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Let There Be Light!

William Wilberforce, motivated by religious conviction, fought to end the British slave trade and to reform public morality. His efforts, captured in the hymn and film β€œAmazing Grace,” helped catalyze the elimination of a cruel practice. He believed education and government must be morally based and mobilized leaders nationwide against vice.
Many faith-based institutions in the last two centuries have been at the forefront in reaching out and rescuing those subjected to cruel circumstances because their members believe that all men are made in the image and likeness of God.23 William Wilberforce, the great British statesman who was instrumental in outlawing the slave trade in Great Britain, is an excellent example.24 β€œAmazing Grace,” the touching hymn, and the inspiring movie of the same name capture the feeling of the early 1800s and describe the account of his heroic effort. Wilberforce’s untiring efforts were among the first steps in eliminating this terrible, oppressive, cruel, and venal practice. As part of that effort he, together with other leaders, set out to reform public morality. He believed that education and government had to be morally based.25 β€œHis … vision of moral and spiritual enrichment was what he lived for, whether in defending the institution of marriage, attacking the practices of the slave trade or emphatically defending the Sabbath day.”26 With great energy he helped mobilize the country’s moral and social leaders in a nationwide struggle against vice.27
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πŸ‘€ Other
Charity Courage Education Faith Marriage Racial and Cultural Prejudice Sabbath Day Service Virtue

Love Extends beyond Convenience

After a stake conference, a widow expressed her needs to the visiting leader, unsure whom to ask for help. As he probed about home and visiting teachers, another sister who had been a widow overheard and volunteered to visit, saying she understood. The exchange shows inspired, peer-to-peer ministering born of shared experience.
After a recent stake conference meeting where I had discussed the role of the family in the Church, I was approached by a sweet woman who said: β€œBishop, I’m a widow and I really appreciated everything you said today. I have a lovely family, but I have many problems and I do need help. My priesthood leaders have families of their own and they have lots of problems and I don’t want to bother them and add to their problems. So what should I do?”
I asked her, β€œDo you have a good home teacher who really cares about you?”
She said, β€œYes, I have a home teacher and he comes by every month or so; but he isn’t very involved with our family.”
Then I asked, β€œWell, do you have a visiting teacher who visits you and understands you?”
She said, β€œYes, the Relief Society sometimes comes.”
At this point, I was praying for a right answer, when a lovely sister, who was standing nearby and heard our conversation, said, β€œExcuse me, but I was a widow; and even though I have just remarried, I know how you feel and I understand your problems. Please let me drop by. I’d like to visit with you.”
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πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local) πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Bishop Family Kindness Ministering Prayer Relief Society Service

Faith at All Levels of Ability

President Juan Medina, who gradually lost his vision, continues serving as a branch president in Sonora, Mexico. During the COVID-19 pandemic he called each branch member, which relieved his stress and depression and deepened his sense of Christlike love. He focuses on caring for those absent from sacrament meeting and cherishes working with new converts. He testifies that the gospel changed his life and that being blind has not altered that blessing.
President Juan Medina is serving as branch president for the second time, but this experience is a bit different. This time, he can’t see those he is ministering to. β€œI lost my vision little by little, but I did not lose the capability to serve that the Lord has always offered me,” President Medina said from his home in Sonora, Mexico. β€œBeing able to minister to my brothers and sisters is a privilege.”
During the COVID-19 pandemic, President Medina called each member of his branch to see how they were doing. He said that this not only helped others but also helped him feel less stressed and depressed. β€œIt is through ministering, whether someone has ministered to me or I am ministering to others, that I come to know the true love of Christ.”
President Medina said he especially loves working with newly baptized members. β€œYou can see a clear difference between their lives before and after baptism,” he said. β€œLove changes them.”
When asked about the challenges he faces, President Medina didn’t mention his visual impairments at all. Instead, his comments focused on the people who are missing from sacrament meeting each week and how he wants them to know how much they are missed.
β€œThe biggest blessing I have received is that my life has changed through the gospel,” he said. β€œBeing blind has not changed that.”
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πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local) πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Baptism Conversion Disabilities Love Mental Health Ministering Sacrament Meeting Service

Take the Lead!

Seeing a boy who is teased and lonely, a child chooses to talk with him and learns about his medical challenges. He invites the boy to his birthday party, which brings the boy and his family joy. The boy smiles a lot and has a great time.
There’s a boy at school who is teased behind his back and is lonely. I saw him sitting alone one day, so I went to talk with him. I found out that when he was a baby he had seizures and a stroke. The stroke injured his brain and makes certain things harder for him to do. I decided to invite him to my birthday party. His family was excited because he hasn’t been invited to very many parties. He doesn’t smile very often, but he smiled a lot at my party and had a great time!
Jason D., age 11, Arizona
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πŸ‘€ Children πŸ‘€ Friends
Children Disabilities Friendship Kindness Service

The Stranger’s Smile

At a fast-food restaurant, the narrator noticed a worn-down man and felt prompted by the Spirit to buy him food. After initial hesitation, she offered him money for a meal, which he accepted and purchased. Seeing his smile brought her warmth and joy, and she recalled the Savior’s teaching about serving 'the least of these.'
I normally would have avoided himβ€”a worn-down man playing a game of cards at a table in the play area of a local fast-food restaurant. He had a soft smile on his sad countenance as he watched the children play. β€œHe must be warming himself from the cold,” I thought as I passed his table to throw away my daughter’s half-eaten meal. As I noticed his table, bare of any food wrappers or paper cups, the still, small voice whispered to me, β€œBuy him some food.”
I returned to my table with some cash still in my pocket. β€œI’ll embarrass him,” I told myself. Then a feeling of peace came, and the Spirit’s sweet whispering stilled me: β€œBuy him some food.”
I didn’t tell my children what I was doing; I just picked up some trash and went to throw it away so I could get near the man’s table without letting my friend who I was eating with know.
I leaned in and asked, β€œCan I buy you some lunch?”
He looked startled and softly replied, β€œIf you want to.”
I pulled out the small amount of cash I had leftβ€”just enough for a meal and a drinkβ€”and gave it to the man. I returned to my seat, undiscovered by the busy moms around me, and watched the man get up to buy his meal.
As I loaded my children into the car to go home, I looked through the window and saw the man carrying a tray of food back to his empty table. On his once-solemn face was a smile.
The winter breeze blowing against my face didn’t feel quite so cold. I basked in the warm, joyful Spirit that filled me from my boots to my frozen ponytail. I remembered the teaching of the Savior:
β€œFor I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink …
β€œThen shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? …
β€œAnd the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me” (Matthew 25:35, 37, 40).
I am thankful for the smile of a stranger that helped me find the courage to do what is right.
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πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Children πŸ‘€ Friends πŸ‘€ Other
Charity Courage Gratitude Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Kindness Peace Revelation Scriptures Service

Losing a Friend to Death

Decades after Peter’s death, the speaker dreamed of meeting him as an adult along an ocean highway, perhaps in northern California. They embraced, talked, and Peter said he had to go take care of β€œsome business,” which the speaker felt was his Father’s business. The Spirit confirmed they would meet again.
Then a year or two ago, almost thirty years after Peter’s death, I dreamed that I was on a business trip, driving my car on a highway that ran alongside the ocean. I think I was supposed to be in northern California.
In my dream I was admiring the beautiful coastal scenery and listening to the car radio.
Suddenly, in my dream, coming toward me on the other side of the road was Peter. He was a full-grown adult, but I recognized him immediately.
Quickly I stopped the car, got out, and ran to him. We hugged and danced like two happy little boys. Then we stood arm-in-arm, face-to-face, with the mighty ocean as a backdrop and talked eagerly for about fifteen minutes.
Never mentioning death, or saying β€œit’s good to see you after all of these years,” or anything like that, Peter finally said to me, β€œWell, I’ve got to be going.”
Knowing and feeling that to be true, I said to him, β€œWhere are you going?”
β€œTo take care of some business,” he said simply. I knew better than to ask any more. He was about his Father’s business. My heart told me so. I know that to be true of Andrew also.
I still remember how wonderful it felt in that dream to see Peter again, to hug him and talk with him after all those years since he died. The Spirit bore witness to me that Peter and I will meet again someday and that meeting will be as sweet and natural as it was in that wonderful dream.
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πŸ‘€ Friends
Death Grief Holy Ghost Plan of Salvation Testimony

The Jadeite Cabbage

An anonymous master carver selected a flawed piece of jade with two colors, cracks, and ripples. Imagined as a dialogue, the carver assures the jade he will create a masterpiece despite its imperfections. The carver uses the flaws to form a lifelike cabbage that eventually is gifted to royalty and displayed in palaces before arriving at a museum in Taiwan.
For a jade carving to have great value, the jade has to be one solid color. Carvings made out of perfect jade sell for high prices because it is nearly impossible to find perfect jade. The Jadeite Cabbage is green on one end and white on the other, and it has cracks and ripples. No skilled carver would waste time on such a piece of jade, until someone came along whom the Chinese call a master carver.
If this jade could talk, I can imagine the conversation it would have with this new carver. I imagine the carver picking up this piece of jade.
β€œWhat do you want?” the jade would ask.
β€œI am looking for jade to carve,” the carver would say.
β€œThen find another piece. I am of no worth. I have two different colors so intertwined that you’ll never separate them. I have cracks and ripples in me. I will never be of any worth. Don’t waste your time.”
β€œOh, you silly little jade. Trust me. I am a master carver. I will make a masterpiece of you.”
What makes the Jadeite Cabbage so amazing is that this anonymous master carver used the weaknesses of the jadeβ€”the two colors, the cracks, and the ripplesβ€”to make the cabbage all the more lifelike. The opaque white part became the stem of the cabbage, and the cracks and ripples make the leaves come to life. If it weren’t for the β€œweaknesses” of this jade, it could not have looked so real.
Because of the beauty of this piece of art, it became a gift for one of the royalties in China and adorned the halls of beautiful Asian palaces until it ended up at the museum in Taiwan.
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πŸ‘€ Other
Judging Others

Room for One More

Marcus helps his parents prepare for a large Thanksgiving gathering. Realizing that the apartment superintendent and his teacher would be alone, he invites both and finds extra chairs. His mother welcomes the additions, and even the teacher’s cat is invited so no one is left out.
β€œMarcus, it’s time!”
When Marcus hear his father call, he sprinted to the kitchen. Lined up on the counter were five of his father’s famous pumpkin pies, ready to go into the oven.
Marcus knew his job. Rolling out the leftover pie crust dough into a huge circle, he picked up the maple-leaf-shape cookie cutter and cut out a large leaf from the dough for the center of each pie.
He’d no sooner finished than he heard, β€œMarcus, I need you.” In the dining room, he found his mother putting one more plate on a table. β€œCousin Molly’s coming. That makes seventeen. I think that’s the last plate in the house,” she laughed. β€œNothing matches, but what colorful tables!”
β€œHow come we’re having so many people?” Marcus asked.
β€œBecause,” Mother answered, β€œthat’s what Thanksgiving is all aboutβ€”being thankful for everything, especially for people we care about. No one should be alone on Thanksgiving.”
Marcus nodded. Tomorrow will be fun, he thought.
β€œI need you to go down to the basement and see if that old chair is still being stored down there. If it is, ask Mr. Swenson if we may borrow it.”
The apartment-house basement was a gloomy place. When Marcus got off the elevator, he was glad to see the superintendent there, sweeping out the furnace room. β€œHi, Mr. Swenson. Do you know if that old chair is still around?”
β€œHello there, Marcus.” Mr. Swenson gave Marcus a grown-up handshake, as he always did. β€œLet me look around.”
β€œAre you having company for Thanksgiving, too?” Marcus asked.
β€œNo, not this year.”
From the way Mr. Swenson said it, Marcus had a feeling that it wasn’t just this year that Mr. Swenson wasn’t having company for Thanksgiving. β€œWell, that’s good,” Marcus said, β€œbecause I want to invite you to our Thanksgiving dinner. You and your chair!”
β€œWell, thank you, Marcus! I’d love to come. What time should I be there?”
β€œCome at four o’clock tomorrowβ€”but I’ll take the chair with me now.”
When Marcus told his mother that he’d invited Mr. Swenson, she said, β€œThat was a terrific idea, Marcus. Oh, but we still need one more chair.”
β€œThere was only the one chair downstairs, but I think I know where I can get another one.”
β€œGreat!”
Marcus dashed out the door and up the street to school. Good! he thought, seeing his teacher’s car. She’s still here. He ran to his classroom. β€œHi, Miss Fields. May I please borrow a folding chair?”
β€œSurely. You know where we keep themβ€”help yourself.”
β€œThanks. How come you’re still here?”
β€œWell, since I decided not to make the long drive home for Thanksgiving this year, I thought that I might as well finish grading these papers.”
β€œOh.” Marcus thought that grading papers would be a terrible way to spend the holiday. β€œUh, Miss Fields,” he said, β€œmy family would like you to have Thanksgiving dinner with us.”
β€œWhy, thank you, Marcus. That sounds like fun, but I have a small problemβ€”here’s a picture of him.”
β€œOh, he’s no problem, Miss Fieldsβ€”just bring him with you,” Marcus said with a grin.
β€œWhat time should we come?”
β€œCome at four o’clock,” Marcus said. β€œI’ll take two chairs from here and borrow that picture to show my mom, if that’s all right.”
Marcus told his mother about Miss Fields. She laughed and said she would call Aunt Etta and ask her to bring some plates.
β€œJust how many more are we going to need, Marcus?” Mother joked.
β€œJust two,” Marcus said. β€œBut maybe you should ask her to bring a saucer too.”
β€œA saucer?”
β€œWell,” he said, pulling Miss Field’s picture from his pocket, β€œI had to invite Miss Field’s cat, Chubbikins, too. Remember what you said, Mom, no one should be alone on Thanksgiving.”
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πŸ‘€ Children πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Other
Charity Children Family Friendship Gratitude Kindness Ministering Service

Friend to Friend

As a girl who occasionally attended Primary with friends, she recited an Article of Faith to the Primary president at her home. The president invited her to be baptized. She chose baptism shortly before turning eleven, on the same day as her younger sister, with her parents’ support.
My father was not a member of the Church, and my mother did not attend Church meetings when I was a young girl, but I went to Primary occasionally with my friends. One day after I recited one of the Articles of Faith to the Primary president at her home, she took my hand and asked, β€œWouldn’t you like to be baptized?”
I was baptized just before my eleventh birthday, on the same day as my sister, Geri, who was eight years old. This was my choice, and my parents supported my decision. They taught me to be kind, honest, and loving, and they supported me in everything I did.
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πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local) πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Children
Agency and Accountability Baptism Children Conversion Faith Family Honesty Kindness Love Parenting Teaching the Gospel

A Key Decision

Wayne Lewis of Washington wrote and shared his life story with his posterity. After suffering two strokes, his counselor observed that continuing to write helped reduce the stresses from brain injury. Wayne, now 88, encourages others to write their own stories in any format their loved ones will read.
Several years ago, Wayne Lewis, of Washington, USA, published his life story. He gave copies to all of his children and grandchildren. β€œThis was not done for the benefit of anyone but my family, to encourage them to write about their life experiences,” he says. Not long afterward, Wayne suffered one stroke, then another. β€œAfter the strokes, my counselor discovered that writing stories about my life was actually helping diminish the stresses brought on by brain injury, so I have continued writing about my life.” Now 88 years old, Wayne adds, β€œI would encourage everyone to write their life story. Act now, and use any format you think will be read by those you love.”
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πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Parents
Adversity Disabilities Family Family History Health Mental Health

The Aaronic Priesthood and the Sacrament

The speaker describes using a chainsaw to cut down a tree and becoming covered in a filthy mixture of sawdust and oil. Feeling unpresentable, he wanted to be cleansed with water before being around others. He uses this experience to illustrate our spiritual need for cleansing through repentance and the sacrament.
A few weeks ago I used a chain saw to cut down a tree in my backyard. It was a dirty job, and when I was done I was splattered with a filthy mixture of sawdust and oil. In that condition I did not want anyone to see me. I just wanted to be cleansed in water so I would again feel comfortable in the presence of other people.
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πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern)
Atonement of Jesus Christ Baptism Repentance

Friend to Friend

After starting his own steel business, Elder Derrick discovered that his grandfather had completed two seven-year apprenticeships, becoming both a mechanic and a foundryman. Well prepared, his grandfather later built the first iron stove manufactured in Utah. Elder Derrick was surprised to realize they shared the same line of work.
Before Elder Derrick was called to be a General Authority, he operated a steel fabricating plant that he had started by saving twenty-five dollars a month from a meager wage. β€œAfter I had started in the business, I discovered that my grandfather had served two apprenticeships, the first for seven years to become a mechanic and the second for seven years to become a foundryman. He was well prepared to make a meaningful contribution to his newly found church. He later built the first iron stove to be manufactured in the state of Utah. Much to my surprise I found that he was in the same type of business in which I had become engaged.”
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πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern) πŸ‘€ Pioneers πŸ‘€ Early Saints πŸ‘€ Other
Education Employment Family Family History Self-Reliance

FYI:For Your Information

Alan Cherry, a Black Latter-day Saint convert, undertakes a search for truth that leads him to join the Church. He confronts the priesthood restriction issue calmly and realistically, offering insights on the priesthood as a channel of truth. His experience includes a testimony of the Lord hearing and answering sincere prayers. The account is presented as a compelling, faith-promoting conversion story.
This is an autobiographical account of a young man’s search for truth, a search that eventually leads him to membership in the Church. The story is all the more remarkable because Brother Cherry is a Negro. He came to grips with the Negro-priesthood issue and faced it calmly and realistically. No outside speculator, without this type of firsthand experience, can provide a better witness to the truth of the gospel than can Alan who was actually engaged in the experience himself.
And in fact, Alan has some interesting and beautiful insights on the priesthoodβ€”on the role of priesthood in the kingdom of God and its function relative to those in the Church who do not hold the priesthood: β€œI look to the priesthood as the channel through which the pure truth of God can flow to me. And yet as I look for this guidance and understanding I too often get confused by an emphasis that seems to be placed on the channel, or the priesthood, and not the truth which should be flowing through it. For myself, someone who cannot be part of the channel but must receive only what the channel can convey, this sometimes is frustrating. It seems to me that a man in Zion is only β€˜honoring his priesthood’ when he is serving as a channel for light and truth. But a channel through which no witness, no element of truth passes is absolutely worthless to those of us who do not hold the priesthood, but are dependent upon it for direction.”
In this light, Brother Cherry’s views are valuable to every young man who holds the priesthood. But in addition to this, Alan’s conversion story and his testimony of the Lord’s hearing and answering his sincere prayers are aspects of the book that will thrill any Latter-day Saint who likes to hear faith-promoting conversion stories.
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πŸ‘€ Young Adults πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Conversion Faith Prayer Priesthood Race and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Racial and Cultural Prejudice Testimony Young Men

Teaching Children to Follow the Prophet

Peter Nordhoff paused to listen as general conference played on TV while his recently reactivated wife watched. Touched by the prophet’s words, he felt a spiritual rebirth and realized he needed to live worthily to be with his family eternally. That same day, he and his wife visited their bishop, and they soon moved from being less-active to fully engaged in the Church.
For some reason as Peter Nordhoff walked through the room, the words he heard from the television made him stop. General conference was being broadcast, and his wife, who had been recently reactivated through the fellowship of a friend, was watching.
Peter and Adrina had been raised in the Church and married in the temple, but for nearly ten years they had not been involved much with the Church. At first, his work kept him busy on Sundays. When that changed, they used Sundays to relax together.
But that conference Sunday changed their lives. β€œThe words of a prophet of God affected me,” Peter says. β€œThe Spirit spoke to me through God’s mouthpiece. It was like a second birth for me. Listening to the prophet helped me realize that I must start doing the things I was supposed to be doing if I wanted my wife and daughter near me in eternity.” Later that day, Peter and Adrina went to their bishop.
β€œWe went from less-active to overactive very quickly,” recalls Adrina, smiling.
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πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Friends πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local) πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern)
Apostasy Bishop Conversion Family Friendship Holy Ghost Marriage Obedience Repentance Revelation Sabbath Day Sealing Temples Testimony

Be a Member Missionary

A young man dating the author's daughter accepted the challenge to pray to find someone ready for the gospel. He was led to a lifelong friend he had never approached before, who was baptized within a month.
Even a young man who was dating one of our daughters (he later became her husband) accepted the challenge to pray and search for someone who would accept the missionary message. He was directed to a friend whom he had known all his life but had never approached about our Church. Within a month this young man was baptized into the Church.
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πŸ‘€ Young Adults πŸ‘€ Friends
Baptism Conversion Dating and Courtship Missionary Work Prayer

Friend to Friend

Called as a Seventy in 1990, he did not speak English. President Gordon B. Hinckley blessed him to learn quickly, and he then applied intense, daily study using tapes, grammar, conference talks, vocabulary memorization, and news broadcasts. Six months later, he prepared for and delivered his first general conference talk in English on the Word of Wisdom.
I love President Gordon B. Hinckley very much. He called me to be a Seventy in 1990. I was the first Chilean called as a General Authority. It was a beautiful moment in my life. However, when I was called, I didn’t speak any English. President Hinckley, who was then First Counselor in the First Presidency, blessed me when he set me apart that I would learn English quickly.
I have two gifts that helped me to learn English quickly. My first gift is a good memory. That has been my salvation in many jobs. The other gift is my persistence. If I have a job to do, I work and work at it until it’s done. When I began to learn English at age fifty-two, I studied it five hours a day, when I had time. I listened to audio tapes every morning, then studied grammar for an hour, which was difficult for me. After that, I read the conference talks in English and listened to them on tape at the same time. I memorized about ten new vocabulary words per day. Then I read aloud in English to practice pronunciation, and I listened to English on an international news station so that I could test my understanding of what was said.
Six months after being called as a General Authority, I prepared intensely for giving my first general conference talk in English. My talk was on the Word of Wisdom.
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πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern)
Adversity Apostle Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Education Patience Priesthood Blessing Teaching the Gospel Word of Wisdom

A Brother’s Example

Inspired by his brother's experience, the narrator decided to read and pray over every page of the Book of Mormon. Though young and not understanding all the words, he felt the Lord confirm its truth and gained a strong testimony by age 12, which helped him through his youth. He expresses gratitude for his brother's example.
After Ron left me alone, I thought to myself, β€œIf the Lord would tell my brother, then I’ll bet the Lord would tell me.” So I did what my brother did, reading and praying over every page of the Book of Mormon. Because I was still young, I didn’t understand a lot of the words, but it wasn’t long before I began to feel the Lord speak to me in my heart, telling me it was true. I read the whole book through and ended up with a strong testimony even at age 12. That really helped me through my youth and in preparation for a mission.
I have always been thankful for my good brother, who loved me enough to show me by example how to gain a testimony.
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Children
Book of Mormon Children Family Missionary Work Prayer Revelation Testimony

Onward and Upward

While completing a job application, Kathryn realized others had similar education and experience, but her Church service gave her an edge. Reflecting on her mother’s Relief Society experience, she saw how those skills translate to many jobs. She looked forward to gaining similar capability.
β€œWhen I was filling out my job application,” says Kathryn, β€œI realized that there were other applicants with just as much education, and just as much job experience and things like that, but my Church experience had given me an edge. My goodness, when I think of all the jobs my mother is qualified for just because of her Relief Society experience, I’m just amazed. I can’t wait to have that same kind of experienceβ€”not only for the job market, but just to make me a more capable person.”
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πŸ‘€ Young Adults πŸ‘€ Parents
Education Employment Relief Society Self-Reliance Women in the Church

Listen to the Whisper

A young man returning from his mission recalled that his father was killed in an accident when he was ten. Faced with new emotions, he realized he could either become bitter or trust the Lord. Influenced by his parents' example, he chose trust, and he testified that choosing faith made all the difference.
A young man returning from his mission shared his experience with faith. He acknowledged it as a miracle in his life. He said, β€œI was the first of six children born to my parents. My mother and father taught me when I was young the principles of the gospel. Faith was taught through the example of both my mother and father. When I was only 10 years old, my father, this great example of trusting the Lord, was killed in an accident. I was young and had many feelings to deal with that were new to me.” This young man said he realized that he had two choices available to himβ€”β€œI could have become bitter towards the Lord and lost all that I now have, or I could trust the Lord. Because of the example of my parents, trust was the path I chose. Choosing faith has made all of the difference.”
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πŸ‘€ Missionaries πŸ‘€ Parents
Adversity Agency and Accountability Death Faith Family Grief Miracles Missionary Work Parenting Testimony Young Men

Seek the Blessings of the Church

The speaker observed his wife, daughter, and many women regularly visit a home to assist an autistic child in learning to crawl. Their scheduled service demonstrated Christlike compassion and care.
The experiences in the Church when I saw my wife and daughter and dozens of other women go into a home on a regularly scheduled basis to help an autistic child learn how to crawl.
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πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Children
Disabilities Ministering Relief Society Service Women in the Church