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FYI:For Your Information

Robert K. Milner tested whether leather basketball shoes outperform canvas shoes. Thirty young men completed electronically measured agility, speed, and vertical jump tests in both shoe types. Performance was identical, suggesting no advantage despite higher cost.
The Shoe War
It’s not the biggest controversy of our time, but to a basketball player, the present battle between the Converse-type canvas and rubber shoe and the new Adidas-type leather and rubber shoe is very important—and costly, simply because leather shoes cost about twice as much as canvas shoes.
Some advertisers claim one type of shoe enables players to play better. Robert K. Milner of the Portland (Oregon) 12th Ward thought he’d test the footwear to see if it increases or decreases the level of athletic performance. If there were any significant difference, the cost would not matter.
He put thirty young men through complicated agility, speed, and vertical jumping tests, electronically measured. (Shoe durability and comfort were not tested.) The results: Performances by players in both shoe types were exactly the same.
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👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Young Adults
Truth Young Men

“I Can’t Go Back to My Church”

As a boy loyal to his own church, he was invited by a friend to attend another church for the sake of salvation. He initially hid to avoid going but later decided to attend. Feeling the Spirit and learning about the Atonement, he chose to attend The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
When I was a young boy, I took church attendance seriously and always said in my heart that I will go to a church that bears Christ’s name, so I was happy to attend a church that had “Christ” in its name. One day at school, one of my friends came to me and said: “Rich Boy, I want to invite you to my church on Sunday.” I asked him why he wanted me to go to his church and he said: “I want you to gain salvation!” I was confused at the invitation to be saved because I attended church regularly and as far as I was concerned, we all worshipped one God.

On Sunday morning, my friend called to tell me to get ready for church because he was coming over to my house to pick me up. When I saw him approaching our compound, I quickly went to hide because I belonged to another church and didn’t know why I should visit my friend’s church.

After that, my friend would on occasion extend the invitation to come to his church again. One day, I decided that I would go with him to know the reason why he wanted me to accompany him. The first time I attended church with my friend, I felt the Spirit. I heard about the Atonement of Jesus Christ and I was so impressed. When we came back from church, I told him that I can’t go back to my church again. I wanted to attend The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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👤 Youth 👤 Friends
Atonement of Jesus Christ Conversion Friendship Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Missionary Work Testimony

She’s My Sister?

As a ninth grader struggling in gym class and feeling humiliated by a strict new teacher, the author felt resentment. While waiting for roll call, she suddenly realized that her teacher was her spiritual sister, a child of God. Choosing to change her attitude, she treated the teacher with respect and kindness, which improved their relationship and her experience in class. By semester’s end, she earned an A, but the greater outcome was a change of heart.
I was in the ninth grade. I had friends, and I was on the yearbook staff. Things were going my way. Everything except gym class. My problem wasn’t exactly the class—it was the teacher. She was new, just graduated from college. She was strict and never smiled. It wasn’t that I didn’t try during class; it was just that my athletic ability wasn’t the greatest.
I remember the day we practiced basketball layups. The gym teacher taught us how to place our feet and shoot the ball. I tried to follow her directions, but my ball just wouldn’t go into the basket. She growled at me.
Another day we played dodgeball. When the ball hit me squarely in the shin, she yelled at me. I felt humiliated and upset. I started to dread gym class because I was afraid I would be yelled at in front of everyone. I wanted to place the blame on her. But one day I had a realization that changed everything.
I was sitting in line waiting for roll call. I watched my teacher moving up and down the line, marking her clipboard as she checked our gym uniforms. Suddenly, a thought occurred to me: “She’s your sister!”
“My sister?” I thought. How could that be? I wouldn’t claim her for all the world. But the thought came again: “She’s your sister.” And then it occurred to me. She is my sister. We are spirit sisters. We have the same Heavenly Father. We both chose to follow the Savior in the premortal world. We are both here on earth to gain a body and learn and grow. This realization was startling. It was as if someone had slipped a pair of spiritual glasses over my eyes. I began to see my gym teacher with a whole new perspective. She is a child of God.
I started to smile at the thought. What if we had actually been friends in the premortal existence? What if she had tried to teach me basketball there and we had laughed together?
I watched her make her way down the line. Soon she was in front of me, marking her chart. I couldn’t help but smile at her in a genuine, friendly way. She seemed a little shocked at my new friendliness.
The rest of the class period I thought about what I had discovered. If she really were my sister, I would want her to be successful as a teacher. Maybe there were some things I could do to make her day go better. To begin with, I could change my attitude.
The next day as I entered the gymnasium and looked at my teacher, the old distasteful feeling started to come back. “Wait,” I thought. “That’s your sister over there. Love her.”
I confidently went and sat in line. Throughout the class I tried to listen respectfully and show real interest in what she was saying. No matter what my teacher did or said to me, I appreciated her. Soon I felt genuine friendship toward her.
She must have sensed my change of attitude because she actually smiled at me a few times. I knew she could tell that I was sincere in my efforts. The rest of the semester went smoothly, and by the end of the year I had even earned an A. But the miracle of the class was not my grade; it was my change of heart.
Now sometimes when I find myself feeling dislike toward someone, I stop and mentally slip on my spiritual glasses. I try to remember that we are all brothers and sisters. My corrected vision makes all the difference. I can reach out in love to people I would otherwise turn away from. After all, that’s what we are here to learn—how to love one another. And that’s much more important than an A in gym class.
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👤 Youth 👤 Other
Adversity Charity Forgiveness Friendship Judging Others Kindness Love Plan of Salvation Revelation Young Women

Q&A:Questions and Answers

A 17-year-old describes feeling overwhelmed by demands, leading to falling behind in piano practice and schoolwork. She decides to set priorities and accept that she cannot do everything all the time. This shift helps her focus on doing her best.
I often feel that I have too many demands placed on me also. My piano practicing falls behind and my schoolwork doesn’t get done because I feel overwhelmed. The Church is demanding, as are my friends and parents.
I have now realized I must set my priorities. I know that I can only do the best I can and that I cannot do everything all of the time.
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👤 Youth
Adversity Education Family Friendship Music

Hans Nieto of Guayaquil, Ecuador

A bishop recalls Hans’s first time bearing testimony in sacrament meeting. Listeners thought he was reading because he quoted scriptures perfectly, but realized he had memorized them. The bishop praises Hans and foresees strong leadership.
Bishop Eduardo E. Martillo of the Tarqui Ward, Guayaquil Ecuador Alborada Stake, remembers when Hans first bore his testimony in sacrament meeting. “We thought he was reading the scriptures because he quoted them perfectly. But then we realized he knew them from memory. Hans is a good boy. He’s going to be a strong leader in the Church in Ecuador.”
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👤 Children 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Bishop Children Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Sacrament Meeting Scriptures Testimony

I Will Strengthen My Family*

While one sister was sick and at the doctor's office, the narrator and other sisters made get-well posters and decorated her room. When she returned, she was happy to see what they had done. The act of service brightened her day.
One of my sisters got sick and had to go to the doctor’s office. While she was gone, my other sisters and I made get-well posters and decorated her room. She was happy when she came back and saw what we had done.
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👤 Children
Family Health Kindness Love Service

Feasting on Spiritual Things

A 13-year-old girl on a camping trip loses her foil dinner and, too embarrassed to admit it, goes hungry. She joins a group where her Big Sister, Rachel, is teaching gospel truths, and feels the Spirit so strongly that she forgets her physical hunger. The experience becomes a turning point, teaching her that feasting on the words of Christ truly fills the soul. She resolves to build a testimony like Rachel’s and share it with others.
“All right, girls, load them on the fire,” Brother Andersen called as he stepped away from the circle of smoldering coals.
When we had arrived at our destination, everyone had piled their backpacks around the fire and taken off to swim in the lake for a few hours. By the time I was done swimming and had changed back into my hiking clothes, the fire was hot and burned down to coals, ready for our lumpy foil-dinner packets.
One by one all my peers put their dinners into the coals. Each one was marked with the girl’s name, so we could identify our own. I, however, was left frantically searching my backpack for my foil dinner but couldn’t find it anywhere. I desperately racked my memory. I remembered double-checking that my foil packet was in my bag before we had left in the morning. Sister Robinson had been stern about us double-checking because she said we wouldn’t have anything to eat if we forgot. Maybe I had taken it out of my bag at the lunch spot and forgotten it along the trail.
All of the dinners were in the fire now and would take a little over half an hour to cook. I didn’t have the courage to tell my leaders that I had lost mine. I was worried and embarrassed that they would scold me and would have to give me theirs. Instead, I sat around and waited with the group. As everyone started eating, I took off looking like I was going to the bathroom, when really I just waited for a while until the group was mostly done eating.
I wandered back into the group after 15 minutes or so and found that my plan was working almost perfectly. No one had noticed that I had been gone or that I hadn’t eaten. The only problem was that I was hungry. I drank a lot of water, but it only left me with that full-of-water-and-nothing-else feeling. The only thing I could hope for was a few marshmallows—mere sugary puffs of air. But now I was surrounded by the aroma of hamburger patties baked with hearty chunks of potatoes, carrots, and onions. It was torture!
All I could think about was foil dinners and how much my stomach really wanted one. I looked around for something to distract me. All the girls were playing around, happy and filled with a good dinner, and getting ready to start roasting marshmallows. Off in the corner I saw Rachel, the Big Sister assigned to me, surrounded by a group of my friends. She was telling them something, and they were listening intently. I was shy to join in, but something pushed me towards the group anyway, and I sat down with them.
I was surprised to find that Rachel wasn’t telling them about a wonderful guy she knew or a favorite vacation. She was teaching them the gospel. They were taking turns asking her questions about scripture stories, gospel doctrine, or her personal testimony. I entered the circle as she was telling about Mary, the mother of Christ, and how brave and obedient she was. From the moment I sat down at the foot of my friend and Big Sister, I could feel the Spirit teaching me that what she was telling us was true. I instantly forgot about my stomach and that I hadn’t eaten. I even forgot to fill up on marshmallows as a last resort because we were all too engaged in discussion and searching the scriptures.
At 13, out in the wilderness with a group of girls my same age and an entirely empty stomach, I truly feasted on the words of Christ for the first time. I listened to the testimony of a girl who was only four years older than me, but what she taught was something that satisfied my hunger much more than any foil dinner. As we hiked home under the stars, I felt like I didn’t even need a flashlight because there was a light burning in my heart as my testimony had grown that night.
The Savior said, “Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled” (Matthew 5:6). I knew that it was an evening that I would never forget. More than anything I wanted to build my own testimony to be like Rachel’s so that I could share it with others and they could feel that wholeness that I had felt that night, having feasted on the words of Christ and been completely filled with the Spirit of God.
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👤 Youth 👤 Friends 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Holy Ghost Scriptures Teaching the Gospel Testimony Young Women

Abundantly Blessed

Frances suffered a severe fall and remained in a coma for 18 days as family members wept and waited. She suddenly awoke, exchanged expressions of love with her husband, and then worried about an unpaid tax installment. President Monson responded with a loving joke, highlighting affection and humor amid trials.
My sweet Frances had a terrible fall a few years ago. She went to the hospital. She lay in a coma for about 18 days. I sat by her side. She never moved a muscle. The children cried, the grandchildren cried, and I wept. Not a movement.

And then one day, she opened her eyes. I set a speed record in getting to her side. I gave her a kiss and a hug, and I said, “You’re back. I love you.” And she said, “I love you, too, Tom, but we’re in serious trouble.” I thought, What do you know about trouble, Frances? She said, “I forgot to mail in our fourth-quarter income tax payment.”

I said to her, “Frances, if you had said that before you extended a kiss to me and told me you love me, I might have left you here.”
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Parents 👤 Children
Adversity Family Grief Health Love Marriage

Trust in the Lord

At 17, the narrator lost her 27-year-old brother, John. Nine months earlier she had prayed for a theme scripture and adopted Proverbs 3:5, practicing trust in the Lord. After John's death, that preparation helped her avoid asking 'why,' rely on the Lord, and comfort her family. She felt peace through the doctrine of eternal families and found hope and guidance in scripture.
When I was 17, my oldest brother, John, passed away. He was only 27 and left behind a wife and young son. I could not have endured through this tragedy without the scriptures to lead and guide my life.
If you have ever had anyone close to you pass away, then you know the pain that strikes in every part of your being. It hurts for a long time. Even though we learn to be happy again and move on, no matter how much time passes, there’s still a pain.
When my brother passed away, I learned that it was OK to let myself hurt. It was OK to be sad. I didn’t need to be so strong all of the time. Sometimes there are challenges where we have to rely on others. And I learned I had to rely on the Lord.
About nine months before my brother passed away, I had prayed to my Heavenly Father to find a scripture I could use as a theme in my life that year. I was reading my scriptures and came across Proverbs 3:5: “Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.”
This scripture struck me with such force that I knew this was supposed to be my theme scripture for that year. For the next nine months, I tried to “trust in the Lord.” In every experience I went through, those words would echo in my mind.
About a week after John’s death, the words in Proverbs echoed in my mind again, and I realized why the Lord wanted me to practice trusting in Him. When my brother passed away, I could have asked my Heavenly Father, “Why? Why did this have to happen to us?” But that question never crossed my mind, because for nine months the Lord had been preparing me to trust in Him. Instead, I was ready to bring comfort to other family members around me who needed it. I felt the peace that comes from the knowledge that family is eternal, and I knew that I hadn’t seen John for the last time. Although at times I feel that pain that comes from losing someone you love, I know that my family can be together again after this life. This scripture in Proverbs brought me hope, peace, and guidance in a time of great need.
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👤 Youth 👤 Other
Death Faith Family Grief Hope Peace Prayer Scriptures

The Greatness of God

The author’s wife went into labor eight weeks early, and he prayed for their safety as they rushed to the hospital. Doctors warned of serious risks, but he felt peace and trusted God. At the same time, he was called as a bishop and juggled his new calling with caring for his family and visiting the hospital. Their son David was born preterm, responded well in the NICU, and is now healthy, strengthening the author’s faith.
On 29 November 2018, my dear wife, Ruth, went into labor with our fourth child. Although this was an exciting and joyous moment for us as a family, there was some major concern. The pregnancy was at 32 weeks and the expected delivery was to be late January 2019. This was approximately eight weeks early. The thought—and the now-evident reality—of getting our baby preterm was disturbing.
Before we rushed to the Aga Khan University Hospital in Nairobi that night, I said a silent prayer and beseeched the Lord so that both the mother and baby would be protected. As we arrived at the hospital, the doctors warned me of the possible dangerous outcomes of preterm delivery. They mentioned that the baby’s development could be affected due to incomplete time in the womb. In the worst-case scenario, loss of life happens, and mom and baby could be lost. Although this terrified me, I knew that God was in the details. I knew that the Lord would do His will upon my wife and baby. This assurance gave me a lot of peace. I had prayed many times for other pressing matters in the past, and I had seen the hand of the Lord. He had answered all my prayers from the days of my youth. I knew He would not forsake us even in this case however difficult it seemed.
Around this time of trial, my ward, Zimmerman, was split and I received a call to become the bishop of one of the two newly created wards. This was a very challenging moment for me, but I knew that God would provide a way to accomplish this immense task. I could juggle between my new calling, taking care of the three children at home—all of whom were still young—making regular visits to the hospital, and give honest labor to my employer.
From my past interactions with other bishops, it was evident that the calling of being a bishop was considered one of the most challenging callings in the church—feared and loved in equal measure. However, I confidently knew that whom the Lord calls He qualifies and that He would provide a way for me to be a successful bishop as well as fulfill all other responsibilities placed on my shoulders. As Nephi states: “And it came to pass that I, Nephi, said unto my father: I will go and do the things which the Lord hath commanded, for I know that the Lord giveth no commandments unto the children of men, save He shall prepare a way for them that they may accomplish the thing which He hath commandeth them” (1 Nephi 3:7).
Things went on well and our baby, David, was born weighing 1.5 kg (approximately 3.3 pounds). The doctors said he looked good for his age and that he was not in any extreme danger. He was placed in the neonatal intensive care unit and he responded very well to the care given by the doctors and nurses. Like many other times in the past, I saw the hand of the Lord and His choicest blessing in my wife’s and son’s lives. This experience helped me appreciate our great medical technology and the selfless acts of the hospital personnel. David is healthy and thriving now and has been a great addition to our family. He is a source of joy to us all. His siblings Payson, Precious, and Natasha love him dearly. He is a constant reminder of the greatness of God.
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👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Church Leaders (Local) 👤 Other
Adversity Bishop Children Employment Faith Family Gratitude Health Miracles Parenting Prayer

Children of Heavenly Parents

While speaking to a group of women in South Africa, the author began humming a hymn. The sisters immediately joined in singing, filling the room with music. Together they felt God's love.
Once I was speaking to a group of women in South Africa. I started humming the hymn “We Thank Thee, O God, for a Prophet.” After just a few notes, these sisters burst out singing. Their music filled my soul. We all felt God’s love.
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👤 Church Members (General)
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Holy Ghost Love Music Women in the Church

Reflections on Establishing the Gospel in Eastern Europe

Poland’s Marianna Glownia suffered severe losses and injuries during World War II. After joining the Church in 1958, she was pressured to renounce her faith but refused. When visited in 1981, she affirmed her steadfastness despite isolation. The narrative emphasizes that the Lord and His Church had not forgotten her.
Representative of the members who struggled through this difficult time is Poland’s Marianna Glownia. During World War II, she and her husband became involved in the underground fight against the Nazi occupation and were captured. Both her husband and child were killed. She lived, but the rigors of interrogation left her with broken wrists and ankles. Given no medical attention, the joints healed in that condition, leaving her crippled. She walked with difficulty and depended on neighbors for assistance.
After she joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1958, representatives of another church told her they would care for her the rest of her life if she renounced her membership. When I visited her in 1981, she looked at me and my traveling companion, Matthew Cziembronowicz, and said, “Brethren, I want you to know I have never renounced my faith.” Because of the difficult circumstances she faced, she had lost contact with the Church but not with the Lord.
And neither the Lord nor his Church had forgotten her and the others like her. Quietly, patiently, both were at work preparing the way for the time when the full resources of the Church could be brought back into Eastern Europe.
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👤 Church Members (General)
Adversity Conversion Courage Disabilities Endure to the End Faith Family Grief Religious Freedom Testimony War

Patriarchal Blessings

A patriarch blessed a woman, stating her progenitors had contributed to the Restoration. She objected, believing she was the first in her family to join the Church. Later, genealogical research showed her ancestors had sacrificed in the early Church, confirming the inspired statement.
I was visiting a patriarch a while ago. He told about a blessing he gave to a woman who came to him from one of the missions. Among other things he told her that her progenitors had made a great contribution to the bringing forth of the gospel in these latter days. And after the blessing was given she said, “I’m afraid you made a mistake this time. I am a convert to the Church; I am the first one of my family to join the Church.”
“Well,” the patriarch said, “I don’t know anything about it. All I know is that I felt prompted to say that to you.” And when he told me the story, she had just been in the genealogical library and had found that some of her relatives—her grandparents or her great-grandparents—had made great sacrifices in the early days of the Church. A part of the family had drifted up into the East and had been converted. She found that she was descended from some of the early pioneers. The patriarch did not know of it himself. He had spoken by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost.
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👤 Church Leaders (Local) 👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Pioneers
Conversion Family History Holy Ghost Patriarchal Blessings Revelation

FYI:For Your Information

Seventeen-year-old Trenton McNeil gained recognition for his pen and ink drawings from the Georgia Museum of Art and the University of Georgia. His work was selected as the jurors’ first choice out of 2,600 entries statewide. He is a senior at Joseph Walker High School.
Trenton McNeil, 17, of the East Cobb Second Ward, Marietta Georgia East Stake, has already made a name for himself with his pen and ink drawings. He has been recognized by the Georgia Museum of Art and the University of Georgia in Athens at the 11th Annual School Art Symposium Exhibition.
On top of that, his drawing was chosen out of 2,600 entries as the jurors’ first choice from students across the state of Georgia. Trenton is a senior at Joseph Walker High School.
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👤 Youth
Education Young Men

Adversity

A young father lost his job during an economic crisis but remained confident as he examined his life and chose obedience. He and his wife found strength in scripture and faithfulness, including paying tithing and meeting with their bishop. Despite uncertainty, they felt peace and trust that things would work out, with faith strengthened through adversity.
I spoke recently to a young father who has lost his job in the recent economic crisis. He knows that hundreds of thousands of people with exactly his skills are looking desperately for work to feed their families. His quiet confidence led me to ask him what he had done to become so confident that he would find a way to support his family. He said he had examined his life to be sure that he had done all he could to be worthy of the Lord’s help. It was clear that his need and his faith in Jesus Christ were leading him to be obedient to God’s commandments when it is hard to do. He said that he saw that opportunity as he and his wife were reading in Alma where the Lord had prepared a people to find the gospel through adversity.

That young man with whom I spoke recently was one who had done more than put away food and a little savings for the misfortune which living prophets had warned would come. He had begun to prepare his heart to be worthy of the Lord’s help which he knew he would in the near future need. When I asked his wife on the day he lost his job if she was worried, she said with cheerfulness in her voice, “No, we’ve just come from the bishop’s office. We are full-tithe payers.” Now, it is still too early to tell, but I felt assured as they seemed to be assured: “Things will work out.” Tragedy did not erode their faith; it tested it and strengthened it. And the feeling of peace the Lord has promised has already been delivered in the midst of the storm. Other miracles are sure to follow.
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👤 Parents 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Adversity Bishop Book of Mormon Commandments Emergency Preparedness Employment Faith Family Miracles Obedience Peace Self-Reliance Tithing

Are You a Saint?

While attending a business closing dinner in Atlanta, the narrator declined alcohol and was asked if he was a Latter-day Saint based on his observed habits. The host explained he had known only one Church member personally—David B. Haight—and shared Elder Haight’s significant influence on his life. The experience led the narrator to reflect on how it felt to be identified as a Saint and on the power of one exemplary life.
A number of years ago I was in Atlanta, Georgia, as an attorney representing a man who was buying a business. After several days of negotiations, we reached an agreement and signed the closing documents. That evening one of the sellers invited us to a dinner to celebrate the closing. When I arrived, he offered me an alcoholic drink, which I declined. He then said, “Are you a Saint?” I didn’t fully understand what he meant, and he repeated, “Are you a Latter-day Saint?” I responded, “Yes, I am,” and he said he had been observing my personal habits during our negotiations and had concluded that I was either LDS or had a stomach problem. We both chuckled. He then informed me that he had only known one member of the Church on a personal basis: David B. Haight. They were both executives in Chicago with a large retail chain following World War II. He told me of the significant influence Elder Haight had been in his life and that he held him in the highest regard.
As I flew back home to San Francisco, I thought about what had occurred, especially in two respects: I was surprised at how it felt to be asked if I was a Saint, and I was impressed with the positive influence one outstanding example—Elder Haight—had on this good man.
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👤 General Authorities (Modern) 👤 Church Members (General) 👤 Other
Apostle Friendship Missionary Work Word of Wisdom

Kirill Kiriluk and Tanya Holosho of Kiev, Ukraine

After church, Kirill’s mother hosted American Church members in their home, playing piano and singing Ukrainian songs while the adults ate bread and drank herbal tea. Missionaries translated, and the children played together. The mothers felt thrilled to welcome foreigners freely, something not allowed under Communism.
After church, Kirill’s mother welcomed their new American friends to their home. She played the piano and sang some Ukrainian songs. The adults ate breads, drank herbal tea, and chatted. Sister Wein from East Germany and Sister Norton translated for them. The two children ate bread and played.
Tanya’s and Kirill’s mothers were thrilled to be able to invite Americans into their homes and allow them to take photos without worrying about getting in trouble with the police. Under Communism, friendly visits with foreigners were not allowed.
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👤 Parents 👤 Missionaries 👤 Children 👤 Church Members (General)
Adversity Children Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Friendship Music Religious Freedom

A Time to Dance

Emo’onahe chose to share her Native American hoop dance at an FSY variety show after a friend encouraged her, despite feeling nervous during the loud performance. Through practice, she learned about herself and used hoop dancing as a form of personal storytelling. Once feeling different and uncomfortable, she found that hoop dancing celebrates individuality and helps her feel closer to God as she develops her talents and serves others.
Emo’onahe (eh-moh-oh-nah) decided to share her talent of hoop dancing, which is part of her Native American culture. “One of my friends who went to FSY before me told me that they had this talent show and that I should perform,” she says.

“I was a little bit nervous, so I tried not to focus on the crowd.” But it was kind of hard not to! “I could hear everyone going crazy,” she says. “They were so loud I could barely hear the music, so I was barely able to keep on beat!”

Emo’onahe has worked hard to get good at hoop dancing. She says, “There was definitely a learning curve.” But the more she practiced, the more she learned about herself.

Hoop dancing is a form of personal storytelling. “You start off with one hoop representing your beginning, and then you continue adding hoops to show more things about your life. In my performance, you could see a butterfly, an eagle, and a cowboy,” Emo’onahe says. “When I’m telling my story, I feel like I’m telling the story of those I’ve learned from and experiences I’ve had.”

Emo’onahe is from the Cheyenne and Arapahoe tribes of Oklahoma, and is also Fort Peck Sioux and Assiniboine. She says, “I used to feel so different from everyone else,” and sometimes “that made me uncomfortable.” But hoop dancing embraces individuality. Each dancer creates their own choreography, and “that’s what makes it so unique and personal to you,” she says.

Emo’onahe feels closer to God as she prays, reads the scriptures, and strives to follow Jesus Christ. She also feels closer to God as she strives to improve in her talents. “When I pick up my hoops and dance, I can feel joy.” She recommends: “Find the things you love and find good people who will help you so you can use your talents to strengthen yourself and others. Serving others can help you strengthen your testimony of Jesus Christ as well.”
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👤 Youth 👤 Friends
Courage Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Faith Prayer Racial and Cultural Prejudice Service Testimony Young Women

Lainey’s Easter

Lainey is excited for Easter Sunday and walks to church with her parents, noticing the beauty around her. At church she sees a picture of Jesus, and the bishop greets her with a message that Jesus loves her. Lainey smiles, feeling love for Jesus.
Lainey is excited. Today is Easter Sunday!
She walks to church with Mom and Dad.
She sees flowers and birds and bugs.
At church, she sees a picture of Jesus.
“Happy Easter,” the bishop says. “Jesus loves you!”
Lainey smiles. She loves Jesus too!
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👤 Jesus Christ 👤 Parents 👤 Children 👤 Church Leaders (Local)
Bishop Children Easter Family Jesus Christ

How We Follow Jesus Christ

The Church donated $500,000 to help bring electricity to the Diné (Navajo) community of Westwater, and new power lines began providing electricity on September 1, 2022. Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf represented the Church at an appreciation event and later encouraged Latter-day Saints to bring both literal and spiritual light to those in need.
The Church donated $500,000 to help provide electricity to the Diné (Navajo) community of Westwater in southeast Utah. September 1, 2022, marked the first day this project’s new power lines brought electricity.
Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles represented the Church in an appreciation event for this project. He then posted on Facebook about how Latter-day Saints can light their communities: “When we see a need and are able to help, we should follow Jesus Christ by loving God and our neighbor and making this world a better place. We should bring light—both literally and spiritually—to all of God’s children who are in need.”5
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