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FYI:For Your Information

At Christmas, grandparents visit and share stories about what the parents were like as children. The stories are funny and reveal things the kids wouldn’t learn just by watching their parents.
“At Christmas time our grandparents visit and tell us stories about what our parents were like when they were kids. It’s so funny! We find out things about our parents that we’d never know just from watching them.”
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👤 Parents 👤 Youth 👤 Other
Children Christmas Family Family History

Youth Is the Season

A story is shared about Brigham Young being asked whether he would educate his sons or daughters if forced to choose. He replied he would educate his daughters because they would become the mothers of his grandchildren.
It is important, therefore, that the girls in the Church have opportunity for and motivation to move forward in programs designed to improve their skills, to enhance their estimation of their own self-worth, and to broaden their knowledge of the gospel with consequent increase of faith. The generations are largely cast by the mothers who produce them. The story is told that Brigham Young was once asked what he would do if he had to choose between providing education for his sons or daughters. He replied that he would educate his daughters because they would become the mothers of his grandchildren.
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👤 Early Saints 👤 Other
Education Family Parenting Women in the Church Young Women

Plant Your Feet Firmly on the Covenant Path

After joining the Church, the author initially felt a lack of joy because he was divided between the world and the gospel. When he fully committed to the covenant path—especially as he prepared for missionary service—he began to experience the joy of the gospel.
I must admit that this joy and happiness did not come directly after joining the Church. In fact, I felt a lack of it at first, but when I look back on my life, I realise, as a new convert, my faith and testimony were weak. I had one foot in the world and the other foot in the gospel. Only when I had planted both feet firmly on the covenant path, did I start to experience the joy of the gospel. For me, this happened when I started to prepare for missionary service.
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👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Young Adults
Conversion Covenant Faith Happiness Missionary Work Testimony

Celebrating Gratitude

A child and their family create a Gratitude Tree using an activity from the Friend magazine. The dad gathers brown bags and constructs the trunk and branches, while the child and brother Mickey make the leaves. The child enjoys writing things they are thankful for on the leaves.
My family and I made the “Gratitude Tree” from the November 2013 Friend. My dad got brown bags for the trunk and the branches. My brother Mickey and I made the leaves while Dad made the trunk and branches. I liked writing down what I’m thankful for on the leaves.
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👤 Parents 👤 Children
Children Family Gratitude Parenting

Approaching the Throne of God with Confidence

While presiding over the Ukraine Kyiv Mission, the speaker asked a faithful sister missionary why she was so hard on herself. She replied, "So no one can beat me to it," revealing she was listening to discouraging inner voices. He then counseled not to be immobilized by weaknesses and to rely on joyful, daily repentance through the Atonement.
While presiding over the Ukraine Kyiv Mission, I once asked one of my most faithful sisters why she was always so hard on herself, why she was always beating herself up over the smallest things. Her answer was a classic example of someone listening to the wrong voice as she replied, “So no one can beat me to it.”

Brothers and sisters, my counsel to this sister missionary is my counsel to you: acknowledge and face your weaknesses, but don’t be immobilized by them, because some of them will be your companions until you depart this earth life. No matter what your current status, the very moment you voluntarily choose honest, joyful, daily repentance by striving to simply do and be your very best, the Savior’s Atonement envelops and follows you, as it were, wherever you go. Living in this manner, you can truly “always retain a remission of your sins” (Mosiah 4:12) every hour of every day, every second of every minute, and thus be fully clean and acceptable before God all the time.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Missionaries
Atonement of Jesus Christ Forgiveness Grace Missionary Work Repentance Sin

Elder Steven C. Barlow

While serving as mission leaders in Ecuador during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Elder and Sister Barlow faced rapid changes as missionaries returned home and others were reassigned. Unsure what each day would bring, they stayed flexible, prayed, and trusted in the Lord. They witnessed the Lord directing the work and felt everything ultimately worked out.
Elder and Sister Barlow served as mission leaders in Ecuador from 2017 to 2020, including at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. During that time, many missionaries returned home, while other missionaries were reassigned to the Barlows’ mission. Elder and Sister Barlow witnessed the hand of the Lord directing those missionary efforts.

“We put our trust in the Lord,” he recalled. “There were times when we didn’t know what was going to happen the next day. We remained flexible and ready. We were prayerful, and it all worked out.”

This experience reinforced lessons he had been taught earlier that the Lord is in charge and that we can always trust Him.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Missionaries
Adversity Faith Miracles Missionary Work Prayer

Ready for Sunbeams

Rachel hears Primary children singing and eagerly listens through the wall, learning a new song. At home she sings the words about the Savior, and her mother remarks that she will be ready for Sunbeams. Rachel feels excited to start Primary.
Rachel was playing with her friends in the nursery when she heard the children next door in Primary singing. She dropped her toy and ran to the wall to hear better.
Rachel clapped her hands. “I know that song,” she said. She started singing “I Am a Child of God.” Then another song started. She listened carefully to learn the words.
When Rachel got home, she started singing the new song. “I know He lives! I will follow faithfully. My heart I give to Him. I know that my Savior loves me!”
“How did you learn that song?” Mommy asked.
“I listened to the Primary,” Rachel said.
“Remember how you are going to the Sunbeam class in Primary soon?” Mommy asked.
Rachel nodded.
“You are going to be so ready!” Mommy said.
Rachel smiled. She was excited to go to Sunbeams.
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👤 Children 👤 Parents 👤 Friends 👤 Church Members (General)
Children Jesus Christ Music Teaching the Gospel Testimony

The Right Thing

Learning that a friend's family would have little for Christmas, the narrator and their family decided to help. They bought and wrapped gifts, left them anonymously on the family's doorstep, and ran away before being seen. The narrator felt good, knowing it was the right thing to do.
One year my friend’s family was going through a hard time and I knew they weren’t going to have much for Christmas. My family and I bought gifts for them. We wrapped the presents and put them in a big bag. We put the bag on their doorstep and ran away before anyone answered the door. I felt really good inside for doing that. I knew it was the right thing to do.
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👤 Parents 👤 Friends
Charity Christmas Friendship Kindness Service

Irony: The Crust on the Bread of Adversity

A physician trains diligently to heal others but becomes ill and cannot practice. Despite commendable plans, undeserved suffering prevents fulfilling the intended service. The situation highlights how frustrating conditions can keep people from their appointed rounds.
Irony may involve not only unexpected suffering but also undeserved suffering. We feel we deserved better, and yet we fared worse. We had other plans, even commendable plans. Did they not count? A physician, laboriously trained to help the sick, now, because of his own illness, cannot do so. For a period, a diligent prophet of the Lord was an “idle witness.” (Morm. 3:16.) Frustrating conditions keep more than a few of us from making our appointed rounds.
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👤 Other
Adversity Book of Mormon Disabilities Health Ministering

Unclouding My Vision

Sarah, born with a rare eye condition, lost most of the sight in her left eye and felt despair. Remembering Christ’s promise of peace, she chose to focus on Him and later received information from doctors leading to a possible sight-saving surgery. Despite no guarantees and continued decline, she found peace by trusting the Lord’s plan.
That clouded vision has been both figurative and literal in my life. I was born with an extremely rare eye condition. My vision has always been limited, but within the past year, I’ve lost almost all sight in my left eye. This condition is so rare that there is very little the doctors can do, and I’ve had to place every ounce of my faith in the Lord.
On a particularly hard day, I found myself falling into despair, worrying that my whole life might crumble right before my eyes—literally. And then I remembered a very timely and powerful scripture: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you” (John 14:27).
The Savior didn’t say, “My answers I give unto you on your timetable” or “Healing I give unto you in every case,” but He did promise us peace. He may not remove the figurative curtains of mortality that are sometimes placed over our eyes, but if we take His hand, He can teach us how to move forward with faith, trusting that the answers will come with time. Through Him, our burdens can be made light. President Russell M. Nelson reiterated this, saying, “The joy we feel has little to do with the circumstances of our lives and everything to do with the focus of our lives.”1 And I chose to focus on Him.
After many months of being afraid to take His hand, I finally did. My sight continued to decline, but I eventually received an answer from doctors about my vision and was able to receive a surgery that could possibly help me retain some of it. There was no guarantee that this procedure would help in the long run, but I went into it knowing that whatever the outcome, the Lord had a plan for me, and this trial could bring me closer to Him if I allowed it to. Peace doesn’t always come after you’ve been healed—sometimes it comes amid the storms of life—but as you rely on the Lord, you can be sure that it will.
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👤 Young Adults 👤 Jesus Christ 👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Other
Adversity Bible Disabilities Faith Health Hope Jesus Christ Patience Peace

Conference Messages from Your Friends

As a mission president in Tasmania, the speaker led missionaries up Mt. Wellington and visited a TV station where a technician explained broadcasting. That evening, he and his sons watched the broadcast, experiencing what had been described. He likens this to revelation, which is fully understood only through personal experience.
When I was a mission president in Australia, I once said to those of my missionaries in Tasmania: “Tomorrow we shall climb Mt. Wellington and hold our missionary meeting on the top. We shall there seek to commune with the Lord and partake of his Spirit.”

We made the climb, and while on top of the peak we visited a television broadcasting station. A bright young man explained to us in words I had never heard, and using principles I could not and do not understand, how the sounds and scenes of television were broadcast into the valley below.

That night, back in the city of Hobart, my two young sons and I sat before a television set that was tuned to the proper wave band, and we saw and heard and experienced what had been described to us in words.

Now I think this illustrates perfectly what is involved in the receipt of revelation and the seeing of visions. We can read about visions and revelations in the records of the past, we can study the inspired writings of people who had the fullness of the gospel in their day, but we cannot comprehend what is involved until we see and hear and experience for ourselves.
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👤 Church Leaders (Local) 👤 Missionaries 👤 Children 👤 Other
Holy Ghost Missionary Work Religion and Science Revelation Testimony

Tudo Bem in Brazil

Fisherman Honorato Rolim was baptized after meeting missionaries, but his wife Nilza feared joining due to warnings from friends. Believing she would feel the Spirit if she attended once, he saved for over three months to hire a taxi for the 3.2-kilometer trip to church. She felt at home and, with two sons, was baptized; their fellowshipping later led to at least 35 baptisms.
That kind of harvest is being enjoyed throughout Brazil. It extends even to the far reaches of the Amazon. On a map, the Amazon River appears to slice off the top of South America in its 6,400 kilometer course from the Andes Mountains in the west to the Atlantic Ocean in the east. This great river, 145 kilometers wide at its mouth, is deep enough for ocean-going vessels to navigate upstream approximately 1,000 kilometers.
One of the many who rely on the river for a livelihood is Brother Honorato Bruce Rolim, a member of the Itaporanga Branch in the small Amazonian town of Itacoatiara. A fisherman, Brother Rolim was himself gathered into the gospel net when he invited the full-time missionaries into his home and then accepted the baptismal challenge. His wife, Nilza, a member of another church, was fearful of taking such a step.
“My friends warned me against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” she says. “They told me that if my husband joined the Church he would go to hell, and if I followed him, I would go there, too.”
But Brother Rolim had a strong testimony that the Church was true, and he wanted Nilza and their oldest boys to be baptized. So he made a plan. Itacoatiara is a town of relatively few motorized vehicles. Horse-drawn carts are fairly common, a bus circles the outskirts of the town, and bicycles are pedaled over bumpy or unfinished roads. But most people walk. It is a 3.2 kilometer walk to church from the Rolims’ home.
“I was sure my wife would never make the effort to go to church if she had to walk there for the first time,” he says. “But I felt that if I could get her to church just once, she would feel the Spirit. My plan was to hire a taxi to take her for that first visit.” It took more than three months to save the (U.S.) $7.00 taxi fare.
Nilza was impressed by her husband’s thoughtfulness. “Once I got to church, I felt at home,” she remembers. “I felt comfortable with the members. I learned more about the gospel that one morning than I had ever learned in all the time I had attended my own church.” Soon, she and two sons, Helio, 14, and Euciney, 8, were baptized. The third son, Honorato, was baptized when he came of age.
Like many Brazilian Saints, the Rolims gladly share their testimony of the gospel by inviting friends into their home to meet the missionaries. Their fellowshipping efforts have resulted in at least 35 baptisms.
“Brother and Sister Rolim are typical of the Brazilian Saints,” says Elder Matthew Connelly, a returned missionary who served in Itacoatiara. “They are eager to share the gospel. For example, a member family invited my companion and me to their home to meet with a few nonmember friends. We expected maybe two or three people, but the family had more than 20 people there for us to talk to.”
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Missionaries 👤 Friends 👤 Church Members (General)
Baptism Conversion Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Family Missionary Work Sacrifice Testimony

Missionary Christmas

A missionary in Japan endures a cold, difficult Christmas day marked by a broken heater, sparse meals, a rough bicycle ride, an awkward Japanese talk in sacrament meeting, and even a minor crash with a flower cart. That evening, he and his companion teach the Nagata family about Christ, feel a powerful Spirit, and invite Mr. Nagata to offer his first prayer. The experience transforms the missionary’s feelings of frustration into gratitude and peace. He ends the day recognizing the true joy and purpose of his mission.
I awoke to the screech of the alarm clock, which seemed designed to double as an air raid siren in the event of a bombing. The man who had invented this clock must have been an electronic mastermind. He had somehow combined the gentle lowing of a disgruntled water buffalo with the cheerful melody of a less-than-well-oiled disc brake and five or ten of the world’s other most annoying sounds. My companion, whose hearing range automatically excludes the top 10,000 kilocycles before 7:00 A.M., had not stirred, so I staggered over to the still frantic clock. Then I realized that it was Christmas morning! All over the world, children would be awakening early and scurrying excitedly to the Christmas tree to find the gifts left by the traditional visitor. I silenced the clock and looked around. This was definitely not like the Christmas of childhood memory.
I was in a small apartment, nearly 7,000 miles from home in a land where words like thermostat and central heating described facilities available mostly to the well-to-do. I dove back into my bed (a mat on the floor) as the icy bite reminded me that my pajamas were not constructed for warmth. There is something unsettling about seeing your breath when you are indoors. It does not conjure up the same feeling that one receives while looking at a cheery Christmas postcard depicting rosy-cheeked children with clouded breath, gleefully frolicking around a newly built snowman. No, this was quite a different feeling.
I reached for the heater, trying to keep as much of the surface area of my skin from contacting the frigid air as possible. To my dismay, the heater would not light. Further inspection revealed the worst—no more gas! In our excitement and busy schedule during the holiday season, we had forgotten to have the tank refilled. Morning study would be held shivering under a blanket. My sometimes overactive imagination recalled a book I had once read on the Donner party, a group of early pioneers who had become trapped in the Sierra Nevada mountains during the winter, eventually freezing to death. What a wonderful Christmas this would be!
After a freezing morning study period, during which my toes and fingers threatened permanent inactivity, we sat down to a Christmas feast of mugi (a Japanese wheat cereal) and mizo (a soup made of bean curd). I tried to imagine myself eating roast turkey and drinking eggnog, but the consistency was simply not there. I tried to console myself with the thought that we were eating more healthy foods than Americans. No fat-ridden meats and calorie-strewn desserts for us! When I found that we were out of cinnamon and butter and would have to eat the mugi plain, however, all attempts at rationalization died. The Sugar Plum Fairy would be replaced by the Pickled Radish Ogre this year. What a wonderful Christmas this would be!
At 10:30 A.M. sharp, as families celebrating the day were just finishing the unwrapping of gifts, we bundled up and set out for church. Since the church was some distance, we rode our bicycles. The “Green Dragon” bicycle, as it is nicknamed by the missionaries, is built like an army tank, for durability rather than looks or speed. Like its military counterpart, it comes in a lovely shade of camouflage green. Although the army’s tank is said to weigh a few more pounds, the bicycle makes up for this by its ability to reach excessive speeds, sometimes 15 or 20 miles per hour. Both are able to withstand mortar fire for prolonged periods of time. Finally, it is fitted with a unique, slow-acting brake system that avoids sudden stops by bringing the vehicle to a standstill only after 50 yards of desperate braking, at the same time emitting a sound which is guaranteed to alert all other motorists within a two-mile radius. This would be as close as we would come to a one-horse open sleigh.
The meetinghouse is the top two stories of a small three-story building near the Kumamoto train station. We were having a special Christmas sacrament meeting. I was to be the program’s principal speaker. I have learned just enough Japanese to begin a very impressive sounding sentence while lacking the skills to finish it. Japanese is interesting in that you must think backwards to translate. If then you become stuck in midsentence and still think in English, being somewhat new to the language, you must look ahead in the sentence, think forward what you desire to say, and then translate backward and finally say it. (I won’t attempt to even broach the subject of pronunciation.)
I think my planned speech on “the meaning of Christmas” came out as a third-person account on the wise men’s camels. The members, however, were kind as always and smiled even at the more blatant grammatical errors, although I saw one or two of the sisters wince. I knew it had gone badly afterwards when one of the brothers told me that the talk was “good.” In Japan, everything is on an elevated level. If they don’t say it was “terribly good” or “amazingly skillful,” then it was really bad. “Terribly” or “amazingly good” mean just plain good. If in fact it really was excellent, then the complimentary phrases will be repeated 10 or 15 times. My talk, therefore, being only “good,” was not good at all. It’s all a little confusing.
After church, we returned to the apartment for lunch. Again the usual Christmas feast gave way to tuna fish sandwiches and soup. No figgy pudding.
Afternoon dendo (proselyting) was without success, unless you count success as making a large dog very happy by allowing him to take two missionaries by surprise and chase them unceremoniously out of his yard. Things turned from bad to worse when I was attacked by the flower cart. Really, it happened. I was riding along minding my own business when out of thin air an old woman pulling a flower cart appeared in my path. To this day I believe nothing outside of a formula racer could have appeared that quickly from nowhere. But from the looks of the cart, it had been a few years since the last Grand Prix. I tried to swerve and brake but clipped the side of it, sending me sprawling on the roadside, Swedish knit and all. The Japanese, due to their attention-shunning nature, try to ignore anything less than a major traffic fatality, so she kept right on going without a second look. I was tempted to cry “hit and run,” but she probably hadn’t done any running since before I was born. Besides, with my complete ignorance of the road rules here, I was probably somehow at fault. There wasn’t much to do but dust myself off, check for bodily damage (of which there was none), and thank the Lord that one of the few inexpensive things here in Japan was dry cleaning. With that I set off after my companion, who was losing a personal battle to not let the humor of the situation (from an observer’s standpoint) show on his face. At the time, I did not find it at all funny, however. What a great Christmas!
With afternoon dendo finished, we again returned to the apartment for dinner, the crowning event of Christmas Day. The curry and rice, however, did little to enhance the day.
We left the apartment to proceed directly to the evening’s only appointment, the Nagata family. I was grateful that the day was nearly over. It had become somewhat of a physical and mental marathon in which I had dropped out, mentally at least, at the 400-yard mark. The moment we emerged from the covering that roofs the apartment’s walkway, it began to rain, then snow. Real snow! Not enough to cover the ground, of course. Anyone living above the 38th parallel would scoff at it, yet there it was, the only bit we received all year. I had always thought that it would be more homelike to have a white Christmas, but at the moment I could only shake my head at the incredible timing that began the downpour as I left umbrella-less to face the elements. What a wonderful Christmas!
The Nagata’s invited us in with the customary Japanese formality, which we gratefully accepted partly due to an established sense of custom and partly because we would have accepted an offer to step into almost any shelter if it had been warm enough. The Nagatas were an elderly couple whose children had long since left home. They had allowed us to talk with them several weeks earlier and had shown interest during the subsequent introductory lesson, so we had made a December 25 appointment for lesson 1.
As we finished renewing introductions and cultural niceties and began to teach, it struck me that we were teaching about the birth and life of Christ on Christmas Day, a unique opportunity. I was glad that I knew the lesson well enough to be able to add some extra comments and feelings relating to the Christmas season. As the lesson progressed something special happened—not an event so much as a feeling, yet one so tangible that all within the room could feel it. I could see on the faces of the family the whisperings of comprehension as they heard for the first time the story of mankind’s greatest benefactor. We taught of the Atonement, the mighty struggle that took place within the Savior’s suffering body so our sins could be purged at the price of life’s blood; then the glorious renewal, the answer to Christ’s humble request, “Glorify thy Son, that thy Son may glorify thee” (John 17:1).
The Spirit was with us that night as we spoke. The Nagatas knew that we were not just two young men giving an historical account but two messengers testifying of their Master. We then instructed them in the simple steps of prayer. After offering a prayer of his own, my companion invited Mr. Nagata to do the same. As that humble little man, for the first time in his 60 years on earth, began to call upon his Eternal Father, I felt a happiness and a sense of purpose that transcended all other feelings. Gone was the cold, the loneliness of Christmas away from home. Banished were the thoughts of rebelliousness and complaint. The single purpose of a mission from God became very clear as a tangible blessing was manifested. Mr. Nagata had told us of the joy he had felt when some of his children had called from America, for Christmas. I could imagine that the Lord felt that sort of joy after a beloved child called from even greater time and distance.
As we rode home that night, the cold didn’t seem to bite quite so hard. Maybe I was too busy marveling at the many blessings the Lord had given me. The chance to live in an age when I could travel thousands of miles in a single day to share what I had been given. The love of family and friends. The joy of knowing my purpose and reason for living. The apartment beckoned as we rounded the final corner knowing that some hot chocolate and a blanket were moments away. A starlit Christmas night, now devoid of clouds, testified of an Eternal Creator with endless dominions who had sent his Son on a night like this. What a wonderful Christmas it had been!
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👤 Missionaries 👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Other
Adversity Atonement of Jesus Christ Christmas Conversion Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Faith Gratitude Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Missionary Work Prayer Sacrament Sacrament Meeting Teaching the Gospel Testimony

Agency or Inspiration

The speaker and his wife discussed their blessings, and she asked what his greatest blessing was. He immediately answered that it was being sealed to her in the Salt Lake Temple on October 13, 1937, and she replied that he had passed the test. He later explains his approach to choosing a spouse: he found the woman he wanted and then prayed for guidance, noting that a more perfect approach would have included counseling with the Lord for spiritual confirmation.
My wife and I were having a serious discussion recently in which we were counting our many blessings. We named a host of things that have come to us, because of the Church, because of our family, because of the glorious restoration of eternal truth that has taken place in this day; and then she climaxed the discussion by asking this question: “What’s the greatest blessing that has ever come into your life?”
Without a moment’s hesitation, I said, “The greatest blessing that has ever come to me was on the thirteenth day of October in 1937 at 11:20 A.M. when I was privileged to kneel in the Salt Lake Temple at the Lord’s altar and receive you as an eternal companion.”
She said, “Well, you passed that test.” I believe that the most important single thing that any Latter-day Saint ever does in this world is to marry the right person, in the right place, by the right authority: and that then—when they have been so sealed by the power and authority that Elijah the prophet restored—the most important remaining thing that any Latter-day Saint can ever do is so to live that the terms and conditions of the covenant thus made will be binding and efficacious now and forever. And so I’d like, if properly guided, to make some suggestions that apply in all fields of choice—in all fields, at least all major fields, of activity—but that apply particularly to the matter of eternal marriage, singling that out as the one thing paramount above all others.
How do you choose a wife? I’ve heard a lot of young people from Brigham Young University and elsewhere say, “I’ve got to get a feeling of inspiration. I’ve got to get some revelation. I’ve got to fast and pray and get the Lord to manifest to me whom I should marry.” Well, maybe it will be a little shock to you, but never in my life did I ever ask the Lord whom I ought to marry. It never occurred to me to ask him. I went out and found the girl I wanted; she suited me; I evaluated and weighed the proposition, and it just seemed a hundred percent to me as though this ought to be. Now, if I’d done things perfectly, I’d have done some counseling with the Lord, which I didn’t do; but all I did was pray to the Lord and ask for some guidance and direction in connection with the decision that I’d reached. A more perfect thing to have done would have been to counsel with him relative to the decision and get a spiritual confirmation that the conclusion, which I by my agency and faculties had arrived at, was the right one.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Other
Agency and Accountability Covenant Dating and Courtship Family Gratitude Marriage Prayer Revelation Sealing Temples

Before she turned 11, her siblings and friends had been to the temple but she had not. When she was finally old enough to perform baptisms, she felt great peace and was thrilled to experience it for herself.
The happiness I feel in seminary is a lot like the happiness I feel when I’m in the temple. Before I turned 11, my siblings and friends had all been to the temple but I hadn’t.
When I was finally old enough to go inside and do baptisms, I felt a great peace. Even though my family and friends had described to me the feeling of being in the temple, I was so excited that I was able to feel that for myself.
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👤 Youth 👤 Friends
Baptisms for the Dead Happiness Peace Temples

FYI:For Your Information

Hundreds of seminary students in California gather annually for a scripture bowl. A participant, Cecelia Hart, felt the Spirit strongly during her first competition. Teams memorize scriptures and take tests, with leaders emphasizing learning over competition, and participation grows each year.
Seminary students in the Sacramento North and Fair Oaks Regions of California get really excited for their seminary scripture bowl, held each year in the spring. Over 500 students have been known to attend.
“The Spirit was so strong that I knew I was where my Heavenly Father wanted me to be,” said Cecelia Hart, after her first year’s competition on her Winters Branch, Davis California Stake team.
Each four-person team is tested on over 200 scriptures that they’ve memorized throughout the year. They also take a prebowl test, and the scores from that are added to their final team scores. Leaders try to emphasize learning over competition. It seems to work. Every year, the number of participants grows.
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👤 Youth 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Education Holy Ghost Scriptures Teaching the Gospel Testimony

Matt and Mandy

A family is about to watch general conference and discusses sustaining Church leaders. They recall the fifth article of faith and talk about how to know a prophet is called of God—by praying and receiving confirmation from the Holy Ghost. Later, the sustaining vote is invited during the session.
The family is about to watch general conference.
This is the session where we’ll sustain Church leaders.
We talked about this when we learned the fifth article of faith!
“We believe that a man must be called of God, by prophecy.”
And our prophet is called of God!
And how can we know he’s a prophet?
I guess the same way we know the Church is true. Or that the Book of Mormon is true.
We pray about it and ask Heavenly Father.
And the Holy Ghost will teach us the truth!
A little later …
All in favor of sustaining …
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Church Members (General)
Book of Mormon Children Family Holy Ghost Prayer Priesthood Revelation Testimony

“Truth Will Prevail”

Ben loved performing in the pageant but learned its true purpose was to invite all to come unto Christ. After a performance, a young man told Ben he’d felt prompted to serve a mission, and they embraced in tears. Ben realized that helping others feel truth mattered more than the production itself.
For Ben H., 18, of North Lanarkshire, Scotland, the pageant was a great opportunity to share his faith and love of the restored gospel. Ben enjoyed his time performing, but the best lesson he learned was the importance of the gospel principles taught in the pageant. “The most important thing I learned was that the purpose of the production was to invite all to come unto Christ,” Ben said. While mingling with the audience at the end of a performance, Ben met a young man his age who had received a prompting during the pageant to serve a mission. The young man hugged Ben and thanked him for the performance. “He and I were both crying, and I was touched. I knew that was the reason I was there participating in the pageant.”
And even though he enjoyed his time on stage, Ben recognizes that the work doesn’t stop at the end of a performance or a pageant. “It doesn’t end when the production ends, because the production wasn’t the important thing. The important thing was that I was learning to be a missionary” and that others were learning about gospel truth.
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👤 Youth
Holy Ghost Missionary Work Teaching the Gospel Testimony Young Men

Emily Anne Jensen of Woodbridge, Virginia

Emily attended two Senate confirmation hearings for her father's presidential appointments. Later, she saw him sworn in as General Counsel of the United States Environmental Protection Agency, which became one of her favorite memories.
One of her favorite memories is of seeing her dad, Larry, sworn in as General Counsel of the United States Environmental Protection Agency. She also attended two of his confirmation hearings before a United States Senate committee when he was to receive presidential appointments.
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Other
Employment Family

The Legacy of Sister Jessie Evans Smith

As a young woman, Jessie was offered a chance to become a contralto with the Metropolitan Opera. She prayed and studied her patriarchal blessing, then chose to return to the Tabernacle Choir, where she would serve for over fifty years.
On decisions: “Decisions ought to be made in favor of our Heavenly Father. When I had an opportunity as a young woman to become a contralto with the Metropolitan Opera, I told them I’d have to pray about it. I also studied my patriarchal blessing, which promised me that my success would come in the service of the Lord. So I came home and rejoined the Tabernacle Choir.” She has the longest service record in the choir—over fifty years—making the phrase “He that hath clean hands and a pure heart” from “King of Glory” not only a sermon in song but a symbol of her life.
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Agency and Accountability Endure to the End Faith Music Obedience Patriarchal Blessings Prayer Sacrifice Service