Sunday, October 9, 2011

Book of Mormon

Today was Fast and Testimony meeting. For those of you reading not of the LDS faith every month we set aside the first Sunday of the month to help each other and learn from one another by getting up and bearing our testimonies of Christ and of this gospel to each other. Today I bore my testimony for the first time in 5 years! I feel very accomplished.

I wanted to bear my testimony here about the Book of Mormon.
Three years ago one of my best friends was on his mission in Washington, D.C. He sent me a letter that at the time I didn't put much thought into. I found this letter a few weeks back as I was trying to make a big decision in my life. It reads:
"READ THE BOOK OF MORMON. I promise you that as you read with a sincere heart it will become harder to put the book down than it ever was to pick it up. It can answer anything. Your hearts greatest desires. As you do this life will begin to be a little easier. Nothing has changed except your view and your understanding. "
I have since read the Book of Mormon. It has answered all my questions, even the ones I didn't know I had been asking. I have come to know my Savior, Jesus Christ. He is my best friend.
I have heard someone say once before it is a book written by God or it is a book written by the Devil there is no middle ground with the Book of Mormon.
To know of the truthfullness of this book is to know that I am a daughter of God. It is knowing that there is a plan for me that is bigger than my understanding. It is knowing that I always have a friend and a compainion who understands. It is knowing that God loves me.
"It is a tangible thing that can be handled, that can be read, that can be tested. It carries within its covers a promise of its devine origin. Millions now have put it ot the test and found it to be a true and sacred record." President Gordon B Hinckley 
I accepted the challenge to read the Book of Mormon and to find out for myself if it was true. I know that it is.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Looking for the Good

This was the First Presidency message from the March 2011 issue of the Ensign. I felt it was a good article to start out this blog with for several reasons. If we are looking for the bad we will find it. Anyone can read this blog, and some will read it looking for any reason to critize. Or you can read it not expecting anything and accept it for what it is. It doesn't have to be good but it doesn't have to be bad either.

Looking for the Good


Dieter F. Uchtdorf President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
While looking for a new home, a young Latter-day Saint couple talked to potential neighbors about the neighborhood and the schools in the area.

One woman they spoke to said of the school her children were attending: “This is the most incredible place! The principal is a wonderful and good man; the teachers are well qualified, kind, and friendly. I am so pleased that our children can attend this wonderful school. You’ll love it here!”

A different woman said of her children’s school: “It’s a terrible place. The principal is self-absorbed; the teachers are unqualified, rude, and unfriendly. If I could afford to move out of this area, I’d do it in a heartbeat!”

The interesting thing was that both women were speaking about the same principal, the same teachers, and the same school.

Have you ever noticed that people can usually find whatever they are looking for? Look hard enough, and you can discover both good and bad in almost anyone and anything. People have done the same with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints since its beginning. Those who look for the good will find a kind and compassionate people—a people who love the Lord and desire to serve Him and bless the lives of their fellowman. But it is also true that those who look for the bad will certainly find things that are not so ideal.

Unfortunately, at times this happens even within the Church. There is no end to the creativity, ingenuity, and tenacity of those who look for reasons to criticize. They cannot seem to release their grip on grudges. They gossip and find fault with others. They nurse wounds for decades, taking every opportunity to tear down and demean others. This is not pleasing to the Lord, “for where envying and strife is, there is confusion and every evil work” (James 3:16).

President George Q. Cannon (1827–1901) knew President Brigham Young (1801–77) well, working closely with him for many years, both as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and as his counselor in the First Presidency. After the death of President Young, President Cannon wrote in his journal: “I never criticized or found fault with [Brigham Young’s] conduct, his counsel or his teachings at any time in my heart, much less in my words or actions. This is a pleasure to me now. The thought that ever was with me was: If I criticize or find fault with, or judge Brother Brigham, how far shall I go; if I commence, where shall I stop? I dared not to trust myself in such a course. I knew that apostasy frequently resulted from the indulgence of the spirit of criticizing and faultfinding. Others, of greater strength, wisdom and experience than myself, might do many things and escape evil consequences which I dare not do.”1

President Cannon’s powerful counsel is something we members of the Church should consider with great care. The word of God admonishes the followers of Christ to be “pure, … peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.” For those who make peace, “the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace” (James 3:17, 18).

We have a choice. We can seek for the bad in others. Or we can make peace and work to extend to others the understanding, fairness, and forgiveness we so desperately desire for ourselves. It is our choice; for whatever we seek, that we will certainly find.