannes’ mother brought him in early before school to do his half hour. He earned it in 10 minute increments. Here I was a teacher trying to maintain control in my classroom with this technique taught by the district. Assertive discipline. No problem for most kids, it made sense to them. Behaviors had consequences. No big deal. Sounds right. But Johannes was BD, behavior disability and defiant. After his mother brought him in he refused to sit in a desk or to wash tables or desks as was his assignment. He left. . . I chased him down and argued with him and tried to physically force him to go back to the classroom. He fought me back. A janitor heard the scuffle and I realized I had over extended my boundaries. I was the oldest child in my family and had always been able to dominate physically and be in control. I was dominated by dad, I could dominate them. Learned pattern. So when the principal came to me commenting to me that he couldn’t see the professed marks on Johannes neck, I was in la la land, and waiting for the guillotine to fall. It never did. No one gave him any credibility! Man did I dodge the bullet on that one. Thank you for trusting me Principal Dale Barlow, even though it was only by God’s grace that I deserved that trust. Tyhf. So have you figured out how to protect yourself? Everyone does somehow. To me it meant being out of control and I hated that. To some girls it means developing an ugly mouth, a mean vocabulary to repel others. To James Langston it meant becoming a black belt in karate and beating the crap out of his nemesis. James spent many of his hours in the counselor’s office in his tiny HHS as he was bussed from Cane beds, AZ and his dad was a bus driver. He was an abused younger brother and a neglected child. Argh, this world is full of us walking wounded, isn’t it.\@The necessity to practice unselfish love in courtship becomes imperative in marriage. Persons interested only in romance soon find the realisms of marriage too much to cope with. Yet in magazines and books emphasis is placed on romance and material pleasures. This is almost the exclusive appeal of advertising. It is demonstrated over and over again in moving pictures and on television. It is the exclusive appeal of pornographic literature. People become conditioned by this exposure and grow up expecting only personal gratification in marriage. Personal selfishness is the main reason for the present high divorce rate throughout the world.\This desire for personal gratification results in disharmony in marriage. Couples interested only in themselves don’t communicate. Lack of communication then becomes a major stumbling block in developing true love. Lack of communication coupled with the postponement of children is based on selfishness, as is the greater evil of abortion. We shudder as we read in Leviticus of the sacrifices of idol worshipers of that time who fed their children into the fiery maw of the iron god Molech. Is personal selfishness which results in abortion any less repulsive to God, as modern people through abortion offer the sacrifice of their children to their idol of selfish materialism?\In Europe families are limited to a point where couples are more or less ostracized by neighbors and friends if they have more than two children. Some European nations are even now beginning to decline in population as birth control and abortion become a way of life. Far too many wives are working in order that the couple may have its own home, a car, colored television, or extensive vacation trips. Children for such couples are an unwanted handicap and a needless expense.\ Wednesday 8/9, 5:33pm hello Brandon, Let’s see if writing you can wake me up. 1- After thinking about arbitrating Spanish I decided to go for it even though I will have to learn new skills. I am good at cursive as long as it is on a certificate. What if it were written freehand on lines? Can you imagine trying to find each bit of information hidden in a paragraph or two? At first I was boggled. I decided to try to index one so I could learn. It was miserable. I was lost. But bit by bit I figured pieces out and then I noticed I had done the dates all wrong. There was a clue I had ignored. Serendipity or Providence helped me figure out all the spots for everything. I did make 4 full page copies so I could number where to find everything and yippee, now I can do it with confidence. Part of my issue after hearing that Spanish arbitrating was hundreds of thousands behind was finding where? Where was a city that needed the help? When I heard it was Guatemala, my mission country I was pleased. I have never done freehand before. But I love riddles (that have an answer). I told an old missionary/ teacher friend yesterday that playing 20 questions with riddles is a blast. She agreed that puzzling the pieces together is satisfying for her as well. So Brandon, I did something new today! And variety is good. Now I can choose how I want to help, both in needed ways: II or Spanish arbitrating. I whined yesterday about not finding Spanish batches to do to Art Jones. He said he calls Elder Howard Chenney. I asked for his number. I hate to bother administration but if I am going to help I need to know where my help is needed. Sister Bolivia forwarded to me his last update and it was fascinating. Now I know all kinds of up to the month information! Exactly what I needed. Friends can be so helpful! I have forwarded that email to Terry Hawks and David L Morgan as well, valuable. @ Yesterday I went out when I couldn’t stay awake any longer n napped in the sun on a flower garden stone wall in the courtyard. I heard a voice asking if I was asleep. I answered half-way. Then he wanted to know if I had fainted or was worried about getting sunburned or heat stroke. I guess some of the people / patrons saw me and it was unique and worrisome. They sent a missionary out to check on me. By that time I was ready to go back to work. @ EricY updated me on my car. It looks like the head is really warped and is 3 thousands out of round/level. I told him, fine let’s just get a new one. He said that wouldn’t work because the bottom half of the block might be damaged and putting on a brand new one might be stupid. Fine, do what you think is best! @\Why bother to marry when children are neither wanted nor expected? Why burden oneself with marriage when couples expect to change partners when they tire of one another? What is the need for virtue when one’s goal is only self-satisfaction? If ever there was a need for the restoration of truth in a world where man is only interested in his own pleasure and self-gratification, it is now!\As I see how many people, not only in Europe but everywhere, quarrel and antagonize one another, I understand better why Jesus continually emphasized the need for love. The gospel of Jesus Christ is a gospel of love. A life of love is not an easy life to live, especially when one lives in a world where strife with neighbors and strife within one’s own family is so common. People have been hurt so often in the past that they are constantly on guard one against another. They have drawn a defensive circle around themselves so tightly it is difficult to penetrate. Yet they need to be taught love.\Strife in families leads to wife abuse and child abuse. This, too, comes through personal selfishness. It is so common in the world that we even find it creeping into the Church. As the Church grows rapidly we must teach love with increasing effectiveness. This is why our Church leaders continually caution home teachers to care for their families and “watch over the church always, and be with and strengthen them;“And see that there is no iniquity in the church, neither hardness with each other, neither lying, backbiting, nor evil speaking” (D&C 20:53–54).\Jesus, out of pure unselfish love, gave his life for our sakes. Had he been as selfish as people are nowadays, there would have been no atonement. We would have been cut off from the presence of God forever and left to be carnal, sensual, and devilish. But Jesus was not selfish. He prepared a way whereby every man and every woman may find personal happiness and great joy in life. That joy, however, must come in the Lord’s way through unselfish love.\I understand now why Jesus always spoke out so strongly against disputations and contention. Contention is of the devil and not of God. I see the need for modern prophets to be in communication with God. I see their strivings to lead God’s children toward truth and righteousness. Their message may be unpopular, but it is needed, for it is the only way to happiness. O people both within and without the Church, please realize that we are living in the last days. It is a day when love is waxing cold. People who will not listen to these warnings are preparing themselves for destruction. Jesus Christ will soon come in power and glory. When he comes only those will be spared who have learned to love God and one another with all their heart, might, mind, and strength.\APRIL 1979 | The Need for Love\The Need for Love\Theodore M. Burton\I testify that God lives, that Jesus is the risen Christ, and that God speaks to us today in the only way he can, through divinely called prophets who know the truth of these things. Please listen! In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.\@ bps, can you see why that one seemed to potent to swallow all at one sitting? Pretty courageous wasn't he? Speaking of courageous and maybe just plain stupid I posted the whole letter I sent you last time, magazine order and all. 7 days I sent Kjane the first page and a question. No response. 2 out of 3 ain't bad. She responded briefly to the first 2. I extracted a promise for 5 so I wouldn't feel guilty, and rather I would be able to feel entitled/ deserving, after all I got permission/ agreement. So I checked to see if the address was right and sent it again. The address was the same as she had responded to. I repasted the one question I wanted her to answer on the forward so she could find it more easily. @@ FedEX has left a notice on my door Monday, Tuesday so I wrote a note asking when I should be home to receive the package. Another notice today, Wednesday. I called: 800-463-3339 and spent too long trying to talk to an answering/ responding machine. I was so perturbed. By the time I finally got a human being to help me my patience was gone and I was short tempered/ abrupt. I laid down in bed to read and eat but I always pray first. As I prayed I realized that it was the machine that disturbed me not the guy who answered the phone in New Jersey. The guy found a solution eventually and I was pleased and cheered so I'm sure he knew I was satisfied. But I called back before praying further to apologize for being less than human and patient to begin with. I wanted to explain and say sorry. Christ would have been much more patient and I try to be Christlike at times. I got a different human and my patience was almost gone again after dodging around the stupid computer answering machine. But I explained and the guy finally seemed to understand the second or third time through. “No Problem” he said, “I am at a call center and that is the norm. We field lots of calls like that.” Poor guy! @@ I went back to read and as I prayed I felt better. I had done what I could. :) @ I did not walk the dog last night. Got home late and felt too tired. I really don't want to walk Molly tonight either but I am a “Man,” I am tough, I can force myself to do it. Good night Brandon.@ @@@He Means Me\Marion D. Hanks\My testimony today is one of gratitude.\At a family gathering a few nights ago, we discussed the fact that today is the anniversary of our mother’s birth.
I thought that night how much the generations owe each other, how much we learn from each other, how we should love and appreciate each other. One of mother’s grandsons said he had watched with wonderment as his tiny daughter paged through her storybook, moistening her first finger to turn the pages as she had seen her daddy do as he read his books. Actually, she was moistening the finger on her left hand and turning the pages with the finger on her right hand! But that only served to emphasize both the power of example and the fact that she, like all the rest of us, is yet learning.
As I observed two of our lovely grown daughters that night an incident from the past came to mind that forms the burden of my brief message today. I still think of it with a tendency to tears. Another little girl had joined our family and was of course much loved. Occasionally I had called her older sister “Princess,” but had thought about that, and, since the second young lady was equally deserving of royal treatment, had concluded that it would be well for her to share the title, if it were used at all.
So one day I called to her, “Come on, Princess. Let’s go to the store for mother.” She seemed not to hear. “Honey,” her mother said, “daddy is calling you.”
Oh,” she answered, with a quiet sadness that hurt my heart, “he doesn’t mean me.”
In memory I can still see the resignation on her innocent child face and hear it in her voice, when she thought that her father didn’t mean her.[I was already tearful, so a few more came.vj]
I am one who believes that God loves and will never cease to love all of his children, and that he will not cease to hope for us or reach for us or wait for us. In Isaiah it is written:“And therefore will the Lord wait, that he may be gracious unto you, and therefore will he be exalted, that he may have mercy upon you” (Isa. 30:18).
And yet over the earth, across the years, I have met some of God’s choicest children who find it very difficult to believe in their hearts that he really means them. They know that he is the source of comfort and pardon and peace and that they must seek him and open the door for him and accept his love, and yet even in their extremity they find it difficult to believe that his promised blessings are for them. Some have offended God and their own consciences and are earnestly repentant but they find the way back blocked by their unwillingness to forgive themselves or to believe that God will forgive them, or sometimes by a strange reluctance in some of us to really forgive, to really forget, and to really rejoice.
The plan of the Lord and his promises are clear in the teachings of the scriptures. The heart of that plan, as I understand it, is announced in verses of scripture which were so movingly sung by the choir this morning:“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.“For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.” (John 3:16–17.)
Christ came to save us. His plan was called, by a prophet who understood it very well, a “plan of redemption,” a “plan of mercy,” a “plan of happiness” (Alma 42:13, 15–16). The Lord taught the letter-bound Pharisees the parables of the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the prodigal son to impress the worth of all of God’s children, to emphasize, as he said, the “joy [that] shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth.” And to teach us the nature of a father who, when his son came to himself and started home, had compassion and ran to meet his boy. (Luke 15:3–32; italics added). In this and many others of his teachings, he manifested the intensity of his love and of his expectations of us in our treatment of each other and in our responsibility to him.
Reverently I remind you of the incident of the woman who, in the home of the Pharisee, Simon, washed the feet of the Lord with her tears and dried them with her hair, and anointed them with ointment (see Luke 7:37–39). The Savior taught the critical Simon the story of the creditor and the two debtors: “The one owed five hundred pence, and the other fifty.[It seems like I am a 500 pencer to me.vj]
And when they had nothing to pay, he frankly forgave them both. Tell me therefore, which of them will love him most?
Simon answered and said, I suppose that he, to whom he forgave most. And he said unto him, Thou hast rightly judged.” (Luke 7:41–43.)
Then, speaking of the woman, he said: “Her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much: but to whom little is forgiven, the same loveth little.
And he said unto her, Thy sins are forgiven.
“… Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace.” (Luke 7:47–48, 50.)
There is here, of course, no encouragement or condoning of sin. She had been converted by the Lord and sorely repented, and would obey his commandments and accept his forgiveness. And there would be rejoicing in heaven and should be on earth.
The story of Alma, the Book of Mormon prophet, was discussed yesterday and is well known. He taught these principles with courage and compassion perhaps never excelled. Himself the son of the great prophet, he and other youthful companions were guilty of serious sins. Through angelic intervention, they were turned to a better way; and Alma, repentant and restored, became a strong leader for the Lord. “Wickedness never was happiness”—he declared, and gratefully testified also of the “plan of mercy” that brings forgiveness to the truly penitent (Alma 42:10, 15). As the leader of his people he was uncompromising in defense of righteousness, and warm and compassionate with those who had repented and turned from unrighteousness. With his own children, including one son who had been guilty of serious moral error, he shared the anguish that follows transgression and the unspeakable joy that accompanies repentance and forgiveness:“Yea, I say unto you, my son, that there could be nothing so exquisite and so bitter as were my pains. Yea, and again I say unto you, my son, that on the other hand, there can be nothing so exquisite and sweet as was my joy.” (Alma 36:21.)
This man of great integrity and no pretense became the first chief judge of the people and high priest over the church. He who had cried out unto the Lord Jesus Christ for mercy, “in the most bitter pain and anguish of soul; … did find peace to [his] soul” (Alma 38:8) and thereafter taught the people with such power and love that multitudes of them turned to the Lord, obeyed his commandments, received that “mercy [which] claimeth the penitent” (Alma 42:23).
The message is consistent through scripture. The noble young prophet-leader Nephi wrote the sweet psalm of contrition and faith that is so encouraging and edifying and can be read in the fourth chapter of the second book of Nephi: “Notwithstanding the great goodness of the Lord, in showing me his great and marvelous works, my heart exclaimeth: O wretched man that I am! Yea, my heart sorroweth because of my flesh; my soul grieveth because of mine iniquities.
I am encompassed about, because of the temptations and the sins which do so easily beset me.
And when I desire to rejoice, my heart groaneth because of my sins; nevertheless, I know in whom I have trusted.” (2 Ne. 4:17–19.)
Nephi understood that true remorse is a gift from God, not a curse, but a blessing. True remorse involves sorrow and suffering; but the sorrow is purposeful, constructive, cleansing, the “godly sorrow” that “worketh repentance to salvation,” and not the “sorrow of the world” (2 Cor. 7:10).
Through the prophet Ezekiel, the Lord taught us that he has no “pleasure at all” in the suffering of his children through sin. His joy comes when the sinner “turneth away from all his transgressions” for such an one shall “save his soul” (Ezek. 18:23, 27–28).
The Apostle Paul was disappointed with certain behavior on the part of the Corinthian saints, and wrote them a letter chastising them. They repented; and when he learned of it, he wrote them again, saying that he was comforted in their comfort: “I rejoice, not that ye were made sorry, but that ye sorrowed to repentance” (2 Cor. 7:9).
Alma summed it all up in magnificent instruction given his wayward son Corianton. He concluded that powerful lesson with these significant words—they could be saving words for some:“And now, my son, I desire that ye should let these things trouble you no more, and only let your sins trouble you, with that trouble which shall bring you down unto repentance” (Alma 42:29).
Almighty God has promised to forgive, forget, and never mention the sins of which we have truly repented. But he has given us the gift of remorse to help us remember them constructively, thankfully, and humbly: “Do not endeavor to excuse yourself in the least point because of your sins, by denying the justice of God; but do you let the justice of God, and his mercy, and his long-suffering have full sway in your heart; and let it bring you down to the dust in humility” (Alma 42:30).
Corianton was sent to preach the word.
As leaders, we deal with the most sacred and sensitive creation of God—his children.
We need to consider this as we carry out our duty to keep the Church free from iniquity.
Holocausts,” it has been written, “are caused not only by atomic explosion. A holocaust occurs whenever a person is put to shame.” (Abraham Joshua Heschel.)
It is good to remember what Joseph Smith wrote a long time ago to the Saints scattered abroad:“Let everyone labor to prepare himself for the vineyard, sparing a little time to comfort the mourners; to bind up the broken-hearted; to reclaim the backslider; to bring back the wanderer; to re-invite into the kingdom such as have been cut off, by encouraging them to lay to while the day lasts, and work righteousness, and, with one heart and one mind, prepare to help redeem Zion, that goodly land of promise, where the willing and obedient shall be blessed. Souls are as precious in the sight of God as they ever were; and the Elders were never called to drive any down to hell, but to persuade and invite all men everywhere to repent, that they may become the heirs of salvation.” (History of the Church, 2:229.)

My child at first did not understand that my invitation was meant for her. She thought it was for someone else. “He didn’t mean me.” If any within the sound of my voice today need assurance that God’s call to repentance and his invitation to mercy and forgiveness and love is for them, I bear you that solemn witness, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.





The Power of Reading Holy Writ (Sunday Thoughts)


Trash
x

Jeronimo Hatch

Aug 6 (3 days ago)
to bcc: me
I am a big believer in the power of reading and studying holy writings.
There are many holy writings from many religions containing wonderful truths.
One of those is the Book of Mormon, a translation of God's dealings with his people in the ancient Middle East and in the Americas.
Whether or not you have a belief in the Book of Mormon, I found these nuggets cleaned from an October 2016 LDS conference talk "There is Power in the Book" by LeGrand R. Curtis Jr. enlightening and powerful.
Perhaps you will too.

The Book of Mormon
Power and Promises

LDS President Monson has encouraged: “Read the Book of Mormon. Ponder its teachings. Ask Heavenly Father if it is true.”

Here are 6 strong gifts that emanate from the Book of Mormon:
1. You will feel the Spirit of God in your lives
2. It will help you resist temptation
3. It will stand as a sure anchor
4. It will be a rock-solid foundation
5. You will be able to discern truth from error
6. You will feel the assurance of the Holy Spirit

Also, the spirit of that great book will permeate our homes and all who dwell therein (and I'll add - or visit) when we read it prayerfully and regularly.

Power
The great power of the Book of Mormon is its impact in bringing us closer to Jesus Christ: 
It is a strong witness of Him and His redeeming mission.
Through it we come to understand the majesty and power of His Atonement.
It teaches His doctrine clearly. 
We see and experience Him loving, blessing, and teaching those people and come to understand that He will do the same for us if we come to Him by living His gospel.

Promise
“I promise you…that if you will study the scriptures diligently, your power to avoid temptation and to receive direction of the Holy Ghost in all you do will be increased.”                     Current LDS President Monson
“I promise you…if we will daily sup from the Book of Mormon’s pages and abide by its precepts, God will pour out upon each child of Zion…a blessing hitherto unknown.”  Past LDS President Benson

These are powerful promises of which I intend to take advantage.

vern jensen phonev6@gmail.com

Aug 7 (2 days ago)
to gayelinnJeronimo
Look how professional!

Beautiful job and absolutely worthy concepts.

I do conference talks everyday. I do BoM class every Thursday.  This is my favorite hobby!

v

I have to share it with my sister whose favorite hobby is the same as mine. Gayelinn'72 born.

vern jensen phonev6@gmail.com

Aug 7 (2 days ago)
to Janice
This format was spectacular.  After responding to you a minute ago I decided to include you. v

Janice Van Dyke

Aug 8 (1 day ago)
to me
Nice. I think you should print a copy & I'll run off some extra copies this Thursday to hand out. Thanks for sharing.

No comments:

Post a Comment