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  • Sabbath Day Light: Peace through Keeping God’s Commandments

    In church this past Sunday, we had our monthly Testimony Meeting. In these meetings, members of the congregation, who feel the Spirit prompt them, will come up to the pulpit and share their testimony of different aspects of the gospel of Jesus Christ. I always look forward to these meetings, and often share my testimony.

    In this particular meeting, there were three individuals, all from different backgrounds, who spoke a similar theme. One of the speakers was a 12-year-old girl, not yet a member of our church. She expressed sincere gratitude to the missionaries for teaching her the gospel, and for helping her turn her life around. She said she used to be “out of control,” but has now calmed down and starting doing the right things. She is so happy to be a part of our congregation.

    Another sister spoke of a close member of her family who had been making poor decisions for quite a while. Life was getting harder and harder for him. She had been praying for this person to have an experience where his eyes would be opened and he would realize he was on the wrong path. She said that her prayer had recently been answered. She is so grateful because now, this person she loves so dearly, has recognized that he has been missing God’s love in his life. He wants a relationship with his Father in Heaven again.

    The third person whose testimony struck me has been coming back been to church, where he had been gone a long time. As he spoke, his humility and honesty were inspiring. He expressed a desire to continue to turn his life around and get worthy again to return to the temple. He knows he has done some wrong things. He knows that he needs to change to be truly happy, and he is trying really hard to do so.

    Each of these people helped me see a theme, which is when we follow the commandments the Lord has set for us, we are at peace. We have hope, we feel love, and we see our true potential.
    In the Book of Mormon, the prophet Nephi said, “…And if it so be that the children of men keep the commandments of God he doth nourish them, and strengthen them, and provide means whereby they can accomplish the thing which he has commanded them… (1 Nephi 17:3).”

    In his mortal ministry, Jesus said,  “…I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me (John 14:6).”

    I know this to be true. You can read more about how members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints keep the commandments here: http://www.mormon.org/beliefs/commandments

  • Sabbath Day Light: In this there is safety. In this there is peace.

    The past two days I was truly spiritually fed.  My family and I watched four 2-hour sessions
    of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ General Conference. It was
    wonderful. The spirit was strong, and from the experience I have grown and have
    specific, loving instruction on how to better myself and help those around me.
    In an effort to help you see how priceless hearing the words
    of the Lord’s servants is, I would like to highlight some of my favorite talks
    from the conference.
    Saturday
    Morning Session – April 5, 2014
    1. Jeffrey R. Holland
    of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles:
    He is always such a powerful speaker,
    and this time was no different. He spoke of how there will be times in our
    lives when we are persecuted for our beliefs. He said it is worth it to be courageous
    and hold true. We will find safety and strength if we are righteous and have Christ-like
    love, which is the greatest need we have on this planet. My favorite part of
    his talk was when he boldly, and poignantly testified of priesthood keys and
    ordinances. He said he was more sure of their existence on the earth than he
    was sure he was standing before us, and that we were watching him speak. See below
    for a sample of his talk:
    2. Ronald Rasbund of
    the Presidency of the 70:
    He spoke of how sustaining our leaders is a
    privilege, and comes with a responsibility to share their burdens, and to be disciples of Christ. We are the Lord’s hands on the earth, and we must lift and
    serve others. We can get help to make divine decisions and love what God loves
    as we help others.
    3. Linda S. Reeves ,
    Second Counselor in the General Relief Society Presidency
    : She was
    incredibly bold and powerful as she spoke of the dangers of pornography as one
    of the worst problems facing families today. However, she offered wonderful
    guidance. She said not to be shocked and angry, or reject someone with a
    pornography problem. Through Christ, one struggling with this type of addiction
    can be made clean again and have his/her sorrows taken away. She also gave
    suggestions on how to prevent the desire to view pornography in our homes.
    She said to do daily scripture study, pray and do weekly family home evening,
    as well as talk of Christ and rejoice in Christ often. She testified that coupled
    with prayer, the Book of Mormon can strengthen family relationships.
    4. Henry B. Eyring,
    First Counselor in the First Presidency
    : He spoke of his great grandfather, Heinrich, and his conversion to the gospel, as well as the example Heinrich set for him, though
    he never met him. The thing President Eyring said that meant the most to me was to let the
    Lord be the leader of your family and things will work out.
    Saturday Afternoon
    Session – April 5, 2014
    1. Russell M. Nelson
    of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
    : The theme of his talk was to let our
    faith show. All truth comes from God, and we should not set aside any of it.
    Living our religions day by day, wherever we are, will bring divine guidance.
    God’s laws must ever be our standard, and we should look first to God and the
    scriptures for guidance. You can’t rise to the full stature of your integrity, or become all your true self can be, if you segment your life into compartments.
    “Even if everyone is doing it, wrong is never right.”

    2. Richard G. Scott
    of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
    : My favorite points from his talk are
    that we should serve the Lord first. He also said to sincerely love those we
    went to help so they can then gain confidence of God’s love. That really struck
    me – that through our love, others can feel God’s love.
    3. W. Craig Zwick of
    the 70
    : He spoke about communication with others, and how we should never
    let corrupt or abrasive words come out of our mouths. We should try to see other people’s perspectives. We should always be kind and civil, even when we disagree
    with someone. Also, being right is not that important. What is important is
    listening, having empathy and seeing through another’s eyes.
    4. Quentin L. Cook of
    the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
    : Elder Cook’s talk focused on hastening
    temple work and family history work. I loved hearing his enthusiasm as he said
    that there were only 12 temples 50 years ago, and now there are 142. Eighty
    five percent of our church membership lives within 200 miles of a temple. With
    the advances in technology, family history centers are now in our homes. The
    church is growing, and it is growing because it is true.
    Sunday
    Morning Session – April 6, 2014
    1. Dieter F.
    Uchtdorf, Second Counselor in the First Presidency
    : If I tried to tell you
    my favorite parts of this talk, I would quote the entire thing. I have never
    heard a more powerful talk on gratitude in my life. One quote is “Gratitude is
    a catalyst to all Christlike attributes.” Please watch this talk! It will change
    your life.

    2. Jean A. Stevens,
    First Counselor in the General Primary Presidency
    : She told a story that
    really strengthened my testimony. She said that one day she was driving and she
    saw a boy walking on the side of the road. She felt an impression to stop and
    help him, but then didn’t. She received a stronger prompting, and then went back and
    asked him if he needed help. He said he had been praying for someone to help
    him. She later told his perspective of the story in his own words, and he
    indicated that he had tried to walk home a long distance and just couldn’t. He
    prayed for someone to help him, and minutes later, Sister Stevens pulled up to
    him. She testified that God is aware of our situations and wants to
    bless us. He has a plan for us and wants to see us home again. God accomplishes His miracles one prayer at a time, one person at a time.
    3. David A. Bednar of
    the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles

    His talk used a metaphor of a truck in the snow that needed a load to give
    it enough traction to get unstuck and head safely home. The load represents our
    trials, our obligations, our sorrows. He said that happiness is not the absence
    of a load. He talked about how Christ will help us pull our load and be with us
    to the end as long as we make and keep sacred covenant with Him. Christ
    experienced all we will ever experience before us, so He has perfect empathy.
    There is always someone who knows what we are going through. This talk is
    definitely worth watching.
    4. Thomas S. Monson,
    President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:
      Our dear prophet reminded us that the
    greatest commandment is to love God, and the second to love one another. He
    said that we can’t fully love God without loving others, and we can’t fully
    love others without loving God. He counseled that as we recognize that we are
    all spirit children of God, and thus brothers and sisters, loving others gets
    easier. We will never regret being too kind. Love should be at the heart of
    family life. Blame keeps wounds open; only forgiveness heals. This man is a
    prophet of God. Please listen to his words.
    Sunday Afternoon
    Session – April 6, 2014
    1.  Boyd K. Packer, President of the Quorum of
    the Twelve Apostles
    :
    I have one quote I want to share that touched me deeply: “I
    know the Lord. I am His witness.” I believe him.
    2. L. Tom Perry of
    the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
    : I loved his talk. It was a profound
    reminder of the importance of following the Spirit, submitting our will to God’s,
    and keeping the commandments. I strongly recommend watching his talk.
    In the meantime, below are two of my favorite quotes from
    his talk:

                 

                 

    3. Lawrence Corbridge
    of the 70
    : Other than President Uchtdorf’s talk, this was my favorite. He
    spoke with great love for the Prophet Joseph Smith. Joseph, as a 14-year-old boy,
    was searching for truth. He wanted to know which church to join. I love how
    Elder Corbridge said, “In his haste to know, he was not hasty.” I felt the
    Spirit very strongly as he gave a long, yet not complete list, of the many
    truths we now know because of revelation given to Joseph Smith. Please, please,
    please watch this talk. If you have a desire to know more about my faith and
    about prophets of God, namely Joseph Smith, I promise you will be touched.

     4. D. Todd
    Christofferson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
    : His talk was the final
    talk before President Monson’s closing remarks, and I felt that was appropriate
    because his talk focused on the life, death, and resurrection of the Lord,
    Jesus Christ – He who we worship as our beloved Savior. It is a wonderful talk
    to get us in the right mood for Easter. I loved it when he said that many doubt
    or disbelieve that Christ was resurrected… and some know. I know that he knows,
    and I also know. We can know that Christ lives and He is our Savior. We do not
    need to see him to know.
    For those of you reading, I want to bear you my solemn testimony that Jesus Christ lives. He is our Savior. He, along with our Heavenly Father and the Holy Ghost, love us and want more than anything for us to be happy in this life and in the life to come. We have everything we need to be able to return to Heaven, and one of those ways is through living prophets. I know that Thomas S. Monson is the Lord’s prophet on the earth today. Please take the time to hear the words of the Lord’s servants. By their fruits ye shall know them, and their fruits truly lead to God.
  • Sabbath Day Light: A promise to receive answers

    My family is currently on vacation in Williamsburg, VA, so this Sunday morning we worshiped with fellow Latter-day Saints from the Jamestown area.

    At the beginning of our first meeting, a visiting local church leader gave us a promise. He promised that if this coming weekend, we watch all four sessions of General Conference, we will receive answers to all of the specific questions we currently have about our lives and our faith.

    For those of you who are not of my faith, you may be wondering what General Conference is. Well, every six months, in April and October, my church does a series of broadcasts from Salt Lake City, UT, to many countries around the world. In these broadcasts, which consists of five 2-hour sessions held over two days, we hear spiritual messages from the leaders of our church. Those who speak to us prayerfully choose what they will speak about, and their messages are meant to uplift, counsel and inform not only the members of the faith, but all the world.

    We believe that God still speaks to His children, and does so through living prophets. We believe that Thomas S. Monson, the President of our church, as well as his counselors, and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles are prophets, seers and revelators. They receive direction directly from God for the benefit of His people. One profound mission of the apostles and prophets is to teach and testify of Jesus Christ to the world.

    If you would like to listen to some of their poignant testimonies of Christ, you can view them at this link: Special Witnesses of Christ. You can also view their pictures and biographies here: Meet Today’s Prophets and Apostles.

    Throughout these two days we hear from these divinely-appointed prophets and apostles. We also hear from other leaders of our church, such as leaders of our women’s organization, called the Relief Society, and many others.

    I always look forward to General Conference. I do not watch much television, but this is better than television. It is life-changing. It leaves me, and everyone who watches it with a prayerful heart, with new hope, renewed purpose, and an overwhelming feeling of love from not only the prophet and other church leaders, but from our Father in Heaven, and His son, Jesus Christ.

    In this world, there is so much confusion, so much hate, so much darkness. We can always find light when we follow Jesus Christ. We know we are following Him as we heed the words of His servants. To read more about why prophets are so important, read here:  We Need Living Prophets.

    The promise my congregation heard on Sunday applies to everyone who has an open heart and wishes to find answers of peace, hope, and love. I want you to watch General Conference and receive the blessings millions of people receive already: Come Join Us for General Conference.

    I know with all my heart that God still speaks, and does so through living prophets, just as He did anciently. I know that our prayers are heard. I know that we can walk in light. I know that God loves all of us and wants each of us to live with Him again. He has provided the way through prayer, though scriptures, and through His servants, the prophets. Come, join with us. You will be changed for the better.

  • Sabbath Day Light: Forgiveness

    I love going to church each Sunday. LDS people attend church for three hours, and in those three hours, go to three different meetings. In each, we are spiritually nourished.

    Yesterday, I left church with an abundance of the Spirit in my heart. In our first meeting of the day, Sacrament Meeting, a brother in our congregation gave a talk about forgiveness. It was such a powerful message and has helped me tremendously.

    This brother talked about how Jesus Christ gave the commandment for us to forgive others:

    Luke 6:27-28 – But I say unto you which hear, Love your enemies, do good to them which hate you,

     28 Bless them that curse you, and pray for them which despitefully use you.

    Luke 6:37 –  Judge not, and ye shall not be judged: condemn not, and ye shall not be condemned: forgive, and ye shall be forgiven:

    Ephesians 4:32 – 32 And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.

    Doctrine and Covenants 64:10 –   I, the Lord, will forgive whom I will forgive, but of you it is required to forgive all men.

    Jesus does not say in any of these scriptures that we only need to forgive minor offenses and not forgive the major. We must forgive everyone for anything that they do to us.

    This isn’t easy. Often when someone does something to hurt us,  we talk badly about that person to our family and friends. We may hold a grudge while we wait for that person to apologize to us. Sometimes we even wish ill-will on those who have hurt us, and maybe even want to get even.

    These are natural human reactions, aren’t they? I am sure all of us have had some of these reactions when we have been wronged.

    Something I have learned from the Book of Mormon, however, is that what is natural is not what is of God:

    For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord, and becometh as a child, submissive, meek, humble, patient, full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father (Mosiah 3:7).

    If you think about it, the natural reactions and actions I mentioned above don’t really help us at all. Do any of us want to be angry, bitter people? Does it heal our hurt to hold a grudge or take revenge? What impression do I give of myself when I talk badly about someone or wish them pain and sadness? No, the natural way is not the right way.

    So, what can we do to make ourselves feel better when we are wronged?

    The prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Thomas S. Monson, said:

     “The spirit must be freed from tethers so strong and feelings never put to rest, so that the lift of life may give buoyancy to the soul. In many families, there are hurt feelings and a reluctance to forgive. It doesn’t really matter what the issue was. It cannot and should not be left to injure. Blame keeps wounds open. Only forgiveness heals.”

    I found this quote today and I love it. What he said can apply to anyone, not just families. Only forgiveness heals. But how can we possibly forgive someone who did something so bad to us? We didn’t deserve to be treated this way. This person maybe hasn’t even apologized.

    Well, I think in order to forgive someone, you have to open your heart. Give the benefit of the doubt because do you really know what is in someone’s heart? Do you know what that person has previously gone through? Is that person struggling right now? Does that person even know (s)he hurt you?

    In his talk, the brother talked about some examples of very heinous wrongs done to others, such as the murder of a child or other family member. In these cases it would be much harder to forgive, but I know all things are possible with the Lord’s help, for He descended below them all. He has felt all of our pains and sorrows, and He can help heal us from our suffering.

    Another realization that can help us forgive others would be recognizing we all have divine potential. We are all children of God. He loves all of us. He wants us all to return to Him, and has given us the ability to repent and to change. By pleading to our Heavenly Father in prayer and by studying our scriptures, we can come to this understanding.

    “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13).

    Our Heavenly Father’s and Savior’s love for us is pure and unconditional. In the scriptures, this love is called charity. It is something all of us must develop in order to truly be like Christ.

    Marvin J Ashton, a former apostle in the LDS church, said:

    “Perhaps the
    greatest charity comes when we are kind to each other, when we don’t judge or
    categorize someone else, when we simply give each other the benefit of the
    doubt or remain quiet. Charity is accepting someone’s differences, weaknesses,
    and shortcomings; having patience with someone who has let us down; or
    resisting the impulse to become offended when someone doesn’t handle something
    the way we might have hoped. Charity is refusing to take advantage of another’s
    weakness and being willing to forgive someone who has hurt us. Charity is
    expecting the best of each other” (in Conference Report, Apr. 1992, 24; or
    Ensign, May 1992, 18–19).

    I know I want to follow Christ and keep His commandments. Thus, I must develop this charity in myself. Elder Ashton further explained that “real
    charity is not something you give away; it is something that you acquire and
    make a part of yourself. And when the virtue of charity becomes implanted in
    your heart, you are never the same again. It makes the thought of [putting
    others down] repulsive.”

    I have grown up learning all of these beautiful truths. I have always known the importance of forgiveness. Why, then, did this talk about forgiveness touch me so?

    It is because as he spoke, the image of a person, the only person who I have never been able to forgive, flooded to my mind. I will not mention what she did, but even nine years later, I still had resentful feelings towards her. She has probably forgotten all about me, and probably never thinks about what she did. However, for years the wrongs she did to me always stuck with me. I knew I was supposed to forgive her, but it just wasn’t a desire I had. I didn’t think she deserved forgiveness.

    After hearing this talk, however, I finally had a desire to forgive her. Something I have always known took its place in my heart. And just like that, I was able to forgive her. I thank my Heavenly Father for touching my heart while listening to this talk on forgiveness. I pray that I will more fully have charity in my heart for all those I will know in my life.