Donβt be like the lazy bird that traded its feathers for worms.
Illustration by Greg Newbold
I remember the story of a bird that started to trade his feathers for worms. It was easy to get food that way, and the bird thought he had plenty of feathers. As he continued to trade his feathers, the bird enjoyed not having to get up early to hunt for worms anymore. He could sit in his nest all day and never have to move a muscle. Eventually, however, the bird got too used to this and realized he could no longer fly because he had lost his vital feathers.
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Be Strong, Be Healthy, Be Smart
A bird begins trading its feathers for worms so it can avoid the work of hunting. Over time it loses too many vital feathers and can no longer fly, showing the consequences of lazy habits.
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π€ Other
Agency and Accountability
Employment
Self-Reliance
Bonus Points
During a bus ride, Haileyβs teammates asked her questions about the Church. She happily explained temples, missionary work, and how following For the Strength of Youth brings blessings.
Hailey also assists those who are curious about the gospel. She remembers a bus ride when her teammates asked questions about the Church. She was thrilled to answer.
βI explained what a temple is and what we do there. I explained what a missionary is. I explained that following the standards in For Strength of Youth leads to blessings.β
βI explained what a temple is and what we do there. I explained what a missionary is. I explained that following the standards in For Strength of Youth leads to blessings.β
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π€ Youth
π€ Friends
Commandments
Missionary Work
Teaching the Gospel
Temples
Testimony
The Golden Chain
During the Depression era, biology teacher Dr. D. Elden Beck was demonstrating how to milk a rattlesnake when it bit his thumb. With no serum available locally, hours passed as his arm swelled until serum arrived late at night from Cedar City, delivered by an old bootlegger. Dr. McGregor administered the full vial, and Dr. Beck survived; the next year, his daughterβlater the author's motherβwas born.
Dr. D. Elden Beck stood confidently before his biology students. In one hand he held a live rattlesnake.
He felt fortunate in having a jobβa good teaching positionβat a time when the effects of a devastating depression were being felt across the country. He was aware that once again the people of the small southern Utah communities were responding as they usually did during hard times, with determination and stubborn endurance.
Dixie Junior College, the pride of St. George, kept her doors open even though some students, to stay in school, paid their tuition with farm produce.
Dr. Beck was not a native of southern Utah, and neither he nor his family had been involved with the seemingly endless task of subduing the arid desert. Perhaps that was why he was able to see the country not merely as a place to overcome and endure but a place of breathtaking beauty. Like the natural coral, turquoise, and silver of a precious piece of Indian jewelry, the vermilion sands and blue sky dazzled him. A part of the world that had resisted discovery now seemed to him an endless frontier for study, an endless source of wonder.
The snake squirmed and struggled. Dr. Beck prepared to demonstrate to his students how a rattler is βmilkedβ of its lethal venom, an act he had performed many times before. As he attempted to move the snake from one hand to the other, it suddenly lurched and slashed its fangs across his thumb. He reeled back in pain and instantly released the snake. It fell to the floor with a dull thud and lay still. The class was stunned. The rattlesnake slowly revived, and by gracefully throwing loops of its body forward, it began to move across the classroom floor. With shouts and screams, students clamored upon desks and chairs. To everyoneβs amazement, it was Dr. Beck who tried to calm them. He gently captured the snake and stashed it away in the classroom snake pit. Then he firmly dismissed the students from the room. Supporting his swelling hand, he walked the two blocks from the college to the St. George Hospital only to find no rattlesnake serum was available.
Dr. McGregor eventually located serum in Cedar City, some 50 miles away, and it was agreed that someone would try to deliver it by car as soon as possible.
Hours passed, and the pain and swelling not only increased but began slowly moving up his arm closer to the elbow. Florence, Eldenβs wife, kept a nervous vigil.
Late that night an old bootlegger arrived with the serum. Then Dr. McGregor faced the dilemma of how much of the serum to inject, for the vial was very large. After much concern, the doctor inserted the needle in Elden Beckβs arm and administered it all.
My grandfather, Dr. D. Elden Beck, lived!
The following year Dr. McGregor delivered, in the St. George hospital, the Beckβs baby daughter, Janet Ruth, my mother.
He felt fortunate in having a jobβa good teaching positionβat a time when the effects of a devastating depression were being felt across the country. He was aware that once again the people of the small southern Utah communities were responding as they usually did during hard times, with determination and stubborn endurance.
Dixie Junior College, the pride of St. George, kept her doors open even though some students, to stay in school, paid their tuition with farm produce.
Dr. Beck was not a native of southern Utah, and neither he nor his family had been involved with the seemingly endless task of subduing the arid desert. Perhaps that was why he was able to see the country not merely as a place to overcome and endure but a place of breathtaking beauty. Like the natural coral, turquoise, and silver of a precious piece of Indian jewelry, the vermilion sands and blue sky dazzled him. A part of the world that had resisted discovery now seemed to him an endless frontier for study, an endless source of wonder.
The snake squirmed and struggled. Dr. Beck prepared to demonstrate to his students how a rattler is βmilkedβ of its lethal venom, an act he had performed many times before. As he attempted to move the snake from one hand to the other, it suddenly lurched and slashed its fangs across his thumb. He reeled back in pain and instantly released the snake. It fell to the floor with a dull thud and lay still. The class was stunned. The rattlesnake slowly revived, and by gracefully throwing loops of its body forward, it began to move across the classroom floor. With shouts and screams, students clamored upon desks and chairs. To everyoneβs amazement, it was Dr. Beck who tried to calm them. He gently captured the snake and stashed it away in the classroom snake pit. Then he firmly dismissed the students from the room. Supporting his swelling hand, he walked the two blocks from the college to the St. George Hospital only to find no rattlesnake serum was available.
Dr. McGregor eventually located serum in Cedar City, some 50 miles away, and it was agreed that someone would try to deliver it by car as soon as possible.
Hours passed, and the pain and swelling not only increased but began slowly moving up his arm closer to the elbow. Florence, Eldenβs wife, kept a nervous vigil.
Late that night an old bootlegger arrived with the serum. Then Dr. McGregor faced the dilemma of how much of the serum to inject, for the vial was very large. After much concern, the doctor inserted the needle in Elden Beckβs arm and administered it all.
My grandfather, Dr. D. Elden Beck, lived!
The following year Dr. McGregor delivered, in the St. George hospital, the Beckβs baby daughter, Janet Ruth, my mother.
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π€ Other
π€ Young Adults
π€ Parents
Adversity
Courage
Creation
Education
Emergency Response
Employment
Family
Health
Birthday Temple Trip
Because flights from Manaus to SΓ£o Paulo are expensive and the city is isolated by dense forest, local stake presidencies organized a yearly multistake caravan to the temple. By chartering a boat and buses and sharing costs, families could afford the weeklong journey, spend several days in temple service, and return home together.
As a witness of the increasing faith of Manausβs members, each year between 150 to 200 members in Manaus go on a multistake caravan to the temple in SΓ£o Paulo, the most accessible temple in Brazil. Because of the dense forest that surrounds the city, the only way to travel from Manaus to SΓ£o Paulo is by boat or plane. Plane tickets are very expensive, so eight years ago the stake presidencies in the city arranged a yearly temple caravan by chartering a boat and buses for those desiring to go to the temple. By sharing the costs, the members have enough money to travel to the temple with their families.
The caravan begins by traveling for four days by boat to Porto Velho, a Brazilian city near the border with Peru and Bolivia. From there, members board chartered buses to take them an additional three days and nights to SΓ£o Paulo, where they stay in Church-owned apartments next to the SΓ£o Paulo Brazil Temple. For four days they do temple work, then make the reverse journey homeward.
The caravan begins by traveling for four days by boat to Porto Velho, a Brazilian city near the border with Peru and Bolivia. From there, members board chartered buses to take them an additional three days and nights to SΓ£o Paulo, where they stay in Church-owned apartments next to the SΓ£o Paulo Brazil Temple. For four days they do temple work, then make the reverse journey homeward.
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π€ Church Leaders (Local)
π€ Church Members (General)
Adversity
Faith
Family
Sacrifice
Temples
Honoring Our Parents
While serving his mission, the narrator spent several days as a temporary driver and companion to Elder Spencer W. Kimball. He witnessed the Apostleβs prayers, testimony, private conduct, and kindness to others. This experience led him to desire to become that kind of man.
While I was on my mission, I traveled for a few days with Elder Spencer W. Kimball, then of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. I was his temporary driver and companion. It was the first time I had been so close to an Apostle of the Lord. I heard him pray and testify. I saw what he focused on, what he talked about, and what he was like when he was not in public. I saw how he treated other people and how thoughtful he was of their needs. I decided that this was the kind of man I wanted to become.
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π€ General Authorities (Modern)
π€ Missionaries
Apostle
Kindness
Missionary Work
Prayer
Testimony
My Note on the Gravestone
In 2003, the author left a laminated note on a Hall headstone in a Michigan cemetery, praying someone could help with research on Robert Hall. A week later, distant cousin Deke Bentley found the note the same day it was left and contacted the author. Visiting Deke later, they discovered additional Hall graves near his home and confirmed at the courthouse that Martin Hallβs father was Robert Hall. The author felt the Holy Ghost confirm the long search had ended and recognized God's timing in the process.
During the summer of 2003, I was in Michigan, USA, researching my great-great-uncle Robert Hall. At the end of my trip, I revisited a cemetery I had been to 20 years earlier.
When I had visited the cemetery before, I noticed flowers on one of the headstones with the last name Hall. This time I wrote a note, dated it, and laminated it to protect it from the weather. Then I prayerfully left the note at the headstone, hoping that someone who could help me learn more about Robert Hall would find it. I returned home to California hopeful but skeptical that anything would come of this note.
I prayerfully left a note at the headstone, hoping that someone who could help me would find it.
A week later I received a letter from a distant cousin named Deke Bentley.
βYesterday I had a strange experience,β he wrote. βAt 3:00 p.m. I was headed to buy strawberries when I decided to stop by the Plains Road Cemetery to check out my ancestorsβ graves. I had not been there for several years. Next to the graves was your postcard.β
Deke had gone to the cemetery the same day I had left the note. I called him immediately. During our conversation I found out that he lived in Hillsdale, more than 50 miles (80 km) from the cemetery.
A few months later I eagerly returned to Michigan to visit Deke. He told me he had relatives buried in the cemetery directly across from his home, and he asked if I would like to go there. He told me that the cemetery had four gravestones of Halls, two that he knew nothing about.
At the cemetery, Deke showed me the gravestones. The two he didnβt know about belonged to Martin and Anna Hall. I hadnβt brought my records, but I distinctly remembered having researched a Martin Hall.
We rushed to the county courthouse an hour before it closed, hoping a death record would identify Martinβs parents. It did! Martinβs father was Robert Hall! The Holy Ghost confirmed to me that my long search had ended.
Deke, not a member of the Church, said finding Robert Hall seemed βalmost spiritual.β I smiled, knowing that the Spirit had led me.
βYou may have been disappointed that you didnβt leave your note 20 years ago,β Deke said, βbut the fact is that I moved to Hillsdale just three years ago!β
This experience was a lesson to me that family history is indeed part of Godβs work and that He leads us in our righteous efforts.
When I had visited the cemetery before, I noticed flowers on one of the headstones with the last name Hall. This time I wrote a note, dated it, and laminated it to protect it from the weather. Then I prayerfully left the note at the headstone, hoping that someone who could help me learn more about Robert Hall would find it. I returned home to California hopeful but skeptical that anything would come of this note.
I prayerfully left a note at the headstone, hoping that someone who could help me would find it.
A week later I received a letter from a distant cousin named Deke Bentley.
βYesterday I had a strange experience,β he wrote. βAt 3:00 p.m. I was headed to buy strawberries when I decided to stop by the Plains Road Cemetery to check out my ancestorsβ graves. I had not been there for several years. Next to the graves was your postcard.β
Deke had gone to the cemetery the same day I had left the note. I called him immediately. During our conversation I found out that he lived in Hillsdale, more than 50 miles (80 km) from the cemetery.
A few months later I eagerly returned to Michigan to visit Deke. He told me he had relatives buried in the cemetery directly across from his home, and he asked if I would like to go there. He told me that the cemetery had four gravestones of Halls, two that he knew nothing about.
At the cemetery, Deke showed me the gravestones. The two he didnβt know about belonged to Martin and Anna Hall. I hadnβt brought my records, but I distinctly remembered having researched a Martin Hall.
We rushed to the county courthouse an hour before it closed, hoping a death record would identify Martinβs parents. It did! Martinβs father was Robert Hall! The Holy Ghost confirmed to me that my long search had ended.
Deke, not a member of the Church, said finding Robert Hall seemed βalmost spiritual.β I smiled, knowing that the Spirit had led me.
βYou may have been disappointed that you didnβt leave your note 20 years ago,β Deke said, βbut the fact is that I moved to Hillsdale just three years ago!β
This experience was a lesson to me that family history is indeed part of Godβs work and that He leads us in our righteous efforts.
Read more β
π€ Church Members (General)
π€ Other
Faith
Family
Family History
Holy Ghost
Miracles
Prayer
Revelation
Testimony
Australian Couple Finds Joy Helping Finish the Lordβs Temples
After completing temple ordinances in Brisbane, Michael was approached in the car park by a Church facilities manager who asked if he was interested in doing work for the Church. They were then invited to bid on gilding the angel Moroni statue. Their willingness led to completing that project and many others in temples.
They became involved in this work in an unusual way.
βMy friend and I were assigned to perform some vicarious ordinances in the Brisbane Australia Temple,β Michael said. βI had driven to the temple in my business van, and when I was returning to it after the completion of my assignment, a fellow approached me in the car park and said he was the facilities manager for the Church in the area.
βHe asked if I would be interested in doing some work for the Church.β
Michael says, βWe were asked if we would be willing to do some gilding (painting with special gold paint) on a statue of the angel Moroni. We told him that we were willing, submitted a bid, and we did that very interesting work and have since been fortunate enough to work on many other projects.β
βMy friend and I were assigned to perform some vicarious ordinances in the Brisbane Australia Temple,β Michael said. βI had driven to the temple in my business van, and when I was returning to it after the completion of my assignment, a fellow approached me in the car park and said he was the facilities manager for the Church in the area.
βHe asked if I would be interested in doing some work for the Church.β
Michael says, βWe were asked if we would be willing to do some gilding (painting with special gold paint) on a statue of the angel Moroni. We told him that we were willing, submitted a bid, and we did that very interesting work and have since been fortunate enough to work on many other projects.β
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π€ Church Members (General)
π€ Other
Baptisms for the Dead
Employment
Ordinances
Temples
Created for Me
A youth attends sacrament meeting feeling grumpy and skeptical as a returned missionary bears testimony that God lives. That evening during family scripture study, her brother reads Almaβs words to Korihor, which she ponders deeply before bed. Reflecting on the creations of God and recalling a Primary song, she is moved to tears and prays for forgiveness and gratitude. She concludes with a personal witness that Heavenly Father lives.
As I sat restlessly in sacrament meeting one Sunday afternoon listening to another returned missionary speak, I entertained myself by watching two children play peek-a-boo across the back of the bench. Coming to church every Sunday seemed a meaningless ritual. None of my friends went to church or observed the Sabbath. I sat there all grumpy, determined to be miserable.
I casually looked over my right shoulder and saw my parents with tears in their eyes. I looked around the room and noticed that many people had tear-stained cheeks and wadded tissues in their hands. I turned my attention back to the recently returned elder in time to hear him say, ββ¦ and I know that my Father lives.β
That was a statement I had heard many times, especially in sacrament meetings. I always asked myself, How could they possibly know that there is a God? As the closing prayer was said, I felt a little guilty for my thoughts.
Later that evening my family sat down together for family scripture study. We were in the 30th chapter of Alma, and my older brother Jim was reading about the anti-Christ Korihor telling Alma there was no God. In verses 43β44, he read, βAnd now Korihor said unto Alma: If thou wilt show me a sign, that I may be convinced that there is a God, yea, show unto me that he hath power, and then will I be convinced of the truth of thy words.
βBut Alma said unto him: β¦ The scriptures are laid before thee, yea, and all things denote there is a God; yea, even the earth, and all things that are upon the face of it.β [Alma 30:43β44]
That night I lay very still and pondered the words of Alma. I thought about all the creations on the earth, about the flowers and the trees and the beautiful night stars and about me. How magnificent the creation of the human body is. I lay there a very long time until the words of a song I learned in Primary entered my head. βWhenever I touch a velvet rose or walk by a lilac tree, Iβm glad that I live in this beautiful world Heavenly Father created for me.β
The tears fell down my face, and I said a prayer to Father in Heaven asking for forgiveness and thanking him for the beautiful world he created for me. I know my Father lives.
I casually looked over my right shoulder and saw my parents with tears in their eyes. I looked around the room and noticed that many people had tear-stained cheeks and wadded tissues in their hands. I turned my attention back to the recently returned elder in time to hear him say, ββ¦ and I know that my Father lives.β
That was a statement I had heard many times, especially in sacrament meetings. I always asked myself, How could they possibly know that there is a God? As the closing prayer was said, I felt a little guilty for my thoughts.
Later that evening my family sat down together for family scripture study. We were in the 30th chapter of Alma, and my older brother Jim was reading about the anti-Christ Korihor telling Alma there was no God. In verses 43β44, he read, βAnd now Korihor said unto Alma: If thou wilt show me a sign, that I may be convinced that there is a God, yea, show unto me that he hath power, and then will I be convinced of the truth of thy words.
βBut Alma said unto him: β¦ The scriptures are laid before thee, yea, and all things denote there is a God; yea, even the earth, and all things that are upon the face of it.β [Alma 30:43β44]
That night I lay very still and pondered the words of Alma. I thought about all the creations on the earth, about the flowers and the trees and the beautiful night stars and about me. How magnificent the creation of the human body is. I lay there a very long time until the words of a song I learned in Primary entered my head. βWhenever I touch a velvet rose or walk by a lilac tree, Iβm glad that I live in this beautiful world Heavenly Father created for me.β
The tears fell down my face, and I said a prayer to Father in Heaven asking for forgiveness and thanking him for the beautiful world he created for me. I know my Father lives.
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π€ Parents
π€ Youth
π€ Missionaries
π€ Children
π€ Church Members (General)
π€ Other
Book of Mormon
Children
Creation
Faith
Family
Music
Prayer
Repentance
Sacrament Meeting
Scriptures
Testimony
Tracy Y. Browning
As a teenager, Tracy Browning watched her mother pursue the Church after requesting a Book of Mormon from a late-night infomercial. Missionaries taught her mother, and Tracy began attending services while visiting from New Jersey to New York. A visit to the Hill Cumorah Pageant and the Sacred Grove deeply moved her, prompting her to tell her mother she wanted to learn more. Her mother quickly arranged for Tracy to meet with the missionaries.
Tracy Y. Browning was about 15 years old when her mother saw a Book of Mormon advertisement on a late-night television infomercial and requested a free copy.
Within a short time, Latter-day Saint missionaries knocked on her door, presented the Book of Mormon, and began teaching her the gospel of Jesus Christ.
At the time, Tracy lived in New Jersey, USA, with her father, but she often visited her mother in New York, USA. While visiting, Tracy observed with curiosity as her mother progressed toward baptism.
With her grandmother, Tracy had attended a Christian church, where she learned foundational Christian beliefs. Soon Tracy began attending Latter-day Saint Sunday worship services with her mother.
The culminating experience came when mother and daughter attended the Hill Cumorah Pageant. Standing in the Sacred Grove, attending church, and listening to messages of the gospel in new ways moved her. Tracy told her mother she was ready to learn more about the Church.
βShe put me in front of the missionaries very quickly after that,β Sister Browning said.
Within a short time, Latter-day Saint missionaries knocked on her door, presented the Book of Mormon, and began teaching her the gospel of Jesus Christ.
At the time, Tracy lived in New Jersey, USA, with her father, but she often visited her mother in New York, USA. While visiting, Tracy observed with curiosity as her mother progressed toward baptism.
With her grandmother, Tracy had attended a Christian church, where she learned foundational Christian beliefs. Soon Tracy began attending Latter-day Saint Sunday worship services with her mother.
The culminating experience came when mother and daughter attended the Hill Cumorah Pageant. Standing in the Sacred Grove, attending church, and listening to messages of the gospel in new ways moved her. Tracy told her mother she was ready to learn more about the Church.
βShe put me in front of the missionaries very quickly after that,β Sister Browning said.
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π€ Missionaries
π€ Parents
π€ Youth
π€ Other
Baptism
Book of Mormon
Conversion
Family
Missionary Work
K3TA:Calling the World
Starting young, Mike explored electronics and, with help from an uncleβs transmitter and a kit receiver, began ham radio. He earned successive FCC licenses from novice to extra class, driven by steady practice and the challenge of faster foreign code. His progression shows deliberate learning and perseverance.
Mikeβs interest in amateur radio (the term ham is a nickname for the same thing) began while he was young. βWe set up an electric train in the basement when I was about five, and I started figuring out how it ran. Iβve been working with wires ever since.β
βMy uncle gave me a home-built transmitter, which I used along with a receiver I built from a kit. You can get a novice (beginnerβs) license from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and with less than $100 worth of equipment, be operating a Morse code station.β
Mike got his novice license in August 1975, received his general license eight months later, his advanced license βa couple of months after that,β and now holds the highest license, the extra class license. There is one other license, the technician license, but it is used mostly for business communication, and higher licenses have the same privileges, so Mike bypassed it.
A novice licensee is allowed to broadcast only in Morse code. If he attains a higher license, however, he is allowed to broadcast his voice. βI started out memorizing Morse code,β Mike says. βThen I had a record with a very slow code speed, and I practiced off the air. Once I got on the air, I didnβt have any interest in receiving from a record. The main thing that pushed me to learn code was foreign stations sending it faster than I could receive, so I kept on pushing.β
βMy uncle gave me a home-built transmitter, which I used along with a receiver I built from a kit. You can get a novice (beginnerβs) license from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and with less than $100 worth of equipment, be operating a Morse code station.β
Mike got his novice license in August 1975, received his general license eight months later, his advanced license βa couple of months after that,β and now holds the highest license, the extra class license. There is one other license, the technician license, but it is used mostly for business communication, and higher licenses have the same privileges, so Mike bypassed it.
A novice licensee is allowed to broadcast only in Morse code. If he attains a higher license, however, he is allowed to broadcast his voice. βI started out memorizing Morse code,β Mike says. βThen I had a record with a very slow code speed, and I practiced off the air. Once I got on the air, I didnβt have any interest in receiving from a record. The main thing that pushed me to learn code was foreign stations sending it faster than I could receive, so I kept on pushing.β
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π€ Youth
π€ Other
Education
Self-Reliance
Journey to Baptism
Before turning eight, Huia fasted and prayed to know if she should be baptized and received a yes. After baptism, she felt warm happiness and was grateful to be confirmed and receive the Holy Ghost. Since then, she has tried to keep the commandments and be a good example.
Before my eighth birthday I fasted and prayed to Heavenly Father to know if I should be baptized. The answer was yes! After I was baptized I felt a wonderful warm feeling of happiness. I was grateful to be confirmed and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. Since my baptism I have tried to keep the commandments, be kind to my family and friends, and always set a good example.Huia K., 8, Victoria, Australia
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π€ Children
Baptism
Children
Commandments
Conversion
Holy Ghost
Ordinances
Prayer
Testimony
There Is a Tomorrow
A father recalls a moment when his nine-year-old daughter asked whether their Persian cat, Arthur, knew he was a cat. He replied that Arthur likely only understood the comfort of being loved, fed, and kept warm. He then reflects that some people seek only those basic comforts, mistaking them for true satisfaction.
We once had a Persian cat named Arthur. One day our nine-year-old daughter asked, βDad, do you think Arthur knows heβs a cat?β
I answered, βWell, I donβt really think Arthur knows heβs a cat. All he knows for sure is that it is very nice when you live with someone who will love you and feed you and keep you warm.β
Actually, I know quite a few people who think that very same thingβtheir highest hope is just to have someone love them and feed them and keep them warm. To them, as to Arthur, thatβs what it means to be βsatisfied.β
I answered, βWell, I donβt really think Arthur knows heβs a cat. All he knows for sure is that it is very nice when you live with someone who will love you and feed you and keep you warm.β
Actually, I know quite a few people who think that very same thingβtheir highest hope is just to have someone love them and feed them and keep them warm. To them, as to Arthur, thatβs what it means to be βsatisfied.β
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π€ Parents
π€ Children
π€ Other
Children
Family
Happiness
Love
Parenting
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
As he began college, he felt worried and considered giving up. Sister Holland counseled him to have faith, providing encouragement at a critical moment. The account highlights a turning point through supportive counsel.
He was worried when he started college and thought about giving up, but Sister Holland told him to have faith.
Read more β
π€ General Authorities (Modern)
π€ Other
Adversity
Education
Faith
Kim Ho Jik:
Before returning to Korea, Kim attended the Hill Cumorah Pageant and a testimony meeting in the Sacred Grove. He met President David O. McKay and, moved to tears, repeated, βI have shaken the hand of the Prophet of God.β
A few days before he finished his doctoral program and returned to Korea in September of 1951, Brother Kim attended the Hill Cumorah Pageant with Brother and sister Wood. On Sunday, they attended a special testimony meeting for local missionaries in the Sacred Grove. After the meeting, Brother Kim met Church President David O. McKay, who was also attending the meeting. βAs we walked from the grove,β Brother Wood said, βBrother Kim cradled his right hand in his left and, with his cheeks still moist, he kept repeating, βI have shaken the hand of the Prophet of God.ββ
Read more β
π€ General Authorities (Modern)
π€ Missionaries
π€ Other
Apostle
Missionary Work
Reverence
Testimony
A Haven of Love
DI manager Jim Clegg attends a sacrament meeting featuring youth with disabilities. A woman, trained and encouraged by an elderly DI worker who recognized her talent, sings a solo and publicly expresses her love for Deseret Industries. Her heartfelt rendition of 'I Am a Child of God' affirms to the congregation the goodness of DI.
Brother Jim Clegg, manager of the Murray Deseret Industries, attended a sacrament meeting in his sonβs ward, where the program was provided by some retarded youth. The final number was a solo to be sung by a sweet mongoloid sister. Brother Clegg knew this young woman could sing because she participated in the Murray Deseret Industries choir, but little did he know that one of the seventy-year-old brethren at the Deseret Industries had been working closely with her because he recognized some natural vocal ability.
As she stood up to perform her number, she noticed Brother Clegg in the audience and cried out, βThatβs my Deseret Industries manager, there in the back!β She proceeded to tell the congregation that Deseret Industries was the most wonderful place in the whole world.
As she sang βI Am a Child of God,β no one in the audience doubted that indeed Deseret Industries is the most wonderful place in the world.
As she stood up to perform her number, she noticed Brother Clegg in the audience and cried out, βThatβs my Deseret Industries manager, there in the back!β She proceeded to tell the congregation that Deseret Industries was the most wonderful place in the whole world.
As she sang βI Am a Child of God,β no one in the audience doubted that indeed Deseret Industries is the most wonderful place in the world.
Read more β
π€ Church Members (General)
π€ Other
Disabilities
Employment
Music
Sacrament Meeting
Service
Your Greatest Challenge, Mother
The speaker watched a TV story about a Midwestern family with parents who resolved to provide the best educational experiences for their children. They lived modestly but nurtured their children with knowledge. Each child became well educated, with one serving as a university president and others leading major businesses.
With fascination I watched one evening on television the story of a family in the Midwest. It included the father and mother and three sons and one daughter.
The father and mother determined when they married that they would do all they could to see that their children were exposed to the very best educational experiences.
They lived in a modest home. They observed modest ways. But they nurtured their children with knowledge. Every one of those children achieved in a remarkable way. Every one was well educated. One became a university president; the others became heads of large business institutions, successful individuals by any measure.
The father and mother determined when they married that they would do all they could to see that their children were exposed to the very best educational experiences.
They lived in a modest home. They observed modest ways. But they nurtured their children with knowledge. Every one of those children achieved in a remarkable way. Every one was well educated. One became a university president; the others became heads of large business institutions, successful individuals by any measure.
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π€ Parents
π€ Children
Education
Employment
Family
Parenting
Able to Serve
In a sacrament meeting, new deacon Braden Anderson, who has cerebral palsy, passed the sacrament for the first time with assistance from Brother Renner. Members watched as he smiled and fulfilled his duties, and Bishop Anderson, his father, moved from anxiety to gratitude. The congregation was moved to tears as they witnessed his determination and service.
The members of our ward in the Grand Junction Colorado Stake were taught the true meaning of service as we witnessed a new deacon pass the sacrament for the first time. I never thought I would be a witness to such a humbling event that had most of the members shedding a tear or two.
Brother Braden Anderson bowed his head during the sacrament prayer then looked up to get ready to pass the bread to his section of the ward. He was helped by Brother Renner as he reached to take the tray of bread. You see, Braden Anderson has cerebral palsy, which makes it difficult for him to move, talk, or reach for a tray.
As I saw a big smile cross his face, I looked immediately to our good bishop, Bradenβs father. I saw the face of Bishop Anderson turn from anxiety to gratitude that his son could fulfill his duties as a new deacon.
I heard some members whisper to each other, βLook at Braden. Heβs smiling, wow! Heβs fulfilling his duties.β I saw some other members take off their glasses to wipe away the tears caused by understanding the important lesson that unfolded before our eyes.
For me, Bradenβs strength lifted me up so much that there was not room for tearsβjust the excitement of knowing that he was doing something others would have deemed impossible. Though he had help from Brother Renner, it was Braden who was doing his duties as a deacon.
Brother Braden Anderson bowed his head during the sacrament prayer then looked up to get ready to pass the bread to his section of the ward. He was helped by Brother Renner as he reached to take the tray of bread. You see, Braden Anderson has cerebral palsy, which makes it difficult for him to move, talk, or reach for a tray.
As I saw a big smile cross his face, I looked immediately to our good bishop, Bradenβs father. I saw the face of Bishop Anderson turn from anxiety to gratitude that his son could fulfill his duties as a new deacon.
I heard some members whisper to each other, βLook at Braden. Heβs smiling, wow! Heβs fulfilling his duties.β I saw some other members take off their glasses to wipe away the tears caused by understanding the important lesson that unfolded before our eyes.
For me, Bradenβs strength lifted me up so much that there was not room for tearsβjust the excitement of knowing that he was doing something others would have deemed impossible. Though he had help from Brother Renner, it was Braden who was doing his duties as a deacon.
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π€ Youth
π€ Church Leaders (Local)
π€ Parents
π€ Church Members (General)
Bishop
Disabilities
Family
Gratitude
Humility
Priesthood
Sacrament
Sacrament Meeting
Service
Young Men
Blessed by the Priesthood
Eleven years after baptism, the author was diagnosed with breast cancer and felt prompted to seek a priesthood blessing that evening. The blessing promised her healing and that her doctors would be guided. This blessing became the first of many that strengthened her through years of treatment.
That truth was reinforced to me when I was diagnosed with breast cancer 11 years after my baptism. Upon hearing the news, I received a spiritual prompting that I should seek a priesthood blessing, which I did that evening. In the blessing, I was promised that the cancer would leave my body, that my body would be made whole, and that the Spirit would guide my doctors.
That blessing was the first of many I would receive over the next three years of treatment and surgeries. It gave me faith to know that healing would come physically if it was the Lordβs will or that it would come spirituallyβand I would be given strength to deal with my trial.
That blessing was the first of many I would receive over the next three years of treatment and surgeries. It gave me faith to know that healing would come physically if it was the Lordβs will or that it would come spirituallyβand I would be given strength to deal with my trial.
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π€ Church Members (General)
π€ Other
Adversity
Faith
Health
Holy Ghost
Priesthood Blessing
Tyler Petersen of Hatton, North Dakota
While visiting, Tyler and Dainβs grandfather helped them clean out an old red granary. Afterward, the boys gathered their favorite toys there and adopted it as their playhouse. They now spend hours inside making up stories and playing together.
In a big red granary that used to store threshed grain, Tyler Petersen (7) and his brother, Dain (5), have gathered some of their favorite toys. They spend hours in the old building, making up stories and playing games together. Tyler and Dain adopted the granary as their playhouse after their grandfather helped them clean it out while he was visiting their home in Hatton, North Dakota.
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π€ Children
π€ Other
Children
Family
βThe Pathway to Leadership is Through Serviceβ
For many years, Valaeiβs home welcomed missionaries serving in the village. She treated them as her own children and cared for them in various ways.
Valaei continues to be a supporter of missionary service. Bishop Taleni remembers that their βhome was the home of missionaries in the village for many years. She called these missionaries her own children, took care of them in many ways.β
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π€ Missionaries
π€ Parents
π€ Church Members (General)
Charity
Ministering
Missionary Work
Service