Si Peterson:
Many people supported Si, including Primary children who raised $2,000 for a hydraulic lift to help with his wheelchair and van. Others held events to raise funds for equipment. Their efforts met practical needs and showed love.
To mention a few: His mother visits his hospital room each day and spends many hours with him. Other family members also show their love and support. Doctors and nurses at the hospital provide constant care. The Primary children of his stake raised $2,000 to buy a hydraulic lift to raise his wheelchair into his van. The Edmonton Singles Ward produced a musical comedy, and his four talented stepsisters presented a musical program to raise funds for a personal computer.
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๐ค Children
๐ค Church Members (General)
Charity
Children
Disabilities
Family
Health
Kindness
Ministering
Music
Service
Prayers and Cathedrals
While visiting England, Dani and her family attend an Evensong service at a cathedral and notice differences in worship, including candle lighting and unfamiliar hymns. Dani recognizes shared faith when scripture is read and prayers are offered for those in need. Upon learning that Sister Monson has passed away, a boy from another church kindly offers to light a candle for President Monson. Dani feels that Heavenly Father hears both her prayer and the boyโs prayer.
Illustrations by Scott Greer
Dani looked up but still couldnโt see the top of the beautiful cathedral. People who belonged to a different church came here. Dani didnโt understand why her family was visiting this church on a Friday, but Dad said they were going to something called Evensong.
โWhatโs that?โ Dani asked.
โItโs a meeting where people sing, read scriptures, and pray together,โ Dad said. โLike a big family at the end of the day.โ
Dani liked how that sounded. She and her family were visiting England. Last Sunday they went to a ward in a city called York. In Primary all the kids knew the same scriptures and songs Dani did. She knew the ward she visited was part of Jesusโs true Church, just like her ward at home.
But this cathedral was very different from what she was used to. She noticed a small table filled with candles. Dani watched a boy light a candle.
โWhy are you lighting candles?โ Dani asked him.
The boy smiled. โI light a candle when I pray for special things. As long as the flame burns, I hope the prayer will continue to be heard by God.โ
They looked like regular candles to Dani. She was a little confused, but she wanted to be polite. She smiled at the boy.
Dani and her family sat down, and soon Evensong started. She saw the same boy a few rows away. Then she realized she didnโt know any of the songs everyone was singing. When they prayed, they read out of a little book. Everything seemed different than what she was used to.
But the music was beautiful, even if it wasnโt familiar. Then a man got up to read the scriptures. He was wearing robes, instead of a suit and tie like Daniโs bishop. But as he started reading, Dani realized she knew this story! He was reading about Jesus healing the 10 lepers.
โDad,โ Dani whispered, โI love this story.โ
Dad smiled. โMe too.โ
Then the man in robes said a prayer. He asked God to bless those who were sick and in need. Just like Dani did! He also asked a special blessing on leaders of his church. Dani remembered how her family always asked Heavenly Father to bless President Thomas S. Monson and his counselors.
A warm feeling came into Daniโs heart. She knew Heavenly Father was telling her He loved all His children and heard all their prayers, even if they went to a different church and didnโt have the fulness of the gospel.
As they got up to leave, Dad checked his phone. He looked sad as he read his messages. โSister Monson passed away,โ he said.
โOh no!โ Dani said a quick prayer in her heart that President Monson would be OK.
โAre you all right?โ someone asked. It was the boy from before. He had heard Dani, and he seemed worried.
โSister Monson passed away,โ Dani said. โShe was the wife of our prophet, President Monson.โ
โIโm sorry,โ he said kindly. โIโll light a candle for him.โ
Dani smiled and thanked him. She thought it was nice of the boy to say a special prayer for President Monson. She knew Heavenly Father would hear the prayer she said in her heart and the prayer the boy said too.
Dani looked up but still couldnโt see the top of the beautiful cathedral. People who belonged to a different church came here. Dani didnโt understand why her family was visiting this church on a Friday, but Dad said they were going to something called Evensong.
โWhatโs that?โ Dani asked.
โItโs a meeting where people sing, read scriptures, and pray together,โ Dad said. โLike a big family at the end of the day.โ
Dani liked how that sounded. She and her family were visiting England. Last Sunday they went to a ward in a city called York. In Primary all the kids knew the same scriptures and songs Dani did. She knew the ward she visited was part of Jesusโs true Church, just like her ward at home.
But this cathedral was very different from what she was used to. She noticed a small table filled with candles. Dani watched a boy light a candle.
โWhy are you lighting candles?โ Dani asked him.
The boy smiled. โI light a candle when I pray for special things. As long as the flame burns, I hope the prayer will continue to be heard by God.โ
They looked like regular candles to Dani. She was a little confused, but she wanted to be polite. She smiled at the boy.
Dani and her family sat down, and soon Evensong started. She saw the same boy a few rows away. Then she realized she didnโt know any of the songs everyone was singing. When they prayed, they read out of a little book. Everything seemed different than what she was used to.
But the music was beautiful, even if it wasnโt familiar. Then a man got up to read the scriptures. He was wearing robes, instead of a suit and tie like Daniโs bishop. But as he started reading, Dani realized she knew this story! He was reading about Jesus healing the 10 lepers.
โDad,โ Dani whispered, โI love this story.โ
Dad smiled. โMe too.โ
Then the man in robes said a prayer. He asked God to bless those who were sick and in need. Just like Dani did! He also asked a special blessing on leaders of his church. Dani remembered how her family always asked Heavenly Father to bless President Thomas S. Monson and his counselors.
A warm feeling came into Daniโs heart. She knew Heavenly Father was telling her He loved all His children and heard all their prayers, even if they went to a different church and didnโt have the fulness of the gospel.
As they got up to leave, Dad checked his phone. He looked sad as he read his messages. โSister Monson passed away,โ he said.
โOh no!โ Dani said a quick prayer in her heart that President Monson would be OK.
โAre you all right?โ someone asked. It was the boy from before. He had heard Dani, and he seemed worried.
โSister Monson passed away,โ Dani said. โShe was the wife of our prophet, President Monson.โ
โIโm sorry,โ he said kindly. โIโll light a candle for him.โ
Dani smiled and thanked him. She thought it was nice of the boy to say a special prayer for President Monson. She knew Heavenly Father would hear the prayer she said in her heart and the prayer the boy said too.
Read more โ
๐ค Children
๐ค Parents
๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Other
Children
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Jesus Christ
Kindness
Prayer
Reverence
Scriptures
Black Hood
Will, a young shepherd boy in medieval England, learns letters from a friendly 'monk' who is actually a spy. At a Christmas feast, Will realizes the monk carries a dagger and secretly carves a warning into a pie, saving Count Hectorโs life. Though ashamed of being used by the imposter, Will is later praised by the count and offered a chance to tend the monasteryโs sheep and continue learning, with the prospect of becoming a scribe.
Twelve-year-old Will hurried through the stony fields of the English countryside, driving his sheep against the bitter wind. But when a crippled ewe slowed down again, he stopped and lugged her, puffing and panting, down to the fold where Cyr the shepherd waited.
Will had dallied too long with Brother Gregory again today, and he wondered what excuse he could give the master shepherd this time. Still, he had learned three new letters today! He could hardly wait for another meeting with the shepherd-monk. Brother Gregory seemed eager to hear what Will could tell him about life at the castleโwhere the great hall and the countโs chambers were and about the rich fur-trimmed robes the count wore. All these splendors impressed the monk, for in the monastery the brothers knew poverty and lived simply. Will didnโt think of Brother Gregory as he did the solemn monks he had seen before. He was witty and wise and a good friend.
โLate again, lad,โ Cyr grumbled as Will eased the animal to the ground.
โThe ewe has a bad leg, and I canโt leave her alone tomorrow. It looks like Iโll not be sharing in the Christmastide feasting.โ
The older shepherd smiled, โIโll tend the ewe, lad,โ he offered. โIโve seen many a Christmas feast, and if Iโm lucky, Iโll see one or two yet. Besides, Iโm waiting to hear more news of the Duke of Wormsley from the castle guard,โ the older man added with a sly grin, as though he were keeping a great secret.
โWhat news?โ asked Will, curious.
โHeโs burned two outlying huts as a warning to Count Hector. You mark my words, thereโll be battle between the two lords over their inheritance.โ
The following evening Will glanced about the great hall. Surrounding Count Hector, Lady Ursula, and other nobles at the large raised table were tables for lesser folksโwandering priests and lute-playing minstrels and traveling merchants and adventuring knights. Beneath these the peasants were gathered, Will among them. Attendants carried salvers heaped with food, and children scurried about underfoot. Dogs growled and snarled under the long trestle tables, waiting for choice scraps. Huge meat pies were served and peacocks and fragrant new bread, washed down by tankards of mead.
Suddenly, Will stared in disbelief. In his black hood and cassock, Brother Gregory sat gaily chatting with the guests around his table. But when he rose slightly to scoop up a second helping of meat pie, Will glimpsed a sharp glinting beneath the folds of the monkโs robes.
Beads of sweat broke out on the boyโs upper lip when he realized that Brother Gregory was carrying a dagger! Will knew that true monks did not go to Christmas festivals, nor did they carry daggers. The monk is an imposter!
Anxious about what might happen, Will slipped from his place into the kitchen. Attendants were hurrying in and out, and the place smelled hot and steamy. A cook motioned to a huge meat pastry and said gruffly, โYou, boy. Take this in to the count.โ
Will obediently grabbed the pie and hefted it to a corner of the busy kitchen. Then grasping a butcher knife, he quickly scratched into the crust the words BLACK HOOD in the same large block letters that the false monk had taught him. His eyes blurred from the steam and he wiped the sweat from his forehead. He wondered if Brother Gregory had seen him too.
Holding the huge pastry high to shield his face, Will bore it in to the great hall and set it directly before the count. The lord and his group were laughing and talking, but when Count Hector leaned forward to grasp his goblet, he spied the words. Peering at Will, and then around the tables, he spotted the only black hood in the hall. Before Will could blink, Brother Gregory had whipped the dagger from the folds of his black robe. It zinged past Willโs ear just as the count ducked to one side. As the imposter raced for the door, an alert guard grabbed him around the neck and forced him down.
The week after the Christmas holiday was over, Will was silently packing a poultice on the eweโs bad leg. Cyr watched admiringly with weary eyes. โI think youโll do well as a shepherd, lad. It would be wise to be content in your place.โ He shook his head. โI know that idea is painful to you now, Will, since your friend Brother Gregory disappointed you. Itโs too bad he turned out to be a spy of the wicked Duke of Wormsley.โ
Will shrank from the words and stared at the sheepโs festered leg, his eyes burning. Now that it was known that he had been used by the imposter-monk to gain information about the castle and its lord, he felt he would be shamed forever.
As Cyr went out of the fold for a moment, a page beckoned Will from the doorway. โThe count wants to see you, lad,โ he rasped.
A few minutes later Will sat on a stool in the countโs chambers, afraid to look at the man who had summoned him. After what seemed a terribly long silence, the count finally spoke, โThe whole castle knows of your association with the Duke of Wormsleyโs spy, lad, but I believe you meant no harm.โ He paused. โDid he teach you to make those letters?โ
โYes, my lord,โ Will whispered.
The count leaned forward and his bright eyes pierced through the boy like a knife. โThose letters you wrote saved my life!โ
At the fervor in the countโs voice, Will looked up. Count Hector settled back in his chair and continued, โThe monastery is without a shepherd these past days, and the abbot tells me that if I consent to let you tend their sheep, theyโll teach you more letters and such that the imposter began. He tells me that if this arrangement is made, in a few years I would have a new scribe to copy books,โ Count Hector concluded. Will sat in stunned silence, hardly able to believe what he was hearing. The count snapped his fingers impatiently. โWell, boy?โ he demanded.
โIโI think the plan is excellent, my lord!โ breathed Will, his eyes bright. โThank you, my lord. Thank you!โ
Will had dallied too long with Brother Gregory again today, and he wondered what excuse he could give the master shepherd this time. Still, he had learned three new letters today! He could hardly wait for another meeting with the shepherd-monk. Brother Gregory seemed eager to hear what Will could tell him about life at the castleโwhere the great hall and the countโs chambers were and about the rich fur-trimmed robes the count wore. All these splendors impressed the monk, for in the monastery the brothers knew poverty and lived simply. Will didnโt think of Brother Gregory as he did the solemn monks he had seen before. He was witty and wise and a good friend.
โLate again, lad,โ Cyr grumbled as Will eased the animal to the ground.
โThe ewe has a bad leg, and I canโt leave her alone tomorrow. It looks like Iโll not be sharing in the Christmastide feasting.โ
The older shepherd smiled, โIโll tend the ewe, lad,โ he offered. โIโve seen many a Christmas feast, and if Iโm lucky, Iโll see one or two yet. Besides, Iโm waiting to hear more news of the Duke of Wormsley from the castle guard,โ the older man added with a sly grin, as though he were keeping a great secret.
โWhat news?โ asked Will, curious.
โHeโs burned two outlying huts as a warning to Count Hector. You mark my words, thereโll be battle between the two lords over their inheritance.โ
The following evening Will glanced about the great hall. Surrounding Count Hector, Lady Ursula, and other nobles at the large raised table were tables for lesser folksโwandering priests and lute-playing minstrels and traveling merchants and adventuring knights. Beneath these the peasants were gathered, Will among them. Attendants carried salvers heaped with food, and children scurried about underfoot. Dogs growled and snarled under the long trestle tables, waiting for choice scraps. Huge meat pies were served and peacocks and fragrant new bread, washed down by tankards of mead.
Suddenly, Will stared in disbelief. In his black hood and cassock, Brother Gregory sat gaily chatting with the guests around his table. But when he rose slightly to scoop up a second helping of meat pie, Will glimpsed a sharp glinting beneath the folds of the monkโs robes.
Beads of sweat broke out on the boyโs upper lip when he realized that Brother Gregory was carrying a dagger! Will knew that true monks did not go to Christmas festivals, nor did they carry daggers. The monk is an imposter!
Anxious about what might happen, Will slipped from his place into the kitchen. Attendants were hurrying in and out, and the place smelled hot and steamy. A cook motioned to a huge meat pastry and said gruffly, โYou, boy. Take this in to the count.โ
Will obediently grabbed the pie and hefted it to a corner of the busy kitchen. Then grasping a butcher knife, he quickly scratched into the crust the words BLACK HOOD in the same large block letters that the false monk had taught him. His eyes blurred from the steam and he wiped the sweat from his forehead. He wondered if Brother Gregory had seen him too.
Holding the huge pastry high to shield his face, Will bore it in to the great hall and set it directly before the count. The lord and his group were laughing and talking, but when Count Hector leaned forward to grasp his goblet, he spied the words. Peering at Will, and then around the tables, he spotted the only black hood in the hall. Before Will could blink, Brother Gregory had whipped the dagger from the folds of his black robe. It zinged past Willโs ear just as the count ducked to one side. As the imposter raced for the door, an alert guard grabbed him around the neck and forced him down.
The week after the Christmas holiday was over, Will was silently packing a poultice on the eweโs bad leg. Cyr watched admiringly with weary eyes. โI think youโll do well as a shepherd, lad. It would be wise to be content in your place.โ He shook his head. โI know that idea is painful to you now, Will, since your friend Brother Gregory disappointed you. Itโs too bad he turned out to be a spy of the wicked Duke of Wormsley.โ
Will shrank from the words and stared at the sheepโs festered leg, his eyes burning. Now that it was known that he had been used by the imposter-monk to gain information about the castle and its lord, he felt he would be shamed forever.
As Cyr went out of the fold for a moment, a page beckoned Will from the doorway. โThe count wants to see you, lad,โ he rasped.
A few minutes later Will sat on a stool in the countโs chambers, afraid to look at the man who had summoned him. After what seemed a terribly long silence, the count finally spoke, โThe whole castle knows of your association with the Duke of Wormsleyโs spy, lad, but I believe you meant no harm.โ He paused. โDid he teach you to make those letters?โ
โYes, my lord,โ Will whispered.
The count leaned forward and his bright eyes pierced through the boy like a knife. โThose letters you wrote saved my life!โ
At the fervor in the countโs voice, Will looked up. Count Hector settled back in his chair and continued, โThe monastery is without a shepherd these past days, and the abbot tells me that if I consent to let you tend their sheep, theyโll teach you more letters and such that the imposter began. He tells me that if this arrangement is made, in a few years I would have a new scribe to copy books,โ Count Hector concluded. Will sat in stunned silence, hardly able to believe what he was hearing. The count snapped his fingers impatiently. โWell, boy?โ he demanded.
โIโI think the plan is excellent, my lord!โ breathed Will, his eyes bright. โThank you, my lord. Thank you!โ
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๐ค Children
๐ค Other
Adversity
Children
Christmas
Courage
Education
Friendship
Honesty
Kindness
Elder Gerrit W. Gong: Love the Lord and Trust Him
While attending the temple with friends, Brother Gong removed his watch to avoid distraction. Katherine Witt remembered this small act and said it helped her be more diligent in her own temple worship.
Among those friends are Tim and Katherine Witt, who remember going to the temple with the Gongs. โI remember clearly that Brother Gong removed his watch so he would not be distracted or constrained by time when contemplating the matters of eternity,โ Sister Witt says. โThat small act has helped me to be more diligent in my own temple worship.โ
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๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Church Members (General)
๐ค Friends
Reverence
Temples
Humility, Faith and Repentance
President Russell M. Nelson recounted a tender final conversation with his daughter shortly before her passing, where they discussed eternal matters such as covenants and faith. After she died, he expressed confidence and peace through the restored gospel, trusting in eternal reunion and noting that both continued to serve the Lordโhe on earth and she in paradise.
Last April, in the Sunday morning session of general conference, President Russell M. Nelson recounted a conversation with his recently departed daughter that must have been very difficult for him as a parent.
We can only guess the feelings that passed through the mind of a man who had scaled the heights of the medical profession, and who knew he held all the keys of priesthood authority and power granted to man on earth by God, as he looked upon his beloved daughter living the last moments of mortality. His statement about it is profound.
โIt was a tender, tearful moment for us. During her 67 years, we worked together, sang together, and often skied together. But that evening, we talked of things that matter most, such as covenants, ordinances, obedience, faith, family, fidelity, love, and eternal life.โ
Regarding her passing which came soon after, he added:
โBecause of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, we do not worry about her. As we continue to honor our covenants with God, we live in anticipation of our being with her again. Meanwhile, weโre serving the Lord here and she is serving Him thereโin paradise.โ1
Such is the testimony of complete submission to the will of the Great Creator that both father and daughter had nurtured through a lifetime of devotion to the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.
We can only guess the feelings that passed through the mind of a man who had scaled the heights of the medical profession, and who knew he held all the keys of priesthood authority and power granted to man on earth by God, as he looked upon his beloved daughter living the last moments of mortality. His statement about it is profound.
โIt was a tender, tearful moment for us. During her 67 years, we worked together, sang together, and often skied together. But that evening, we talked of things that matter most, such as covenants, ordinances, obedience, faith, family, fidelity, love, and eternal life.โ
Regarding her passing which came soon after, he added:
โBecause of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, we do not worry about her. As we continue to honor our covenants with God, we live in anticipation of our being with her again. Meanwhile, weโre serving the Lord here and she is serving Him thereโin paradise.โ1
Such is the testimony of complete submission to the will of the Great Creator that both father and daughter had nurtured through a lifetime of devotion to the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.
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๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Parents
๐ค Church Members (General)
Apostle
Covenant
Death
Faith
Family
Grief
Hope
Love
Obedience
Ordinances
Plan of Salvation
Priesthood
Testimony
The Restoration
Home Again
Marcelle (Marcy) Collins grows up on a rented farm in Gettysburg, South Dakota, balancing early-morning seminary, school, and heavy farm chores while finding strength in family prayer and supportive neighbors. A year later at Ricks College in Rexburg, Idaho, she adapts to rigorous classes, new responsibilities, and independence, maintaining spiritual habits and friendships. When her parents move after the farm is sold, she recognizes that home can be wherever she turns to faith and the things that matter most.
โThis is home,โ 18-year-old Marcelle Collins said, crossing her arms and looking over her shoulder. Behind her, across the stubble of a fresh-mowed field, the two-story house, the silos, barns, pens, machinery, even the windmill, all said this was farm country.
But the fields said it even more.
Here in the heart of South Dakota the plains are flat and the sky runs forever. The soil is fertile but the work is hard. Here, as on family farms everywhere, life is land and workโand a clinging hope that maybe there will be enough profit to keep things going one more year.
Marcyโs parents, Al and Tonnie, donโt actually own the farm. They rent it. But theyโve lived here long enough to raise a string of children. Debra, Connie, and Dan live in the area. David, 23, is still on the farm, along with Noah and T.J., Marcyโs four-year-old twin nephews. Al and Tonnie are their legal guardians.
Before the nephews came, Marcy was the youngest. Now they seem like little brothers, some days so noisy and into everything that Marcy thinks sheโll be glad to get away from them when, in a few weeks, she leaves for college.
College. Itโs a place of changes, Marcy knows. Sheโs been thinking a lot lately, wondering exactly what it is sheโs leaving behind:
The smallness. Gettysburg (say GET-iss-burg, not get-EES-burg), a hometown more like a cluster of farms. Gettysburg High, with a student body of 198, โif you count the junior high kids on the third floor.โ The Gettysburg Branch and its Young Women program, much of which has beenโyou guessed itโMarcy Collins.
Chores and schedules. โYou live on a farm, you work,โ Marcy explains. She can drive a tractor, operate machinery, grind feed for the pigs. She helps with planting, calving, cutting, harvesting. She gets up at 5:00 A.M. to be ready for seminary, goes to school, then comes home to work at whatever Dad needs help with. Or whatever Mom needs help with. Oh yes, and thereโs homework too. And sleep.
But as Marcy makes her list, it also fills with pleasant things:
An LDS neighbor. Lori Thompson, only a year younger, lives a mile down the dirt road. Lori comes up each summer from Denton, Texas, to farm with her parents. โAnd what a relief just to be able to talk to another Mormon girl my own age,โ about things like standards and testimony and spirituality. Together Marcy and Lori were responsible for their branchโs training for girlsโ camp, the two of them in charge of five others. All seven certified.
A non-LDS neighbor. Sarah is learning about the Church.
Prayer. The strength of kneeling with her family.
Privacy. The sanctuary of her room, where on her own she can let off steam or study scriptures. She hangs her picture of the Savior there.
Space. The open freedom of the fields, and the beauty of a South Dakota sunset.
It is one year later. Marcy is standing in a field again. Well, not really. Sheโs standing in a parking lot.
โThis is home,โ she says, crossing her arms and looking over her shoulder. Behind her, the Manwaring Center, the library, the dorms, the administration building, all say this is Ricks College, Rexburg, Idaho.
But her classes say it even more.
Go with Marcy to the third floor of the Spori Building and watch her draw. It isnโt just a matter of sketching. Itโs two and a half hours of analyzingโstructure, form, shading, foreshortening. It is listening, observing, imitating as the teacher shows examples from the masters.
Or go to the ceramics lab in the Kirkham Building, where Marcy takes a lump of clay, kneads it to remove the air, then โthrowsโ it, centering it carefully on a wheel, opening it with her thumbs, smoothing it with her fingers, pulling with equal pressure inward, outward, upward. Then, just as itโs taking the form of a vase, Marcy groans. Her fingers have slipped, and the clay twists, ill-shapen and uneven. She cuts it free, kneads it again, and starts over.
This is learning of a fundamental kind, learning by doing. Successes outweigh failures only after hours, weeks, and months. But itโs a learning Marcy is coming to understand.
A year can make a lot of difference. As Marcy stands in the parking lot she makes a list of what sheโs found here:
Growth. An understanding of new places, new people, and roommates from as far away as England. A student body of thousands, but a ward where everyone is about her age, and activities and opportunities abound. โThe challenge here,โ she says, โis to not take the Church for granted.โ
Family. The joy of letters from home. โNoah and T. J. are growing fast,โ she says. โI really miss them.โ
Chores and schedules. Someone has to shop and clean and cook. Someone has to do the laundry. And the schoolwork! โSome days it seems like I live in the labs,โ Marcy says. Some days she does.
But Marcy canโt help but add to her list, this time a list of lessons:
Independence. โIโve learned to rely on myself,โ she says. โIn college you have to. Thereโs a law of the harvest in school, too. You do good work, you get good grades.โ
Priorities. No matter where you are, turn your life to things that matter. If youโre not with your family, have prayer with your roommates. If you donโt have the sanctuary of a private room, study your scriptures in the hall.
Friends. People who matter will always matter. Sarah and Marcy are still in touch, Loriโs back in Texas, and Marcyโs found a new friend, fellow art student Diedra Newville from Fort Myers, Florida, whose sense of adventure keeps them both from getting overwhelmed by pressure. Whatโs more, the people who matter most, Marcyโs parents, her brothers, her sisters, are still in the background cheering.
Not long ago, Marcelle Collins got word from her parents that the farm had been sold. Theyโve moved to another small town, Faith, South Dakota, where her dad was born. A lot of people might say Marcy canโt go home now. The home in Gettysburg belongs to someone new.
But Marcy knows how to be at home wherever she is. And thatโs a lesson more profound than she may realize. Long before she left South Dakota, she left another place, a place she may have been nervous to leave. But she trusted her Father, and so began her journey.
And someday, if she continues to turn toward the things that matter mostโthings like faith, obedience, and honestyโsheโll return to hear her Father say, โwell done.โ Maybe at that moment, sheโll cross her arms, look over her shoulder, and say, โThis is home.โ
But the fields said it even more.
Here in the heart of South Dakota the plains are flat and the sky runs forever. The soil is fertile but the work is hard. Here, as on family farms everywhere, life is land and workโand a clinging hope that maybe there will be enough profit to keep things going one more year.
Marcyโs parents, Al and Tonnie, donโt actually own the farm. They rent it. But theyโve lived here long enough to raise a string of children. Debra, Connie, and Dan live in the area. David, 23, is still on the farm, along with Noah and T.J., Marcyโs four-year-old twin nephews. Al and Tonnie are their legal guardians.
Before the nephews came, Marcy was the youngest. Now they seem like little brothers, some days so noisy and into everything that Marcy thinks sheโll be glad to get away from them when, in a few weeks, she leaves for college.
College. Itโs a place of changes, Marcy knows. Sheโs been thinking a lot lately, wondering exactly what it is sheโs leaving behind:
The smallness. Gettysburg (say GET-iss-burg, not get-EES-burg), a hometown more like a cluster of farms. Gettysburg High, with a student body of 198, โif you count the junior high kids on the third floor.โ The Gettysburg Branch and its Young Women program, much of which has beenโyou guessed itโMarcy Collins.
Chores and schedules. โYou live on a farm, you work,โ Marcy explains. She can drive a tractor, operate machinery, grind feed for the pigs. She helps with planting, calving, cutting, harvesting. She gets up at 5:00 A.M. to be ready for seminary, goes to school, then comes home to work at whatever Dad needs help with. Or whatever Mom needs help with. Oh yes, and thereโs homework too. And sleep.
But as Marcy makes her list, it also fills with pleasant things:
An LDS neighbor. Lori Thompson, only a year younger, lives a mile down the dirt road. Lori comes up each summer from Denton, Texas, to farm with her parents. โAnd what a relief just to be able to talk to another Mormon girl my own age,โ about things like standards and testimony and spirituality. Together Marcy and Lori were responsible for their branchโs training for girlsโ camp, the two of them in charge of five others. All seven certified.
A non-LDS neighbor. Sarah is learning about the Church.
Prayer. The strength of kneeling with her family.
Privacy. The sanctuary of her room, where on her own she can let off steam or study scriptures. She hangs her picture of the Savior there.
Space. The open freedom of the fields, and the beauty of a South Dakota sunset.
It is one year later. Marcy is standing in a field again. Well, not really. Sheโs standing in a parking lot.
โThis is home,โ she says, crossing her arms and looking over her shoulder. Behind her, the Manwaring Center, the library, the dorms, the administration building, all say this is Ricks College, Rexburg, Idaho.
But her classes say it even more.
Go with Marcy to the third floor of the Spori Building and watch her draw. It isnโt just a matter of sketching. Itโs two and a half hours of analyzingโstructure, form, shading, foreshortening. It is listening, observing, imitating as the teacher shows examples from the masters.
Or go to the ceramics lab in the Kirkham Building, where Marcy takes a lump of clay, kneads it to remove the air, then โthrowsโ it, centering it carefully on a wheel, opening it with her thumbs, smoothing it with her fingers, pulling with equal pressure inward, outward, upward. Then, just as itโs taking the form of a vase, Marcy groans. Her fingers have slipped, and the clay twists, ill-shapen and uneven. She cuts it free, kneads it again, and starts over.
This is learning of a fundamental kind, learning by doing. Successes outweigh failures only after hours, weeks, and months. But itโs a learning Marcy is coming to understand.
A year can make a lot of difference. As Marcy stands in the parking lot she makes a list of what sheโs found here:
Growth. An understanding of new places, new people, and roommates from as far away as England. A student body of thousands, but a ward where everyone is about her age, and activities and opportunities abound. โThe challenge here,โ she says, โis to not take the Church for granted.โ
Family. The joy of letters from home. โNoah and T. J. are growing fast,โ she says. โI really miss them.โ
Chores and schedules. Someone has to shop and clean and cook. Someone has to do the laundry. And the schoolwork! โSome days it seems like I live in the labs,โ Marcy says. Some days she does.
But Marcy canโt help but add to her list, this time a list of lessons:
Independence. โIโve learned to rely on myself,โ she says. โIn college you have to. Thereโs a law of the harvest in school, too. You do good work, you get good grades.โ
Priorities. No matter where you are, turn your life to things that matter. If youโre not with your family, have prayer with your roommates. If you donโt have the sanctuary of a private room, study your scriptures in the hall.
Friends. People who matter will always matter. Sarah and Marcy are still in touch, Loriโs back in Texas, and Marcyโs found a new friend, fellow art student Diedra Newville from Fort Myers, Florida, whose sense of adventure keeps them both from getting overwhelmed by pressure. Whatโs more, the people who matter most, Marcyโs parents, her brothers, her sisters, are still in the background cheering.
Not long ago, Marcelle Collins got word from her parents that the farm had been sold. Theyโve moved to another small town, Faith, South Dakota, where her dad was born. A lot of people might say Marcy canโt go home now. The home in Gettysburg belongs to someone new.
But Marcy knows how to be at home wherever she is. And thatโs a lesson more profound than she may realize. Long before she left South Dakota, she left another place, a place she may have been nervous to leave. But she trusted her Father, and so began her journey.
And someday, if she continues to turn toward the things that matter mostโthings like faith, obedience, and honestyโsheโll return to hear her Father say, โwell done.โ Maybe at that moment, sheโll cross her arms, look over her shoulder, and say, โThis is home.โ
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๐ค Young Adults
๐ค Parents
๐ค Children
๐ค Friends
๐ค Church Members (General)
Adversity
Education
Faith
Family
Friendship
Honesty
Hope
Missionary Work
Obedience
Prayer
Self-Reliance
Testimony
Young Women
Mamaโs Refrigerator
After the motherโs burial, the narratorโwho had not seen their father cry beforeโwitnessed him weeping before the familyโs old refrigerator. The fridge was covered with mementos of the motherโs life, prompting his grief and highlighting how it held the familyโs shared memories.
I donโt remember seeing my father cry during my motherโs funeral or at any other time during her last few days. He seemed to be the one in charge of consoling everyone else. But one night after the burial, I saw my father weep in front of our old refrigerator, as he looked at all that Mama had put there. The refrigerator was covered with mementos of my motherโs life.
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๐ค Parents
๐ค Children
Death
Family
Grief
Sharing Christmas
Sarah's parents invite her to donate toys to a children's home for Christmas. She struggles to give up her stuffed cow, Moo-Moo, but chooses to donate it. At the home, a little girl joyfully receives Moo-Moo, and Sarah feels happy, realizing service brings Christlike joy. She decides she wants to donate more toys next year.
Sarah sat in her room playing with her dolls. She was changing them into their best clothes for a Christmas party she was hosting. Everyone was invited: Mr. Snuggles, the teddy bear; Chocolate and Caramel, the raccoon twins; Lady Juniper, the ladybug; and many of their friends.
As Sarah began to introduce her guests to each other, Mom walked into the room.
โSarah, Dad and I were talking about what service we could do this Christmas. We thought we could give gifts to the childrenโs home down the road.โ
โOK,โ Sarah said.
โWe were wondering if you would like to donate some of your toys,โ Mom said. โI know that it would mean a lot to the children. They probably wonโt be getting many new toys for Christmas.โ
โBut I donโt want to get rid of my toys! I love them all!โ Sarah said.
โWhat about this stuffed cow?โ Mom asked.
โNot Moo-Moo!โ
โIโve never seen you play with her. Are you sure you want to keep her?โ
โWhat if I decide I want to play with her after I give her away? Then I wonโt have her anymore!โ Sarah said.
โThe purpose of serving is to think about the needs of others before yourself,โ Mom said. โWhen you make a sacrifice to help someone else, you are becoming more like Jesus Christ.โ
โI am?โ Sarah asked. โHow?โ
โWhat did Jesus do when He was on the earth?โ
โHe helped people.โ
โRight! He spent His life serving others,โ Mom said.
โSo if I give away something important to me to help others, I am being like Jesus?โ Sarah asked.
โExactly,โ Mom said.
Sarah knew Mom was right, but she was still a little nervous about giving up Moo-Moo.
That weekend, Sarah and Mom and Dad went to the childrenโs home with a big bag of gifts. As the children opened their presents, their smiles grew bigger and bigger.
One little girl picked up a box wrapped in shiny red paper. Sarah watched as the girl carefully unwrapped the present. Inside the box was the stuffed cow.
โHer name is Moo-Moo,โ Sarah said to the girl. โAnd she loves parties.โ
A smile spread across the face of the little girl. She hugged Moo-Moo tight and looked up at Sarah. โThank you,โ she said. โIโve never had my own stuffed animal before.โ The girl skipped away with her new toy.
Sarah felt happy. She imagined Jesus must have felt happy too when He helped people.
โI want to come back next Christmas,โ Sarah said as she and her parents left the childrenโs home. โI think I have more toys I can give away next year.โ
As Sarah began to introduce her guests to each other, Mom walked into the room.
โSarah, Dad and I were talking about what service we could do this Christmas. We thought we could give gifts to the childrenโs home down the road.โ
โOK,โ Sarah said.
โWe were wondering if you would like to donate some of your toys,โ Mom said. โI know that it would mean a lot to the children. They probably wonโt be getting many new toys for Christmas.โ
โBut I donโt want to get rid of my toys! I love them all!โ Sarah said.
โWhat about this stuffed cow?โ Mom asked.
โNot Moo-Moo!โ
โIโve never seen you play with her. Are you sure you want to keep her?โ
โWhat if I decide I want to play with her after I give her away? Then I wonโt have her anymore!โ Sarah said.
โThe purpose of serving is to think about the needs of others before yourself,โ Mom said. โWhen you make a sacrifice to help someone else, you are becoming more like Jesus Christ.โ
โI am?โ Sarah asked. โHow?โ
โWhat did Jesus do when He was on the earth?โ
โHe helped people.โ
โRight! He spent His life serving others,โ Mom said.
โSo if I give away something important to me to help others, I am being like Jesus?โ Sarah asked.
โExactly,โ Mom said.
Sarah knew Mom was right, but she was still a little nervous about giving up Moo-Moo.
That weekend, Sarah and Mom and Dad went to the childrenโs home with a big bag of gifts. As the children opened their presents, their smiles grew bigger and bigger.
One little girl picked up a box wrapped in shiny red paper. Sarah watched as the girl carefully unwrapped the present. Inside the box was the stuffed cow.
โHer name is Moo-Moo,โ Sarah said to the girl. โAnd she loves parties.โ
A smile spread across the face of the little girl. She hugged Moo-Moo tight and looked up at Sarah. โThank you,โ she said. โIโve never had my own stuffed animal before.โ The girl skipped away with her new toy.
Sarah felt happy. She imagined Jesus must have felt happy too when He helped people.
โI want to come back next Christmas,โ Sarah said as she and her parents left the childrenโs home. โI think I have more toys I can give away next year.โ
Read more โ
๐ค Children
๐ค Parents
Charity
Children
Christmas
Family
Jesus Christ
Kindness
Parenting
Sacrifice
Service
โOf You It Is Required to Forgiveโ
President Joseph F. Smith faced widespread ridicule and harsh public criticism. His response was to grant his critics freedom to speak and to ignore their attacks, continuing to lead the Church positively. In time, even some who had mocked him wrote tributes at his death. The account illustrates the power of forgiveness and focusing on constructive work.
Joseph F. Smith presided over the Church at a time of great bitterness toward our people. He was the target of vile accusations, of a veritable drumbeat of criticism by editorial writers even in this community. He was lampooned, cartooned, and ridiculed. Listen to his response to those who made sport of demeaning him: โLet them alone. Let them go. Give them the liberty of speech they want. Let them tell their own story and write their own doom.โ (Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed., Salt Like City: Deseret Book Co., 1939, p. 339.) And then with an outreaching spirit of forgiving and forgetting, he went ahead with the great and positive work of leading the Church forward to new growth and remarkable accomplishments. At the time of his death, many of those who had ridiculed him wrote tributes of praise concerning him.
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๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Other
Adversity
Apostle
Endure to the End
Forgiveness
One Man Making Life Better for the People of Kiribati
Eritai works on a national desalination project funded through collaboration between the Church, the Kiribati government, and SUEZ. Years later, his former missionary mentors returned as project managers, bringing their relationship full circle.
He is also working on a desalination project which is funded by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints working in collaboration with the government of Kiribati and the SUEZ Group.
โThe mentorship provided by Elder and Sister Brock came full circle, as some years later they became project managers for the national desalination project,โ says Ruth Cross, welfare and self-reliance manager for the Church in Kiribati and local coordinator for the desalination project.
โThe mentorship provided by Elder and Sister Brock came full circle, as some years later they became project managers for the national desalination project,โ says Ruth Cross, welfare and self-reliance manager for the Church in Kiribati and local coordinator for the desalination project.
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๐ค Missionaries
๐ค Church Members (General)
Charity
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Employment
Self-Reliance
Service
Caring Caravan to Mexico
Debbie Webb noticed a little boy sitting stiff and alone on a windowsill when the visitors arrived. She held him, and he relaxed and engaged, but when she set him back, he stiffened again. The moment showed the transforming effect of loving attention.
Debbie Webb comments: โThey just wanted us to hold them and give love. This one little boy was sitting stiffly in the windowsill all alone when everyone came in. Then I held him and he started acting like a person. When it was time to leave, we put him back in the windowsill and he stiffened up again.โ
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๐ค Youth
๐ค Children
Children
Kindness
Love
Ministering
Service
Friend to Friend
At about eight years old, Sister Grassli practiced and gave a Sunday School talk about pre-earth life. Hearing that Satan vowed to get Godโs children, she firmly decided, โHeโs not going to get me.โ That determination remained with her.
When Sister Grassli was about eight years old, she was asked to give a talk in Sunday School. She practiced and practiced her talk about pre-earth life. โI talked about how Jesus Christ and Satan presented their plans and about how Christโs plan was chosen. Satan got mad and said, โIโll get them!โ I thought at the time, Well, heโs not going to get me! Even now I remember that decision. That feeling of determination that I had as an eight-year-old girl has stuck with me.
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๐ค Children
Agency and Accountability
Children
Foreordination
Plan of Salvation
Teaching the Gospel
A girl paused her movie to join her dad in visiting her grandmother at a hospice. She gently played peek-a-boo to make her grandmother smile and laugh softly. On the way home, she felt warm in her heart about what she had done.
One Saturday I was watching a movie at home when my dad said he was going to visit grandma at the hospice. I called to my dad, โWait for me, I want to come!โ So off we went. We went to Grandma Billieโs room, and she was in bed. She was tired. Dad and I talked with her. Every time she opened her eyes I would say, โPeek-a-boo!โ and make her laugh softly. I felt as if her soul and my soul started to giggle to themselves. On the way home, I felt warm in my heart for what I did.
Tiara H., age 10, Arizona
Tiara H., age 10, Arizona
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๐ค Parents
๐ค Children
๐ค Other
Children
Death
Family
Grief
Kindness
Love
Ministering
Be Not Moved!
The speaker returned to her old high school for a stake conference and was flooded with memories of insecurity and a desire to fit in. She stood on the same stage where she once served as a student officer, saw former classmates, and this time bore testimony of Jesus Christ. The experience contrasted her past feelings with her present confidence to witness of the Savior.
Several weeks ago I returned to my old high school for the first time in years. I was visiting a stake conference that was being held in the schoolโs auditorium. As I walked down the halls, a flood of memories began to pour into my mind. I remembered exactly how I felt when I attended high school as a young womanโinsecure, unsure of myself, self-conscious, and so, so desirous to fit in. I went into the auditorium. Again a flood of memories came to mind. I was familiar with every detail of that auditorium. Only one thing had changedโme.
That day I had the opportunity to stand on the stage as I had done in high school many times as a student officer. I even saw some of my former classmates in the audienceโsome I had dated! But this time, instead of conducting an assembly, I had the privilegeโthere in my high school auditoriumโto โstand as a witnessโ and bear my testimony of our Savior, Jesus Christ.
That day I had the opportunity to stand on the stage as I had done in high school many times as a student officer. I even saw some of my former classmates in the audienceโsome I had dated! But this time, instead of conducting an assembly, I had the privilegeโthere in my high school auditoriumโto โstand as a witnessโ and bear my testimony of our Savior, Jesus Christ.
Read more โ
๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Other
Adversity
Courage
Faith
Jesus Christ
Testimony
To Stay or Obey?
As a 16-year-old, the author was deeply impressed by missionaries who taught that obeying God brings blessings and chose to be baptized. Eight months later, the author's youngest sibling was also baptized.
I can still remember the words of the missionaries who taught me: โWhatever God commands, do it, and blessings will follow.โ These words made a deep impression in my heart. I was baptized at the age of 16, the only member of the Church in my family. Eight months later, I had the blessing of seeing my youngest sibling baptized into the Church.
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๐ค Missionaries
๐ค Youth
๐ค Other
Baptism
Conversion
Family
Missionary Work
Obedience
Testimony
Couple Missionaries:
In 1963, Elder Haight, as mission president in Scotland, saw branches of new converts needed seasoned Church experience. He wrote retired friends in California, inviting them to serve; seven couples applied. After requests were made through proper channels, those couples were assigned to the Scottish Mission and proved to be a wonderful resource.
Let me answer from my own experience. In 1963 I was called to preside over the Scottish Mission. When I arrived, I made a tour of all the branches and could see that the members, many of whom were new converts, were still learning the patterns of the gospel and why we do things the way we do. I realized that what these branches needed was the example of members who were well seasoned in Church experienceโpriesthood and Relief Society knowledge and operating procedures. I thought of the vast numbers of healthy retired people sitting in rocking chairs on sunny patios when they still had many years of productivity in them. I could visualize how successful we could be in Scotland if we had some of those experienced retired couples in some of our branches. What a help they would be!
So I wrote to some of our retired friends in California, encouraging them to come on a mission and suggesting that they indicate on their missionary applications that they would enjoy serving in Scotland. Seven couples responded to my encouragement.
In addition, as a mission president I submitted my request to the Missionary Department for couple missionaries. Since assignments for missionary service are made by inspiration through the Brethren, there was no guarantee that these couples from California would be able to serve with me. However, to our mutual joy, these seven couples were assigned to the Scottish Mission, and we put them to work in these branches. Their influence was just as successful as I had hoped it would be. What a wonderful resource they were!
So I wrote to some of our retired friends in California, encouraging them to come on a mission and suggesting that they indicate on their missionary applications that they would enjoy serving in Scotland. Seven couples responded to my encouragement.
In addition, as a mission president I submitted my request to the Missionary Department for couple missionaries. Since assignments for missionary service are made by inspiration through the Brethren, there was no guarantee that these couples from California would be able to serve with me. However, to our mutual joy, these seven couples were assigned to the Scottish Mission, and we put them to work in these branches. Their influence was just as successful as I had hoped it would be. What a wonderful resource they were!
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๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
๐ค Missionaries
๐ค Church Members (General)
Missionary Work
Priesthood
Relief Society
Service
Teaching the Gospel
The Easter Story
Skipping his motherโs funeral, the narrator went fishing, then returned home looking for his father. He found him sitting on the old Happy Rock and witnessed him cry for the first time. The moment deepened the narratorโs bitterness and questions about God.
The funeral was held on Tuesday morning. I didnโt go. I couldnโt stand to see them put her into the cold earth. Besides, I had been to LDS funerals before. Always they were so cheerful and positive, telling us to have faith in God and that things would be fine with the departed loved one. I wasnโt sure I even believed in God anymore. I went fishing in an effort to forget the pain I was feeling.
I arrived home as the sun was sinking in the evening sky. My fishing expedition had been a failure, and I badly wanted to speak to my father. Jason and Bronwyn were solemnly seated in the living room, but Dad was nowhere to be found. I went to look for him in the yard.
When I was a little boy, I had a pet dog called Bunyip. He was my best friend. We were inseparable. But one day Bunyip was bitten by a snake and died. I was shattered, and there was nothing my parents could do to console me. So my father went into one of the fields and painted a huge smiling face on a large granite boulder. He called it the Happy Rock. After that, whenever I felt sad, I would go to the Happy Rock, and my sorrows seemed to magically vanish.
It was here that I found my father, perched atop the boulder, its great, smiling face showing the strains of time. He looked pathetically vulnerable as he sat, gazing sadly at the retreating sunset. I quietly announced my presence. For a moment, he didnโt respond. Then a wistful smile briefly crossed his sun-browned face.
โI guess the old rock has lost its magic,โ he said. Then, for the first time in my life, I saw my father cry. Again I felt bitterness within. How could the Lord give us a Christmas gift like this?
I arrived home as the sun was sinking in the evening sky. My fishing expedition had been a failure, and I badly wanted to speak to my father. Jason and Bronwyn were solemnly seated in the living room, but Dad was nowhere to be found. I went to look for him in the yard.
When I was a little boy, I had a pet dog called Bunyip. He was my best friend. We were inseparable. But one day Bunyip was bitten by a snake and died. I was shattered, and there was nothing my parents could do to console me. So my father went into one of the fields and painted a huge smiling face on a large granite boulder. He called it the Happy Rock. After that, whenever I felt sad, I would go to the Happy Rock, and my sorrows seemed to magically vanish.
It was here that I found my father, perched atop the boulder, its great, smiling face showing the strains of time. He looked pathetically vulnerable as he sat, gazing sadly at the retreating sunset. I quietly announced my presence. For a moment, he didnโt respond. Then a wistful smile briefly crossed his sun-browned face.
โI guess the old rock has lost its magic,โ he said. Then, for the first time in my life, I saw my father cry. Again I felt bitterness within. How could the Lord give us a Christmas gift like this?
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๐ค Parents
๐ค Young Adults
๐ค Youth
Death
Doubt
Family
Grief
Parenting
Moving toward Brighter Days
A narrator describes flying out of an area filled with wildfire smoke. As the plane ascended, they broke through the haze into a clear, sunny sky and realized the sun and clean air had been there all along, though blocked by circumstances beyond their control.
Once I flew out of an area filled with smoke from a nearby wildfire. As the airplane took off, we broke through the ashy haze into a clear, sunny sky. I realized that the bright sun and clean air had been there all along, but my ability to enjoy them had been blocked by something out of my control. The wildfire was not my fault, but it had still affected my life.
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๐ค Other
Adversity
Gratitude
My Favorite Scripture
A teenage girl felt very alone during a difficult time. After reading Psalm 139:9โ10, she felt assured that God is always with her and wants to help. This changed how she prays; she now prays with trust that the Lord will comfort and care for her and her family.
Psalm 139:9โ10 I had been going through a rough time recently and felt very alone. But after reading this, I knew that God would always be with me. He loves me and wants to help me. Now when I pray, I pray with trust that the Lord will comfort and care for me and my family and that His โright hand shall hold me.โ
Katie W., 15, Washington, USA
Katie W., 15, Washington, USA
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๐ค Jesus Christ
๐ค Youth
Adversity
Bible
Faith
Peace
Prayer
โNo Other Gods before Meโ
As a missionary, the author awaited Elder Boyd K. Packerโs arrival at a meetinghouse. He sensed Elder Packer enter even before seeing him and felt a powerful spiritual presence, realizing what consecrated living can make of a person.
As a missionary I was privileged to meet a living Apostle, Elder Boyd K. Packer. All the missionaries were waiting for him at the meetinghouse. We were talking and excited. My back was to the door when Elder Packer arrived, but even without seeing him, I knew he had entered the room. He filled it with the same power and purity I felt at my motherโs side. It was as though he had stepped out of one of the scripture stories. I thought, This is what a lifetime of obedience and communion with God makes a man.
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๐ค Missionaries
๐ค General Authorities (Modern)
Apostle
Missionary Work
Obedience
Reverence