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Q&A:Questions and Answers

On turning 18, a young woman planned to get a tattoo and considered designs and placement. She then reflected on whether she would feel comfortable entering the temple with a tattoo and whether she wanted a permanent worldly mark. This reflection led her to decide against getting a tattoo, a choice she feels grateful for.
One of the most exciting events of turning 18 was being allowed to get a tattoo. I was deciding what I should get and where I should get one. Then a thought occurred to me, “Would I feel comfortable entering the temple with a tattoo on my body? Do I want a permanent mark in my skin reminding me of the standards of the world?” I am so grateful that I didn’t get one!
Haley Adams, 18Liberty, Missouri
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👤 Young Adults
Agency and Accountability Obedience Temples Temptation Young Women

Spanish Fencing Champion

At age fifteen, Susana Fernandez-Rebollos Herrero from Madrid became Spain's best female fencer in her age group after intense training and sacrifice. She discovered fencing at eleven, read a Liahona story about LDS athletes, and set a goal to become a champion with support from family and friends. Though too young for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, she prepared for the next Games.
At age fifteen, Susana Fernandez-Rebollos Herrero of Madrid, Spain, is a champion. Competing against sixty-two female participants in the national fencing championships, she won the title as the best female fencer in Spain in her age group.
Her victory was a result of long hours of training and sacrifices. After discovering the sport when she was eleven years old, she read a story in the Liahona about LDS athletes. Inspired by the article, she set a goal to become a champion in fencing and, with encouragement of her family and friends, has done just that, winning many medals and cups along the way.
Susana was too young to participate in the Olympic Games in Barcelona in 1992, but she is preparing for the next Olympics.
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👤 Youth 👤 Parents 👤 Friends
Adversity Family Sacrifice Young Women

Help Them Aim High

Seeking to help his daughters see their divine trust, Eyring organized making carved breadboards and delivering bread to widows, widowers, and families. The boards bore the phrase 'J’aime et J’espere'—'I love and I hope.' Through giving, the daughters helped others feel love and a bright hope through the Savior.
As a father I was blessed to see great futures in God’s kingdom for my daughters as well as my sons. When I prayerfully sought guidance, I was shown a way to help my daughters recognize the trust God had placed in them as servants who could build His kingdom.
When my daughters were young, I saw that we could help others feel the love of those beyond the veil, throughout the generations. I knew that love comes from service and inspires hope of life eternal.
So we carved breadboards on which we placed a loaf of homemade bread and went together to deliver our offering to widows, widowers, and families. The legend I carved on each of those breadboards read, “J’aime et J’espere,” French for “I love and I hope.” The evidence of their unique spiritual gifts appeared not just on the boards I carved but more clearly as we distributed them to those who needed, in the midst of pain or loss, reassurance that the love of the Savior and His Atonement could produce a perfect brightness of hope. This is life eternal for my daughters and for each of us.
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Church Members (General)
Atonement of Jesus Christ Charity Children Family Grief Hope Love Ministering Parenting Prayer Service Spiritual Gifts Women in the Church

I Chose Baptism

Two weeks after deciding to read the Book of Mormon, missionaries began teaching her. She prayed for divine help to make the right choice. By the end of the lessons, she knew what they taught was right.
Two weeks later missionaries began to teach me. I prayed that God would help me make the right decision so that my conscience would be at ease. By the end of the lessons, my eyes had been opened to something I knew to be right.
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👤 Missionaries 👤 Young Adults
Conversion Light of Christ Missionary Work Prayer Testimony

Out of the Best Books

Eight-year-old Annie is used to hearing cheers from family and friends. She faces a dilemma when others are too busy to cheer. The story asks how she will handle the change.
Hip, Hip, Hooray for Annie McRae! Eight-year-old Annie spends most of her days surrounded by cheers of “Hip, hip, hooray for Annie McRae!” from her family and friends. But what happens when others are too busy to cheer?Brad Wilcox, illustrated by Julie Olson4–8 years
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👤 Children 👤 Parents 👤 Friends
Children Family Friendship Kindness Service

The Worth of Souls

A young mother researched her great-grandfather, who had left church one Sunday with his family and never returned. She discovered he had over 1,000 descendants, yet she was the only active Church member among them. The speaker reflects on the lost spiritual influence and the potential thousands not reached because of that decision.
One of the talks that has had an everlasting impression on me is one given in a Saturday evening session of a stake conference years ago. The talk was given by a young mother. Here’s what she said: “I have been doing the genealogy of my great-grandfather. He and his large family of sons and daughters were members of the Church.
“My great-grandfather,” she said, “left church one Sunday with his family, and they never returned—no indication why.”
She then said, “In my research, I have found that my great-grandfather has over 1,000 descendants.”
And then she said, and this is the part I have not been able to forget, “Of those 1,000 descendants, I am the only one active in the Church today.”
As she said these words, I found myself thinking, “Is it only 1,000, or could it be more?”
The answer is apparent. The spiritual influence that family might have had on their neighbors and friends did not happen. None of his sons nor any of his daughters served as missionaries, and those they would have touched with their testimonies were not baptized, and those who were not baptized did not go on missions. Yes, there are probably many thousands who are not in the Church today, and not in this very meeting, because of that great-grandfather’s decision.
As I heard her talk, I found myself thinking, “What a tragedy! Perhaps if I had been there at that time, I could have said something to the father, to the family, to the priesthood leaders that might have helped to prevent such a calamity to their family and to so many in the future generations that would follow.”
Well, that opportunity of the past is lost. But we can now look to the present and to the future.
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👤 Parents 👤 Church Members (General)
Agency and Accountability Apostasy Baptism Conversion Family Family History Missionary Work Priesthood Testimony

What’s Up?

Edward L. Hart got the idea for the hymn “Our Savior’s Love” after watching shoppers take fabric outside to view its true color in sunlight. He realized that love should likewise be tested by comparing it to the Savior’s perfect love. Crawford Gates later set Hart’s words to music, and the hymn was published in 1977.
The author of “Our Savior’s Love” (Hymns, no. 113), Edward L. Hart, compares the Savior to the perfect light of the sun. The idea for the hymn came to him when he saw people in clothing or fabric stores taking material outside into the sunlight to test the color under the true source of light. He thought, likewise, the only true test of love is to compare it to the Savior’s love. Crawford Gates, who put Hart’s words to music, suggests reading and pondering the words of this hymn before you sing it. Verse one of the hymn is about the Savior, verse two is about the Holy Ghost, and verse three is about Heavenly Father. The hymn was first published in 1977 in the Ensign magazine.
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👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Other
Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Love Music

Line upon Line

Early Church leaders urged converts to gather, leading to organized emigration and community building in the West. As conditions changed by the late 1890s, leaders counseled Saints to remain in their homelands. The Church implemented this shift by establishing stronger local infrastructure and publicly reaffirmed the focus on building stakes of Zion across the world.
The understanding of the doctrine of the gathering illustrates the statement made by the Prophet Joseph Smith that what is right under one set of circumstances may not be right under another. In this case, no basic doctrinal principle was involved. Rather, it was the Lord giving special instructions to his Saints, according to the needs and circumstances of the times. Thus is continuous revelation.
The early revelations to Joseph Smith were filled with commands that the Saints should gather to the land of Zion, and particularly to the headquarters of the Church. The building of the kingdom, the First Presidency wrote in 1840, would require “the concentration of the Saints, to accomplish works of such magnitude and grandeur … and everyone who is zealous for the promoting of truth and righteousness is equally zealous for the gathering of the Saints.” (History of the Church, 4:185–86.)
Among other things, this led to the organization of a systematic immigration program, which was only intensified after Church headquarters were moved to Utah. “Emigrate as speedily as possible to this vicinity,” the Council of the Twelve advised the European Saints in 1847. They were told to bring everything and anything that would enhance the building of the new community of Saints in the West.
After this concept of the gathering had been taught so strongly for two generations or more it became almost automatic—especially to the Saints in Europe. But in the late 1890s certain circumstances were changing. The Church was more secure in its western setting. The kingdom had been strengthened in its new location, the days of pioneering were over, and the challenge now was to build up Zion—the “pure in heart”—throughout the world. This was clearly the larger mission of the Church from the beginning.
These and other considerations undoubtedly led Church leaders to consider prayerfully what should be done. In 1898 George Q. Cannon, a member of the First Presidency, announced that the Saints in various lands were being counseled to “remain quiet for a while; to not be anxious to leave their homes to gather to Zion.” (In Conference Report, Oct. 1898, p. 4.) By the following year it was concluded that it was no longer advisable for them to gather, even if they did so at their own expense.
The change in policy was implemented rapidly. The Church undertook to furnish more permanent headquarters in the missions and to build more chapels as a way of encouraging converts to remain in their homelands. “We do not advise you to emigrate,” President Joseph F. Smith told the Swedish Saints in 1910. “We would rather that you remain until you have been well established in the faith in the Gospel.”
And in 1958 three mission presidents in Europe issued a strongly worded editorial in Der Stern which epitomized the necessity to build Zion abroad:
“We have not discontinued to preach the Gathering of the House of Israel. We still call all people to come out of the spiritual Babylon, which means to come out of spiritual darkness. We are still gathering the children of light. We are still gathering scattered Israel. But we no longer urge them to emigrate to America. On the contrary, we tell the Saints exactly what the Lord required, namely to build up the stakes of Zion and to enlarge the boundaries of His kingdom …
“We believe that God directs His Church through the words of His prophets. The world conditions have undergone a complete change and we must adapt to the new situation.”
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Church Members (General)
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Joseph Smith Missionary Work Revelation

School Thy Feelings, O My Brother

An elderly man revealed at his brother’s funeral that after a quarrel they divided their one-room cabin with a chalk line. For 62 years neither crossed the line nor spoke to the other. The account highlights the tragic consequences of sustained anger.
Many years ago I read the following Associated Press dispatch which appeared in the newspaper: An elderly man disclosed at the funeral of his brother, with whom he had shared, from early manhood, a small, one-room cabin near Canisteo, New York, that following a quarrel, they had divided the room in half with a chalk line, and neither had crossed the line or spoken a word to the other since that day—62 years before. Just think of the consequence of that anger. What a tragedy!
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👤 Other
Agency and Accountability Family Forgiveness Grief

Choose the Light

The speaker and his wife biked the Hiawatha Trail through the Taft Tunnel with friends. His lights proved inadequate, and he felt anxious and disoriented in the darkness. After admitting his fear, he drew close to a friend with a stronger light and the group clustered together to proceed. Seeing a distant pinpoint of light, his confidence returned, and he eventually no longer needed others’ help as they rode toward the light and out into the morning.
Not long ago, my wife and I decided that we should more fully experience the beauty of an area close to our home in northwest Montana. We determined to take our bicycles to the Hiawatha Trail, a converted rail line that crosses the beautiful Rocky Mountains between Montana and Idaho. We anticipated a fun day with good friends, enjoying the natural beauty of the area.
We knew our ride along the magnificent 15-mile (24 km) trail would include trestles stretching over deep canyons and long tunnels penetrating rugged mountains. So we prepared ourselves with lights strapped to our helmets and bicycles.
Those who had gone before warned us that the tunnels were dark and that we needed really strong lights. As we gathered in front of the massive stone opening of the Taft Tunnel, a caretaker explained some of the dangers of the trail, including deep ditches along the edges, rough walls, and complete darkness. Impatiently, we pushed forward into the tunnel. After we had ridden only a few minutes, the predicted darkness engulfed us. The lights I brought proved inadequate, and the darkness soon overwhelmed them. Suddenly, I began to feel anxious, confused, and disoriented.
I was embarrassed to admit my anxieties to my friends and family. Although an experienced cyclist, I now felt as though I had never ridden a bicycle. I struggled to stay upright as my confusion increased. Finally, after I did express my discomfort to those around me, I was able to draw closer to the more powerful light of a friend. In fact, everyone in the group began to form a tight circle around him. By staying close to him and relying for a time on his light and the collective light of the group, we pushed deeper into the darkness of the tunnel.
After what seemed like hours, I saw a pinpoint of light. Almost immediately, I began to feel reassured that all would be well. I continued to press forward, relying on both the light of my friends and the growing pinpoint of light. My confidence gradually returned as the light grew in size and intensity. Long before reaching the end of the tunnel, I no longer needed the assistance of my friends. All anxiety disappeared as we pedaled quickly toward the light. I felt calm and reassured even before we rode into the morning full of warmth and splendor.
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👤 Friends 👤 Church Members (General)
Adversity Friendship Hope Mental Health

Songs of Peace

Alexander Neibaur, a Jewish convert to Christianity, recognized the Book of Mormon as the book shown to him in a dream. He read it, gained a testimony, and was baptized in 1838. He later entered the Salt Lake Valley in 1848 and became the pioneer dentist.
f. Alexander Neibaur, author of this hymn, was Jewish but had converted to Christianity as a young man. He recognized the Book of Mormon to be the book he had been shown in a dream. He read it and knew it to be true, and in 1838 he was baptized a member of the Church. He entered the Salt Lake Valley in 1848 and became the pioneer dentist there.
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👤 Early Saints 👤 Pioneers
Baptism Book of Mormon Conversion Employment Faith Testimony

Eliot L.

On a family trip to São Paulo, the narrator's father gave a bag of apples to a young man who asked for food. Later that day, he also gave their sandwiches to another man, saying the man needed them more. This example taught the narrator about service and charity.
I’ve also learned about service from my father. On a family trip to São Paulo, my father gave a bag of apples to a young man asking for food. Later that day, my father gave our sandwiches to another man. He said, “He needs these more.”
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👤 Parents 👤 Other
Charity Family Kindness Sacrifice Service

The Heart of a Prophet

As a 14-year-old, the speaker mourned President David O. McKay's death and struggled to adjust his prayers. He wondered if he could develop the same conviction for future prophets. Over time, he grew to love and sustain each succeeding prophet with both hand and heart.
This caused me to reflect on experiences I have had. The first prophet I remember is President David O. McKay. I was 14 years old when he passed away. I remember a sense of loss that accompanied his passing, the tears in my mother’s eyes, and the sorrow felt by our whole family. I remember how the words “Please bless President David O. McKay” fell out of my lips so naturally in my prayers that if I wasn’t mindful, even following his passing, I would find myself using those same words. I wondered if my heart and mind would transition to the same feeling and conviction for the prophets succeeding him. But almost like parents who love each of their children, I found a love for, connection with, and testimony of President Joseph Fielding Smith, who followed President McKay, and for each prophet thereafter: Harold B. Lee, Spencer W. Kimball, Ezra Taft Benson, Howard W. Hunter, Gordon B. Hinckley, Thomas S. Monson, and today President Russell M. Nelson. I fully sustained each prophet with uplifted hand—and uplifted heart.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Parents 👤 Youth 👤 Church Members (General)
Apostle Death Faith Grief Love Prayer Testimony

Friend to Friend

In 1951–52, missionaries taught in the small Frankfurt branch, and Elder Stringham emphasized that we are children of God and cited Romans 8:31. These teachings brought comfort amid the ruins of Frankfurt and taught him to be on the Lord’s side.
In 1951 and 1952, I attended the Frankfurt branch, which was not as big as the one in Zwickau. The Frankfurt meetinghouse was small, and we had classes in the basement. The missionaries taught us important gospel principles. One missionary, Elder Stringham, impressed me very much with his lessons on the Pearl of Great Price, especially where Moses is being taught that he is a Son of God. Elder Stringham also taught me the scripture that says, “If God be for us, who can be against us?” (Rom. 8:31). This gave me comfort and courage, because at that time, the future looked bleak in Germany. The city of Frankfurt was in ruins with bombed-out buildings. That teaching has stayed with me throughout my life. It taught me that I need to be on the Lord’s side. I cannot afford not to be on the Lord’s side.
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👤 Missionaries 👤 Youth 👤 Church Members (General)
Adversity Courage Faith Missionary Work Scriptures War

How to Have a Happy Family

A child, saddened by struggling families and influenced by a lawyer father’s cases, wants to help families be happier. They come up with a program idea and write to the President of the United States asking what is being done to help families. The next day, they read the Family Proclamation and feel happy to see prophets and apostles teaching the same goals. They conclude that living the gospel each day will make families happier.
I love my family and try hard to help them when I can. I feel sad when I see families or parents who are struggling. I want to help them learn how to be a better and happier family. My dad is a lawyer and sometimes he has cases about families who are not choosing the right and that makes them very unhappy.
My idea was to help make a program to teach mothers and fathers and children to love each other better. I even wrote a letter to the president of the United States to ask what is being done to help families. Then yesterday I was reading “The Family: A Proclamation to the World.” I felt so happy that President Hinckley and the Apostles also want families to have love and do things that are right. I think if families will live the gospel every day they will be a lot happier.
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Other
Apostle Children Family Happiness Love Parenting

The Returned Missionary

On his first night in the Mission Home in Salt Lake City, the speaker fell asleep from exhaustion. He woke to find all the elders in his dorm kneeling around his bed saying evening prayers. Embarrassed, he pretended to sleep, but the experience marked the beginning of two years of regular, meaningful prayer as a missionary.
One of the strongest recollections I have of being a missionary is how close I drew to the Lord through the practice of regular prayer. In my day the Mission Home was located on State Street in Salt Lake City. It was a large house that had been converted to a mission training center. It had large dormitory rooms with perhaps as many as 10 beds in a room. We checked in on Sunday night.
The week before I entered the mission field was an exciting time. There were a lot of parties and farewells. I am afraid that I was not properly rested and prepared for the training I was to receive at the Mission Home. As the evening of our first day in the Mission Home came to a close, I was weary. While waiting for the other missionaries to prepare themselves for bed, I stretched out on my bed and promptly fell asleep. My sleep, however, was interrupted by a feeling that I was surrounded. As the fog of sleep lifted, I heard the words of a prayer being said. I opened my eyes, and much to my surprise I found all the elders in my dormitory room kneeling around my bed, concluding the day with a prayer. I quickly closed my eyes and acted as if I was asleep. I was too embarrassed to get out of bed and join them. Even though my first experience with prayer as a missionary was an embarrassing one, it was the beginning of two wonderful years of frequently calling upon the Lord for guidance.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Missionaries
Faith Missionary Work Prayer Testimony

How Do I Honor My Father and Mother as a Young Adult?

Grace takes the initiative to call her parents and keep them updated. Through these conversations, she has learned more about her mother and has become a support to her. She values the friendship that has developed with her mom.
Tell them about your life. Your parents may not monitor your day-to-day activities anymore, but you can still keep them in the loop. For Grace, that means taking the initiative to call her parents. Grace said: “I have learned even more about my mom and have become a support to her instead of her supporting me all the time. I love knowing that I support her life with friendship after she has blessed my life with being an amazing mom.”
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👤 Young Adults 👤 Parents
Family Friendship Parenting Service

Studying the Work of Relief Society

As a young Relief Society sister, the speaker attended a monthly mother-education class. Despite having a capable mother, she learned practical homemaking, parenting skills, and ways to strengthen marriage from Relief Society teachers. These classes improved her ability to nurture her family and home.
When I was a young Relief Society sister, we had a mother-education class once a month. Though I had a wonderful and skilled mother, I still learned from my teachers in Relief Society how to be a better mother and how to improve my home. We learned homemaking principles and skills, we learned how to be better parents, and we learned how to strengthen our marriages.
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👤 Parents 👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Education Family Marriage Parenting Relief Society Women in the Church

The Gospel and the Good Life

As a young lawyer, the author attended two funerals of older men he had known—one he calls Rich and the other Faithful. Rich achieved notable career success but prioritized résumé virtues, and his somber funeral reflected limited focus on Christ and family devotion. Faithful had modest career outcomes but emphasized family and discipleship, and his funeral was joyful and centered on the Savior. The contrasting services profoundly shaped the author's resolve to put the Savior, family, and the Church first.
David Brooks, in an editorial titled “The Moral Bucket List,” developed the concept that there are “two sets of virtues, the résumé virtues and the eulogy virtues. The résumé virtues are the skills you bring to the marketplace. The eulogy virtues are the ones that are talked about at your funeral.”7 Brooks correctly concluded that the eulogy virtues are much more important. This hit home for me personally because I had an experience when I was in my mid-20s that had a profound impact on me. It involved the funerals of two good men that took place only a few days apart. The account is true, but I have changed the names and have purposely been vague about a few of the facts.

I was 25 years old, had graduated from Stanford Law School, and had just started employment with a law firm. I spent my workday world with highly educated people who had amassed significant material possessions. They were kind and on the whole gracious and attractive people.

The Church members I associated with were much more diverse. Most of them had little material wealth. They were wonderful people, and most had meaning in their lives. It was at this juncture that two older, retired men I had known for many years passed away. Their funerals were held only a few days apart, and I traveled to both funerals. I have decided to call one of the men Rich and the other man Faithful. Those two funerals are cemented in my mind because they clarified the significance of the choices all people have before them, especially the young. They also demonstrate the complexity of the distinction between the résumé virtues and the eulogy virtues.

Both Rich and Faithful served missions as young men. By all accounts, they were both dedicated missionaries. After they attended college, their lives began to diverge. Rich married a beautiful woman who over time became less active in the Church. Faithful married an equally beautiful woman who was completely active in the Church. More than any other factor, this decision framed the remaining decisions of their lives. In my experience, when couples remain true and faithful to the Savior and the eternal significance of the family, the eulogy virtues are almost always preserved.

I will now share more about Rich. He had wonderful people skills and cared a great deal about people. He began employment with a major U.S. corporation and ultimately became president of that company. He had a large income and lived in a large, beautiful home set on spacious grounds. That is why I have decided to call him Rich. It would be fair to say that his career choices were not just good or better but were the best.

His family and Church choices, however, were not so good. He was a good man and did not engage in personal choices that were in and of themselves evil, but his family choices and influence on his children focused almost exclusively on education and employment, essentially the résumé virtues that are so valued in the marketplace. His sons also embarked on excellent careers. They did not, however, remain active in the Church, and they married young women who were not members. I am not aware of all the facts about his sons, but in each case these marriages ended in divorce.

Rich and his wife also became less active. They were primarily involved in high-profile social and community activities. He always considered himself LDS and was proud of his mission, but he did not attend church. He would, from time to time, contribute to Church building projects and assist LDS members in their careers. Furthermore, he was an influence for honesty, integrity, and goodwill in all the positions he held.

His funeral was held at a nondenominational chapel at the cemetery. Many top executives and dignitaries attended the funeral, including the governor of the state where he lived. Except for his children, grandchildren, and me, everyone attending was over the age of 50. It was, on the whole, a somber funeral. Basic principles of the plan of happiness were not taught, and little was said of Jesus Christ. Rich’s life was based almost exclusively on résumé virtues.

Faithful’s employment decisions were far less successful. His initial effort at a small independent business was thwarted when the business burned and he lost everything. He subsequently created a small business but could barely make his required payments. He had a small but adequate home. He enjoyed his work and his interaction with people. His career was good and certainly satisfactory but not distinguished or what might be called best. It was not a résumé-virtues career.

His family and Church choices, on the other hand, were absolutely the best. He and his wife were completely active in the Church. He served as called, often as a teacher, attended the temple frequently, and was a faithful priesthood holder. He had wonderful relationships, especially with his large family and his many grandchildren. They were all well educated, but his main emphasis to them was on living a Christlike life. In his retirement, he and his wife served a mission together. Though he faced trials, including the death of a son in World War II, he achieved satisfaction and joy throughout his life because of the purpose and meaning provided by his family and the gospel of Jesus Christ.

His funeral in the ward meetinghouse was large and joyful. People of all ages attended, including large numbers of grandchildren and young people he had served. The plan of happiness was taught, and the Savior was at the center of the service. It was an exemplary Latter-day Saint funeral. The talks were about his character, kindness, concern for others, and faith in and love of the Lord Jesus Christ.

I have indicated that these two funerals came at a defining time for me. I had served a mission, and I loved the Church. I was just starting my career and was becoming impressed with those having material and occupational success. I realized that the choices I was making would define my happiness in this life and determine the legacy I would leave. I also realized the eternal significance of the choices that were before me. It was clear to me that choices have eternal significance. What was most important to me about the lives I just described is that I realized that the most significant choices can be made by everyone, regardless of their talents, abilities, opportunities, or economic circumstances. I realized that for me, my future children, and everyone I would have the opportunity to influence, putting the Savior, my family, and the Church first was essential. Doing so would result in the good life.
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👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Other
Agency and Accountability Apostasy Death Divorce Education Employment Faith Family Happiness Marriage Missionary Work Temples

We’ve Got Mail

Maegan read “A Vote for Myself” and realized that others also find it difficult to follow the Savior’s example. Motivated by this insight, she is trying harder to be like Him and finds she is happier whenever she follows His example.
Thank you for “A Vote for Myself” (Sept. ’99). This story helped me realize that I’m not the only one who thinks it’s hard to follow the Savior’s example. I am trying harder to be more like Him, and every time I follow His example I am a happier person.
Maegan O’TooleIdaho Falls, Idaho
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👤 Youth
Happiness Jesus Christ Obedience