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Who Are Your Friends?

Responding to an 'unknown trouble' call, the officer entered a dilapidated home and found a distraught young girl on the stairs. Inside, he discovered a young man dead from Russian roulette amid signs of drugs and alcohol, with the partygoers having fled. The tragedy underscored that supposed friends abandoned the scene, leaving only the victim’s sister behind.
I remember a cold winter evening as I was on radio car patrol on the east side of Salt Lake. Suddenly the silence was broken by the beep, beep, beep of an emergency radio call. β€œCar 16,” came the dispatcher’s voice. β€œSuch and such an address, 9–40.” Nine-forty was a police code meaning unknown trouble. It might be a cat in a tree, family fight, lost child, or even a homicide. Calls like this were always tense because you just didn’t know what to expect.
I arrived at the address, an old two-story home surrounded by a rickety picket fence. I made my way toward the front porch along a broken and weed-choked sidewalk. The paint was peeling off the house, and it looked like it could have been the scene for a good Halloween movie. I knocked on the door, and as I did, it came partially ajar. There was no sound. I pushed the door open a little wider and cautiously poked my head inside. β€œHello. Did anyone here call the police?” No answer. I opened the door wider and stepped inside.
I found myself in a small vestibule, no more than four feet square. It was nearly dark inside and smelled of a strange and musty odor. To my left was a narrow and steep stairway going to the second floor. β€œHello,” I called again. β€œIs anybody there?” This time I heard a sound. It wasn’t much of a sound, just a quiet sound like a sob. The beam of my flashlight cut through the gloom as I pointed it up the stairway toward the sound.
There, huddled miserably on the bare wooden stair, was a young girl. She was barefoot and poorly dressed, with long, straggly hair. Her eyes were red, and I could see she had been crying hard. Her breath came in gasps, and I inquired again concerning the call for help. β€œDid you call the police?” All she could do was sob and point through the open doorway at the top of the stairs.
I made my way past the girl and entered into a scene of true desolation and tragedy. The room was small. No carpet covered the bare wooden floor. It was littered with the obvious signs of drugs and alcohol. Empty beer cans were strewn about, and evidence of marijuana was everywhere. Lying in the center of the floor was a young man. A dark pool of blood surrounded his head, and near his lifeless fingers lay a small, shiny revolver. I was heartsick as I called for assistance and began the investigation of a terrible tragedy.
I share this experience to emphasize again the fickle nature of the friends that Satan might send to tempt you to take part in such parties as these. We learned from our investigation that there had been 20 to 30 young people at the party. The gun was a plaything, and a game of Russian roulette seemed exciting to those using drugs and alcohol. No one expected to be hurt, yet tragedy struck and a young man’s life was lost. No friends stayed behind to help. No friends even did anything to comfort the one who did stayβ€”the sister of the poor dead boy.
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Young Adults πŸ‘€ Other
Addiction Agency and Accountability Death Friendship Grief Temptation Word of Wisdom

Pacific Artists Selected for International Art Competition

As a high school student in Sydney, Reena Naidu discovered her artistic gift while completing a self-portrait assignment. After reading a Church talk about developing talents, she felt inspired to improve and pursued formal training at the National Art School, later earning a master’s degree.
Originally from Fiji, Reena Naidu’s family moved to Sydney, Australia, when she was young.
She discovered her gift for art in high school when an assignment required her to submit a self-portrait. β€œAt about the same time, I read a Church talk about developing our talents and I felt inspired to develop my artistic skills,” Reena says.
She followed that inspiration to the National Art School in Dalinghurst, Sydney, where she earned a master’s in fine arts. Today she is a manager for an art supplies company where she helps others select the right materials for their art projects.
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πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Youth
Education Employment Self-Reliance

Book Reviews

A classroom wonders if the biggest pumpkin has the most seeds. Through a messy experiment, the students discover that size may not predict seed count.
How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin? by Margaret McNamara, illustrated by G. Brian Karas. The biggest pumpkin always has the most seeds, right? Maybe not. Find out what Mr. Tiffin’s class discovers in their messy experiment.
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πŸ‘€ Children πŸ‘€ Other
Children Education

Learning to Feel God’s Love for Me

As a freshman in Relief Society, she heard a sister describe writing down how God felt about her. At home she tried to do the same, but after 10 minutes she couldn’t write anything and burst into tears, feeling like a fraud and an exception to God's love.
My freshman year at university, I was sitting in Relief Society when someone shared an experience where she felt impressed to write down how she thought God felt about her.
This struck me.
When I got home, I felt impressed to do the same thing. But after 10 minutes of sitting there with nothing written down, I burst into tears. I felt like a fraud. So much of my testimony was based on God and His perfect love for us. And yet I couldn’t even write anything down.
I knew that God loves all His children, but for some reason I felt like the exception.
How could that be?
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πŸ‘€ Young Adults πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Doubt Love Relief Society Revelation Testimony

My Dad’s Apology

At 16, the narrator bought a rock album that included a vulgar word and argued with his father about keeping it. After tempers rose, the father returned, apologized for getting angry, and expressed love without lecturing. The narrator, moved by this humility, broke the record and learned that their relationship mattered more than pride.
I was 16 and playing my new rock-and-roll album for the first time. Unfortunately, as I listened, I was disappointed to hear a vulgar word in the last song. I was embarrassed. I knew my parents would not approveβ€”the record didn’t meet our family’s standards. But I liked the rest of the songs, so whenever I played the record, I turned down the volume just before the offensive word was sung.
My well-meaning sister told my father about my album. Later, when he and I were in the dining room, he shared his concern about the inappropriate word. Although his comment was said in a kind manner, I dug in and stubbornly defended my position.
I used every argument I could think of to convince my dad that I should keep the record. β€œI didn’t know that word was on the album when I bought it,” I said, β€œand when that song plays, I turn it down.”
When he said I should still get rid of the record, I said, β€œIf you think that, then I should quit school too! I hear that wordβ€”and worse onesβ€”every day at school!”
He began to get frustrated. He reemphasized that we shouldn’t have vulgar music in our home. The argument escalated as I said there were worse sins I could commit and that I never used that word.
I tried to turn the tables: β€œI try so hard to be good, and then you focus on this one little thing and think I’m an evil sinner!”
Even so, my father wouldn’t back down. Neither would I. I marched upstairs to my room, slammed the door, and lay on my bed, seething. I rehearsed my argument over and over in my head, entrenching myself deeper in my flawed logic and convincing myself I was right.
Ten minutes later, there was a soft knock at the door. It was Dad. His countenance had changed. He wasn’t there to argue. β€œI’m sorry I got angry,” he said. β€œWill you forgive me?” He told me how much he loved me and that he thought highly of me. He didn’t preach. He didn’t give me counsel. Then he turned and quietly left the room.
A thousand sermons on humility could never have been more powerful to me. I was no longer angry with him, just with myself for being so stubborn and difficult. I fetched the record, snapped it in two, and threw it away. I don’t know if I ever told Dad what I did, but it didn’t matter. What mattered was that I had learned that my dad valued our relationship more than his own pride, even when he had been in the right.
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πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Youth
Family Forgiveness Humility Music Obedience Parenting Pride Repentance Young Men

Friend to Friend

At age twelve, the narrator and friends stayed at a mountain cabin and hiked three miles to a store, eager for treats. They spent all their money on a nickel pinball machine instead and returned hungry and tired. He learned to avoid gambling and to delay gratification for what matters most.
Once, when I was twelve, my parents allowed my friends and me to spend a few days in a cabin in the mountains not far from my home. We spent time hiking and exploring the forest, and we even cooked our own food.
After a few days, we got tired of our own cooking and decided to go to the store, which was about three miles away. With several dollars between us, we hiked there under the hot sun, dreaming of the frozen fudge bars and other treats that we would buy.
Finally we arrived at the store. What a welcome sight it was! Inside was a pinball machine that cost one nickel to play. After playing a game, a person might get his nickel back, or he might not. Soon my friends and I had spent all our money on the pinball machine, and we had to go back to the cabin with nothing but growling stomachs and tired legs to show for our trip. I learned from that experience to never gamble again. I also learned that sometimes we have to put off what we want right now for what is really more important.
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Friends πŸ‘€ Parents
Agency and Accountability Children Gambling Patience Temptation

Common Questions about the Book of Mormon

Eleven men, known as the Three and Eight Witnesses, saw and in some cases handled the plates and recorded their testimonies. Even when some became hostile to Joseph Smith for a time, they maintained their witness to the end of their lives, affirming that the plates were shown by the power of God.
In addition to Joseph Smith, several other men and women saw the plates and testified of their existence. Eleven men in particular, known as the Three Witnesses and the Eight Witnesses, recorded their testimonies of seeing the plates and, in the case of the Eight Witnesses, of holding the plates. Their testimonies are included at the front of each copy of the Book of Mormon.

These men stand as powerful witnesses of the Book of Mormon, perhaps even more so because some of them became β€œfor a time hostile to Joseph,” affirms Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Nevertheless, they β€œtestified to their death that they had seen an angel and had handled the plates. β€˜They have been shown unto us by the power of God, and not of man,’ they declared. β€˜Wherefore we know of a surety that the work is true.’”4
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πŸ‘€ Early Saints πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern)
Book of Mormon Joseph Smith Revelation Testimony The Restoration

Friend to Friend

The speaker felt proud when his father became a state senator while serving as a bishop. When others asked his relation to Bishop or Senator Haight, he proudly answered that he was his son.
β€œI was very proud when my father became a state senator. He was the only Mormon bishop serving in the Idaho legislature. When someone asked me what relation I was to Bishop Haight or Senator Haight, I would proudly say, β€˜I’m his son!’
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πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local)
Bishop Family Pride

Glad Tidings from Cumorah

The Herrod family suffered a sudden freeway accident when a truck wheel struck their van, fatally injuring the father, Kimball. Catherine prayed for help, later affirming her faith in their sealing covenants at the hospital and during the funeral, where their five-year-old son sang about eternal families. Their family drew strength from covenants and from anchoring their faith in Christ.
The binding and strengthening power of covenants in our lives became very real to me recently as our dear friends experienced a tragic loss in their family. While Catherine and Kimball Herrod and their four young children, ages nine months to seven years, were driving home from a family dinner at their grandparents’ place, a double wheel from a huge semitruck on the opposite side of the freeway suddenly sprang loose, flew across the median, and pounded into the driver’s side of the family van. Kimball, the driver, husband, and father, was severely injured and unconscious. Catherine somehow guided the car to the shoulder and called for emergency help. While she watched the paramedics work on her husband and two older children, she sat in a police car with her two little ones on her lap and prayed vocally, β€œHeavenly Father, we know that Thou hast the power to heal Kimball if it is Thy will, but if not, we have faith that somehow Thou wilt sustain us through this.” Kimball was life-flighted to the hospital, but he did not make it there alive.

After the children were treated for cuts, bruises, and other minor injuries, dismissed from the hospital, and safely home in bed, Catherine returned to the hospital to say her final earthly good-bye to her husband. As difficult as it was, she declared to her parents, who were with her, β€œI know that Kimball and I are sealed by our temple covenants, and we will be together again someday.” In the most terrible trial of a young mother’s life, her covenants sustained her.

At the funeral, we were reminded of the power of covenants to sustain us in moments of distress and grief. As we joined in the closing song, we all heard above the crowd the voice of Taylor, the five-year-old son, loudly singing, β€œFamilies Can Be Together Forever” (Hymns, no. 300). It was joyous for the congregation to know that a child had been taught of the sealing covenants that would bind him to his father and mother.

We were also taught the power of covenants in the sermon offered by Catherine’s father. He quoted a scripture from the precious record that Moroni had sealed up and then brought forth to the Prophet Joseph, reminding us that the gospel promises us a rock in the storms and whirlwinds, not an umbrella:
β€œRemember, remember that it is upon the rock of our Redeemer, who is Christ, the Son of God, that ye must build your foundation; that when the devil shall send forth his mighty winds, … it shall have no power over you to drag you down to the gulf of misery … , because of the rock upon which ye are built, which is a sure foundation” (Hel. 5:12).

The profound strength the family exhibited comes from the knowledge that they are eternally bound to each other as a family, and they are bound to Heavenly Father and cannot be separated from Him.
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πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Children πŸ‘€ Friends πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Children Covenant Death Faith Family Grief Hope Prayer Sealing Temples

I Believe in Christ

A young woman describes attending Church meetings in many countries while traveling with her family. Even without understanding the language, she consistently feels the Holy Ghost confirm that it is the Lord’s Church. This experience strengthens her gratitude to Jesus Christ and her testimony of the Restoration.
β€œMy family loves to travel, so I have been to our church meetings in many different countries. Even though I don’t understand all they say, I can feel the Holy Ghost testifying to me that it is the Lord’s church. I am so thankful to Jesus. He is my Savior and Redeemer. I am thankful that the Lord restored the Church through Joseph Smith. I know this Church is true.”
Lauren Fredrickson, 14Brussels, Belgium
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Jesus Christ πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Testimony The Restoration

β€œIn His Strength I Can Do All Things”

In response to Brigham Young's rescue call, Dan W. Jones and 17 young men stayed at Devil’s Gate to guard the handcarters’ goods through a severe winter. They repaired cabins, survived on meager food including boiled hides, and received timely help from a Snake Indian who brought buffalo meat. After months of privation, relief wagons began arriving in early May.
Now, the story I promised to tell you began before the October 1856 general conference, but that is where we will begin. President Brigham Young stood at the Old Tabernacle pulpit on this square and issued a call to go rescue the Willie and Martin Handcart Companies. Two days later, about 30 faithful brethren with good mule teams were dispatched to go bring in the handcarters stranded several hundred miles east. Dan W. Jones, a convert of about five years, volunteered.
After arduous effort, the Willie Company finally was found. Caught in the storms of early winter, the Saints were freezing and starving to death. The relief party did all they could to improve conditions, but for some it was simply too late. The morning after the rescuers’ arrival, nine of the company were buried in a common grave.
Some of the rescuers were assigned to escort the handcarters to the Salt Lake Valley, but others pushed further eastward in an effort to find the Martin Company. Finally they were found, along with the Hodgett and Hunt Wagon Companies, bogged down and helpless in the snow east of Devil’s Gate, Wyoming.
Members of the Martin Company were in dire straits. Their food rations had been cut to a few ounces of flour per day. Only a third of them could walk, and deaths were recorded daily.
The leaders of the rescue party wisely decided to spare no effort in getting the suffering survivors to safety in the Salt Lake Valley. Because of the shortage of space in the wagons, it was necessary to leave most of the handcarters’ possessions in storage at Devil’s Gate till spring.
Brother Dan W. Jones and two others from the relief party, along with 17 young men from the wagon companies, were called to stay behind to guard the property. They were left to face five winter months in Wyoming, hundreds of miles from help, with scarcely anything to eat, and under conditions of extreme privation. Imagine the sacrifice! Offers were made to each man to join the wagons bound for the valley, but every one of them chose to stay behind, obedient to the call to serve.
That winter was recorded as one of the most severe ever. The intrepid watchmen struggled to repair the cabins at Devil’s Gate; killed the remaining cattle; stored the tough, stringy beef for food; and reconditioned and stacked the goods they were left to protect.
They killed a few buffalo, but the hunting became bad. Soon they were reduced to living on animal hides, from which they scraped off the hair, then boiled the leather. They ate the leather wrappings off the wagon tongues, old moccasin soles, and a well-worn buffalo hide that had been used as a foot mat for two months. At one point Dan Jones was literally preparing to eat his own saddle!
In February of that extreme winter, a member of the Snake Indian tribe visited and helped them. That first night he and two scouts came to camp loaded with good buffalo meat.
The winter passed, and finally, early in May, the relief wagons began to roll in. Of the various communications Brother Jones had received, one critical letter from Brigham Young had not arrived. Loading and shipping of the stored goods could not commence without it.
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πŸ‘€ Pioneers πŸ‘€ Early Saints πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Other
Adversity Charity Courage Emergency Response Endure to the End Faith Obedience Sacrifice Service

How Rare a Possession

Director-screenwriter Russ Holt says the film project originated with President Ezra Taft Benson’s call for increased study and use of the Book of Mormon. That counsel catalyzed the creation of the production.
Russ Holt, the director and screenwriter, explains how the project was initiated. β€œIt started with President Benson’s call to the membership of the Church to increase their study of, interest in, and use of the Book of Mormon. It really originated with that.”
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πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern) πŸ‘€ Other
Book of Mormon Movies and Television Scriptures

A child answers a phone call from his dad and casually reveals that Mom is busy making a surprise birthday cake for him. The mom immediately yells the child's name, realizing the surprise has been spoiled.
Oh, hey, Dad. Mom can’t talk on the phone right now ’cause she’s making a surprise birthday cake for you.
Michael!!!
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πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Children
Children Family Parenting

FYI:For Your Info

Robert Rightenour spent six months at a sports training school in Trencin, Slovakia, and attended a tiny local branch. He served as a home-teaching companion with the missionaries. He also helped with genealogy and met relatives from the region.
Robert Rightenour, a 14-year-old teacher from the Seattle (Washington) First Ward, spent six months at a special sports training school in Trencin, Slovakia, one of the first Americans ever to attend the school. While he was there, Robert attended the tiny branch, which consisted of seven members and two missionaries.

When Robert wasn’t training with world champions in canoe racing and kayaking, he spent time as a home-teaching companion with the missionaries.

Robert also helped his family do their genealogy. Many of his ancestors came from Slovakia, and he has met several relatives in the nearby town of Svidnik.
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Missionaries πŸ‘€ Church Members (General)
Diversity and Unity in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Education Family History Missionary Work Young Men

β€œCalled As If He Heard a Voice from Heaven”

As a young deacon, the speaker was told by his adviser, Bruford Reynolds, that he had leadership potential but needed to change his rowdy behavior. He chose to reform and soon received progressive leadership roles in his troop. The adviser’s belief profoundly shaped his life.
When I was a boy of eleven, I used to go over to the old Richards Ward every Tuesday night. The Scouts would be having their troop meeting. I would lie on the ground and watch through the basement window. The Scouts would have patrol contests, build a fire using flint and steel, practice first aid, drill, and play games. I could hardly wait to become a deacon and a Scout.
When I was ordained a deacon I also registered in Scouting. Bruford Reynolds was the deacons quorum adviser for a period of time and also was the Scoutmaster.
Two months after I joined the troop I went to Brother Reynolds’s home to pass off the Second Class requirements. When I had done this, Bruford Reynolds said to me: β€œVaughn, you have a lot of leadership ability, but we cannot use you because you are rowdy in troop meeting. When you get squared away, we need you.”
Having come from a large inactive family that was poor, I had little personal attention. My father had never told me that I could be anything. I gave a great deal of thought to my conduct. I decided to change. The following Tuesday I hardly moved an eyeball. I was as near perfect as I knew how to be.
Bruford Reynolds was true to his word. I became an assistant patrol leader, a patrol leader, assistant senior patrol leader, then senior patrol leader. He believed in me and had a profound impact on my life.
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πŸ‘€ Church Leaders (Local) πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern) πŸ‘€ Other
Family Priesthood Repentance Young Men

To Sit in Council

The Relief Society General Presidency and members of the Seventy met to counsel about how councils invite revelation, increase unity, and bring power. From their discussion, they offered guiding principles to help members apply effective counseling.
Recently, the Relief Society General Presidency and members of the Seventy met in council to discuss how counseling invites revelation, increases unity, and brings power. They offer the following principles, knowing that you will build on these ideas as you discover solutions that are right for you, your ward or branch, and your quorum or Relief Society.
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πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern) πŸ‘€ Other
Relief Society Revelation Unity Women in the Church

The Nourishing Power of Hymns

As a young boy growing up in Mapleton, Utah, the speaker attended meetings in the old white church. Singing hymns in priesthood, Sunday School, and sacrament meetings powerfully influenced his testimony and conversion to the restored gospel. These memories resurface whenever he visits the town and passes the old church.
This magnificent choir gives inspiring sermons. In fact, β€œsome of the greatest sermons are preached by the singing of hymns.” My testimony and conversion to the restored gospel were strongly influenced by singing the hymns of Zion as a young boy. I grew up in the small town of Mapleton, Utah, and attended meetings in what is known today as the β€œold white church.” My 95-year-old mother still lives in Mapleton. When I visit her, I drive past the old white church, and a flood of sweet memories fills my mind. Among them is the converting power of the hymns we sang in priesthood, Sunday School, and sacrament meetings. My experiences were similar to that of President Hinckley when, as a deacon, he attended a stake priesthood meeting with his father. They sang β€œPraise to the Man.” Later he would say, β€œI had an impression that has never left that Joseph Smith was indeed a prophet of God.” I believe that many of our Saints experience this again and again. Hymns play an essential role in spirituality, revelation, and conversion.
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πŸ‘€ Youth πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Other
Conversion Faith Joseph Smith Music Priesthood Revelation Sacrament Meeting Testimony

β€œI Saw Another Angel Fly”

While the Washington D.C. Temple’s angel Moroni was being enlarged in Italy, sculptor Avard Fairbanks invited the architects to review it. Architect Keith W. Wilcox noted the mouth looked like the angel was drinking rather than blowing the horn and demonstrated how trombonists buzz their lips. Fairbanks adjusted the mouth accordingly.
The third temple to be topped with an angel Moroni statue was the Washington D.C. Temple, dedicated in 1974. Avard Fairbanks sculpted a graceful angel holding a trumpet to his lips and a replica of the gold plates in his left arm. Brother Fairbanks’s one-meter model was taken to Italy, enlarged, cast in bronze, and covered with gold leaf.

When the clay enlargement was finished, Brother Fairbanks invited the temple architects to Italy to see it. One of the architects, Keith W. Wilcox (who later became a member of the Seventy), mentioned that the angel looked as though he were drinking from the horn rather than blowing it. Brother Wilcox demonstrated how a trombone player β€œbuzzes” with his or her lips to make a tone. With Brother Wilcox posing, Brother Fairbanks changed the angel’s mouth.7
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πŸ‘€ Other πŸ‘€ General Authorities (Modern)
Book of Mormon Temples

Practicing What We Preach

The speaker visited his desperately ill sister in the hospital and found her husband and family holding family home evening, led by a son recently returned from a mission. He joined them and later prayed with his own family to live their teachings better. The experience deepened his testimony.
I visited the hospital the other evening to see my desperately ill sister. Her husband and family were surrounding her bed, holding their family home evening, led by their fourth missionary son just returned from foreign fields. I joined them, and then went home rejoicing and thanking God for that kind of example, and met my own family who were waiting, and prayed that we might do a better job of practicing what we preach.

I visited her this morning and talked with her to the Lord, and in the spirit of that sobering experience offer my testimony this morning.
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πŸ‘€ Parents πŸ‘€ Missionaries πŸ‘€ Church Members (General) πŸ‘€ Other
Adversity Faith Family Family Home Evening Gratitude Health Ministering Missionary Work Prayer Testimony

Elder James E. Evanson

At age 10, James Evanson read his family's illustrated Book of Mormon and Church history volumes and chose to follow Joseph Smith's example. He went to a grove of trees, knelt, and prayed. He received a confirmation from the Holy Ghost of Jesus Christ, Joseph Smith, and the Book of Mormon. That conviction influenced a lifetime of Church service.
At 10 years of age, he read all 16 volumes of the family’s illustrated Book of Mormon and Church history stories and decided to follow Joseph Smith’s example. Sneaking into a grove of trees across the road from his home, he knelt, prayed, and received a confirmation from the Holy Ghost that Jesus Christ is his Savior, Joseph Smith was a true prophet, and the Book of Mormon is true.
That conviction has spurred a lifetime of dedicated service in the Church, including as an Area Seventy, stake president, and president of the Utah Orem Mission. At the time of his call, Elder Evanson was serving as a Valiant activity leader in his ward in Lethbridge.
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πŸ‘€ Children
Book of Mormon Children Conversion Holy Ghost Jesus Christ Joseph Smith Missionary Work Prayer Priesthood Revelation Service Testimony The Restoration