Sunday, November 30, 2008

women

now more than ever, we need women to step up and be strong. we need women who declare the truth with strength, faith, and boldness. we need women to set an example of righteousness. we need women to be "anxiously engaged in a good cause." we need to live so that our lives bear witness that we love our Heavenly Father and the Savior Jesus Christ and that we will do what They have asked us to do. we need to rescue "all that is finest down deep inside of us" so that as daughters of God we can do our part to build the kingdom of God. we will help you do this. as joseph declared, "if you live up to your privileges, the angels cannot be restrained from being your associates."

Barbara Thompson
Second Counselor in the Relief Society General Presidency

prepare

the best preparation for tomorrow
is to do today's work
superbly well.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

irony

Outside the Church, most of their peers were against Proposition 8; inexperienced in marriage and child-rearing, they saw no harm in gay marriage.

So when our Latter-day Saint singles heeded the call of the church's leaders to take part in the defense of marriage, they, more than any other group of Saints, were swimming upstream.

They worked hard. They took risks. And many of them paid a price that is heavy indeed.

Many of them lost dear friends -- sometimes with bitter, angry recriminations from people they had once been close to.

It seems ironic that these young Mormons were open-minded enough to be friends with people whose lives were so different from their own; but their friends, in the name of tolerance, could not remain friends with Mormons who merely stood up for their faith.

If the situation had been reversed, if Prop. 8 had failed, these LDS young people would not have rejected their friends who voted to repudiate the meaning of marriage.

And if they had, would they not have been condemned as bigots, for being unable to tolerate someone else voting his conscience?

Orson Scott Card
November 13, 2008

Sunday, November 9, 2008

choose faith

several years ago ago a friend of mine had a young daughter die in a tragic accident. hopes and dreams were shattered. my friend felt umbearable sorrow. he began to question what he had been taught and what he had taught as a missionary. the mother of my friend wrote me a letter and asked if i would give him a blessing. as i laid my hands on his head, i felt to tell him something that i had not thought aobut in exactly the same way before. the impression that ame to me was:

faith is not only a feeling: it is a decision. he would need to choose faith.

my friend did not know everything but he knew enough. he chose the road of faith and obedience. he got on his knees. his spiritual balance returned.

it has been several years since that event. a short time ago i received a letter from his son who is now serving a mission. it was full of convictoin and testimony. as i read his beautiful letter, i saw how a father's choice of faith in a very difficult time had deeply blessed the next generation.

challenges, difficulties, questions, doubts--these are part of our mortality. but we are not alone. as disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, we have enormous spiritual reservoirs of light and truth available to us. fear and faith cannot coexist in our hearts at the same time. in our days of difficulty, we choose the road of faith. Jesus said, "be not afraid, only believe."

~ elder neil l. anderson
october 2008 general conference

this concept of making a conscious decision to choose faith touched me deeply. we are always told to have faith, but that isn't always easy. and then we try and pray for it and then feel guilty when it doesn't come. when maybe just telling ourselves that we are making that choice, like it or not, to have faith, would be easier. i truly believe in the power of our words and our thoughts, instead of just casually allowing things to happen to us and saying, "that's the way it's supposed to be." i believe that we create our lives.

spiritual storage

..we each have moments of spiritual power, moments of inspiration and revelatoin. we must sink them into the chambers of our souls. as we do, we prepare our spiritual home storage for moments of personal difficulty. Jesus said, "settle this in your hearts, that ye will do the things which i shall teach, and command you.

~ elder neil l. anderson
october 2008 general conference