Thursday, November 30, 2023

Bob’s Note, November 30, 2023, Bob’s note

I was browsing through some old journal entries and spotted this which I think is very touching since Bob died less than a year later  


March 2, 2019

We received this from my brother, Bob, on his 64th birthday... also his 40th wedding anniversary (April 12):


“Since before our mission I have had a small lump on my back which was diagnosed as a Lipoma.
Over the course of our time here in Ohio the lump has grown and for the past 2 months I have been sampled, scanned, prodded and poked to determine what the lump actually is. We now know it is a soft tissue sarcoma. I have been waiting for the official diagnosis before telling anyone. It doesn't bother me other than when I lay on the floor. I don't suffer any adverse effects from it. So I haven't mentioned it before.
The plan going forward is to have a CT scan on Monday to see if it has spread to my lungs. We will meet with my orthopedic surgeon on Thursday to see what the plan is going forward. I believe everything will work out but wanted to let you all know.

Love,”


We are hoping and praying for the best.


Bob and Kathy sold their home in Gilbert, AZ before they left on their mission to Kirtland, Ohio. So in a real sense they are homeless (though not without resources). Their medical insurance is through the church so they are planning to remain on their mission for the time being.
We are a short day's drive from Kirtland. I spoke with Bob yesterday and told him that whenever the time comes for their release from their mission they are welcome to settle here in our home for as long as they need. Our second floor can easily be made to be like a large hotel room including a full bathroom. They can relax here and plan for whatever comes next. We would love to have them here.

2023 November 30, Thursday, Journal Entry

After serving in the temple, I came home and helped Cathy with things around the house. I feel a little unsettled because I haven't finished decorating the front of the house. It's been cold every day where I carby really work with my hands without gloves and I can't do what needs doing with gloves on so...

I went to the Orem FFC and walked and climbed stairs. After missing most of last week, I exceeded 7500 steps for the second day in a row. I hope to get 7500+ steps in at least four days each week.

Come Follow Me 

1 John 3:18 My little children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue; but in deed and in truth.

"Love is expressed in many recognizable ways: a smile, a wave, a kind comment, a compliment. Other expressions may be more subtle, such as showing interest in another’s activities, teaching a principle with kindness and patience, visiting one who is ill or homebound. These words and actions and many others can communicate love."

President Thomas S. Monson

I appreciate these New Testament scriptures more than ever. I can really see how the original Apostles worked to try to keep the Church of Jesus Christ in tact. Eventually the great apostacy came upon the world. I have faith that God's plan for his children is completely just and true. There are many details that we just don't know right now but He knows and He loves us and I have total faith in Him. Everything I learn contributes to that faith. God's work includes truth, love, service and happiness.

Next up is Revelation. Then we start on the Book of Mormon. 

2023 November 29, Wednesday, Journal Entry

I served in the temple this morning and enjoyed it very much. Brother Clergg, who is the man I'm replacing, was with me and helped me out. 

Got my new glasses from Costco. They are a big improvement over the old ones.

We served in the Bishops Storehouse yesterday afternoon. It was pretty busy.

Come Follow Me 

Temple 0445 - 1000



Wednesday, November 29, 2023

2023 November 28, Tuesday, Journal Entry

I'm really struggling with the Christmas decorations at the front of the house. Our old garlands with lights are wearing out after I put them up. So I need to take them down and replace them with something else and it is now so cold outside that it's almost impossible. 

Today is Bishops Storehouse and that's always a good experience. And tomorrow I get to go back to the temple. I'm looking forward to serving as the dressing room coordinator even though that means I have to be there at 0445 each Wednesday. It's a little extra responsibility and that's always a good thing when serving the Lord.

I haven't been meeting my step goals during the Thanksgiving week. Part of the problem is that Cathy wants to go with me but when it gets to be time, she has other things to do and I get the feeling she feels badly if I try to go without her. I'm going to the Orem FFC this morning early and getting it done.  It's not a place where she likes to go so I'll go by myself and be done before 0800. Then if she wants to walk later, I'll be happy to go along.

Come Follow Me 

1 John 2:15 Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him.

16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.

17 And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.

"Just as the Savior prayed that his apostles not be taken out of the world, but kept from the evil of the world, so are members of the Church everywhere praying that by the power of the Holy Ghost and the priesthood they may be strengthened to withstand the “world.”… There is a great challenge in living in the “world.” The concern is not where we live—but how we live. Obedience to the laws of the Lord will bring happiness and peace. We never need apologize for living the standards of the Church."

Elder James A. Cullimore, Assistant to the Council of the Twelve, October 1973


Monday, November 27, 2023

2023 November 27, Monday, Journal Entry

 We Spoke in Sacrament Meeting. It went fairly well. I included my outline/notes in a separate blog entry. 

Pretty much relaxed the rest of the day. It's cold outside. Too cold to be out there unless absolutely necessary.

The Hutzleys may come for a visit today. It will be nice to catch up with them.

Hopefully I can go to the gym and get some exercise later today. 

Come Follow Me 

1 John 1:5 This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in him is no darkness at all.

Christ’s light brings hope, happiness, and healing of any spiritual wound or ailment. Those who experience this refining influence become instruments in the hands of the Light of the World to give light to others.  They will feel what King Lamoni felt: “This light had infused such joy into his soul, the cloud of darkness having been dispelled, and … the light of everlasting life was lit up in his soul.”… 

[M]y dear friends, it is our quest to seek the Lord until His light of everlasting life burns brightly within us and our testimony becomes confident and strong even in the midst of darkness.

President Dieter F. Uchtdorf

2023 November 26, Sacrament Meeting Talk

 Gratitude, Lindon 27th Ward, November 26, 2023




In Come Follow Me this morning:


2 Peter 1:5 And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge;

6 And to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness;

7 And to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity.

8 For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.

2 Peter 1:5-8










Elder Robert D. Hales, April 2017:

"Disciples live so that the characteristics of Christ are woven into the fiber of their beings, as into a spiritual tapestry...

As you can see, weaving the spiritual tapestry of personal discipleship requires more than a single thread. In the Savior’s day, there were many who claimed to be righteous in one or another aspect of their lives. They practiced what I have called selective obedience...

The attributes of the Savior, as we perceive them, are not a script to be followed or list to be checked off. They are interwoven characteristics, added one to another, which develop in us in interactive ways. In other words, we cannot obtain one Christlike characteristic without also obtaining and influencing others. As one characteristic becomes strong, so do many more.








"I would suggest - since we are celebrating Thanksgiving this weekend - that GRATITUDE ought to be added to this tapestry.

Thanksgiving is one of my favorite holidays: a time to reflect and be thankful for and appreciate what we have.  And we are truly blessed when we get to do it with loved ones.

It’s unfortunate that our Thanksgiving holiday ends somewhat quickly.  At best it usually means a four or five day weekend.

Gratitude can be seen as a big part of the spirit of Thanksgiving  so here is my plug for prolonging that holiday spirit and finding a way to incorporate it into our day to day existence throughout our lives. And isn’t that a big part of what we have been studying in Come Follow Me? 

Usually when we think about gratitude we are concerned with its effect on the person or persons to whom we are grateful; how nice it is for them to hear that they are appreciated, how it’s the polite thing to do.

And it is.

But I would argue that that isn’t the only thing that makes gratitude important to us as individuals.

There are plentiful reasons to show gratitude in many situations that most of us know very well.  I would like to suggest some additional benefits to think about.




Gratitude Might Interrupt Bad Behavior

Gratitude might very well have a very beneficial effect when expressed during a conflict or contentious interaction with someone. It can, and frequently will, have positive benefits. 

As a policeman I had some success - well sort of - with using gratitude to defuse contentious situations.

The “Nordstrom” effect.

Thank you for speeding in Los Angeles!

Seriously though, for example, let’s say you’re in the middle of a conversation that seems to be escalating into an unpleasant argument.  For example, you might have a young son or daughter who wants to do something that you know has potentially negative consequences.

 You’ve told them in a half dozen different ways that things might go wrong but they’re still not getting it. They are explaining how they can handle the situation and why they believe they should be able to go forward with their plan.  What’s worse, they’re getting angry and the conversation is becoming confrontational.

Voices are being raised, they are accusing you of utterly lacking in trust in them and what will their friends will think.

They are Angry and they're making you angry and you know that you both need to calm down.

How do you handle this?

Try saying, “Thank you.”

What??

Genuinely thanking someone for something when stakes are this high is, I think we can agree, not a normal response. Since gratitude is not a normal response in situations like these it can help knock the momentum of the conversation off the tracks.

Which is exactly what you need. If you allow the conversation to continue escalating, things probably will not be good.

A quick but important point: saying “thank you” to someone is not the same as saying, “you’re right, I’m wrong.” It is simply an expression of appreciation, no more, no less.

But what on earth can you be appreciative about in a situation like this?

This is where you have to calm down and engage your thinking.

You can thank them for being willing to have an open and honest conversation with you.

You can thank them for their feedback.

You can thank them for their past good behavior.

You can thank them for trusting you and loving you in the past.

The point is: there is a lot you can show gratitude for without agreeing that they’re right.

By saying “thank you,” you interrupt the bad behavior and change the tenor of the conversation. From there, you can move the conversation toward a more productive place.




Showing Gratitude Encourages Beneficial Behavior

We humans are social animals. 

We like belonging in groups 

and we love being liked. 

The drive to be accepted by others is a strong one.

When you say “thank you,” you give the other person a social cookie. A social cookie that says, “I like you.”

If you want others to do things that are beneficial to you, give them social cookies when they do things you genuinely appreciate.

So if you have a friend or someone you work with either in the church or at work who often falls short of your expectations, make a big deal about saying “thanks!” when they meet or exceed those expectations.

When you get feedback that’s particularly helpful, say “thank you” and “that's a good idea” and explain why the feedback is so helpful to you.

If you don’t let others know what you like, how can you expect them to do it? Tell them what you like; say “thank you.”


Expressing Gratitude can be So Confusing it Feels Good

If you’re scratching your head over this whole gratitude being selfish thing and wondering if maybe I’m a bit crazy, you’re normal.

Expressing gratitude to someone we don’t like or in situations where gratitude seems out of the ordinary might seem a little confusing. So confusing our brains try to make sense of it.


In his autobiography, Ben Franklin explains how he dealt with the animosity of a rival legislator when he served in the Pennsylvania legislature in the 18th century:

“Having heard that the rival had in his library a certain very scarce and interesting book, I wrote a note to him, expressing my desire of perusing that book, and requesting he would do me the favour of lending it to me for a few days. He sent it immediately, and I return'd it in about a week with another note, expressing strongly my sense of the favour. When we next met in the House, he spoke to me (which he had never done before), and with great civility; and he ever after manifested a readiness to serve me on all occasions, so that we became great friends, and our friendship continued to his death.”

This is sometimes called “the Ben Franklin effect” and is seen as an example within cognitive dissonance theory, which says that people will often change their attitudes or behavior in order to resolve tensions, or "dissonance", between their thoughts, attitudes, and actions and the thoughts, attitudes and actions of someone else. 

In the case of the Ben Franklin effect, the dissonance is between the rival legislator’s negative attitude towards Ben and the knowledge that he actually did Ben a favor by loaning him his book.

And what our brains usually tell us is that if we do something nice for someone or we express gratitude toward them it must be for a reason. We can convince ourselves, without a whole lot of conscious thought, that we said “thank you” because that person did something nice for us or because we like them.

So if you have someone that gets on your nerves? Do yourself a favor and find something, anything, to be grateful for about who they are or what they do for you.

It won’t necessarily make you suddenly think they’re the Best Person Ever, but it can help you see them as more human and less your worst nightmare.

Perhaps even more important is that expressing gratitude can make for a stronger community. The more we experience help from others, the more likely we are to help others in need.

Expressing gratitude marks that moment of help in our minds and is a good reminder that when we have the opportunity to help, we should. And when we get that opportunity to help someone, and do it then when that person experiences gratitude, what do you think happens to them? Well, they’re more inclined to help others, too.

So the next time you want to rear back and really let the other guy have it, take a moment and ask yourself, “Can gratitude serve me better in this situation?”

Not only is the answer probably, “Yes,” but you might get more out of it than they will.





The Good and Grateful Receiver


PRESIDENT DIETER F. UCHTDORF


SECOND COUNSELOR IN THE FIRST PRESIDENCY


At Christmastime we talk a lot about giving, and we all know that “it is more blessed to give than to receive” but I wonder if sometimes we disregard or even disparage the importance of being a good receiver.

On a Christmas day many years ago, a young girl received a beautiful beading kit. The girl’s father suggested that she make something for one of her relatives who had assembled for a family party.

The girl’s face lit up, and she went to work creating what she thought would be a perfect gift. She picked out the person she wanted to make it for—an elderly aunt with an unhappy face and a harsh personality.

“Perhaps if I make her a bracelet,” the little girl thought, “it will make her happy.”

And so she carefully selected each bead and did her very best to make this a special gift for her aunt.

When she finally finished, she approached her aunt, handed her the bracelet, and told her she had designed it and made it just for her.

Silence descended on the room as the aunt picked up the bracelet with her finger and thumb as though she were holding a string of slimy snails. She looked at the gift, squinted her eyes and scrunched up her nose, and dropped the bracelet back into the hands of the little girl. She then turned away from her without saying one word and began talking to someone else.

The little girl blushed with embarrassment. With deep disappointment she quietly walked out of the room.

Her parents attempted to console her. They tried to help her understand that the bracelet was beautiful—regardless of her aunt’s insensitive reaction. But the little girl couldn’t help feeling unhappy every time she thought of this experience.

Decades have passed, and the little girl—now an adult herself—still remembers, with a bit of sadness, that day when her childlike gift was rejected. Every  gift that is offered to us—especially a gift that comes from the heart—is an opportunity to build or strengthen a bond of love. When we are good and grateful receivers, we open a door to deepen our relationship with the giver of the gift. But when we fail to appreciate or even reject a gift, we not only hurt those who extend themselves to us, but in some way we harm ourselves as well.

Our two sons… one who feels no need to express gratitude and the other who does.  Their wives seem to have the same spirit about them as their husbands.  And it has been passed along to the children.

Is our Heavenly Father more likely to bless his children who are grateful?  Truly grateful?

He loves all of his children, as do we.  But we know he has emotions and feelings. So just to be certain, I think we should make sure our gratitude is sincerely expressed and genuine.


2 Peter 1:5 And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge;

6 And to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness;

7 And to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity.

(And I, of course, add GRATITUDE)

8 For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.

CLOSE














Add 1:

Gratitude (Comb Ridge)

In October of 1879 a group of 237 Latter-day Saints from several small southwestern Utah settlements was called to blaze a new route to, and colonize what is today known as San Juan County in southeastern Utah. The journey was to have taken six weeks but instead took nearly six months. Their struggles and heroics are well documented, particularly their seemingly impossible task of crossing the Colorado River at a place called Hole-in-the-Rock. Those who have visited this place marvel that wagons and teams could have been lowered through this narrow crack in the red rock canyon walls to reach the Colorado River far below. Once the Colorado was crossed, however, many other severe tests awaited them. Tired and worn out, early in April 1880 they faced their final obstacle, a place called Comb Ridge. The Comb is a ridge of solid sandstone forming a steep wall nearly 1,000 feet high.

Nearly one hundred and fifty years later, the ridge is still steep and treacherous. It is difficult to imagine that wagons, teams, men, women, and children could make such an ascent. But still visible are the scars from the wagon wheels left as evidence of their struggles so long ago. How did they feel after enduring so much? Were they bitter after the many months of toil and privation? Did they criticize their leaders for sending them on such an arduous journey, asking them to give up so much? Those questions are answered as the top of Comb Ridge is reached. There inscribed in the red sandstone so long ago were the words, “We thank Thee, O God.”

Brothers and sisters, I pray that we might keep our hearts full of thanks and appreciation for what we have and not dwell on what is not ours. As Latter-day Saints, let us adopt an attitude of gratitude in all we do.









Add 2:

Gratitude“ Is the Memory of the Heart”

President Joseph F. Smith has instructed us that “the spirit of gratitude is always pleasant and satisfying because it carries with it a sense of helpfulness to others; it begets love and friendship, and engenders divine influence. Gratitude is said to be the memory of the heart” (Gospel Doctrine, 5th ed. [1939], 262).

A pleasant and satisfying feeling of gratitude with its sense of helpfulness to others, love and friendship along with the accompanying divine influence, is what we remember from our youth.

Isn’t it ironic that many of us believe that, for example, it is the size, location or grandness of our homes that is important to our children, or the expense and popularity of the things we give them or the educational opportunities we can somehow provide, when it is, instead, the love, helpfulness, friendship and the knowledge of the Savior and His mission that are the things that our children remember most fondly throughout the years.

The important things can be found in any home where a loving mother who leads out in making a home into a Heaven on Earth and a loving father who reveres and adores his wife and loves his children by supporting them to the best of his ability while being there for family home evenings and other  important events.

One of the greatest gifts we as mothers and fathers can give our children is to love each other.



Testimony

Sunday, November 26, 2023

2023 November 26, Sunday, Journal Entry

Cathy and I get to speak in Sacrament meeting this morning. I'm truly praying that we will do well. I'm thinking of writing out my talk and making a separate journal entry. 

We worked at the Bishops Storehouse yesterday and it was pretty busy at a constant pace. The time went by quite quickly. I had at least two people who were there for the first time. I tried to assure them that they were doing a good thing by utilizing the Storehouse for their benefit. That was the impression I had and it seemed to be appreciated. 

Spent the remainder of the day working on my talk and helping Cathy with hers.

Come Follow Me 

5 And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge;

6 And to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness;

7 And to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity.

8 For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.

2 Peter 1:5-8

"Disciples live so that the characteristics of Christ are woven into the fiber of their beings, as into a spiritual tapestry...

As you can see, weaving the spiritual tapestry of personal discipleship requires more than a single thread. In the Savior’s day, there were many who claimed to be righteous in one or another aspect of their lives. They practiced what I have called selective obedience...

The attributes of the Savior, as we perceive them, are not a script to be followed or list to be checked off. They are interwoven characteristics, added one to another, which develop in us in interactive ways. In other words, we cannot obtain one Christlike characteristic without also obtaining and influencing others. As one characteristic becomes strong, so do many more."

Elder Robert D. Hales, April 2017

Saturday, November 25, 2023

2023 November 25, Saturday, Journal Entry

It snowed most of the day yesterday. Our HOA snow removal was nowhere to be found. My neighbor, Bill Harvey, shoveled his own walks and ours and his neighbor on the other side. He is one of the best men I know and not just because of that.

I don't have a snow shovel but I still have an "electric snow removal" tool of some type in a box on a shelf in my garage. Kevin gave it to us a couple of years ago and I haven't even opened it yet because snow removal has been handled pretty well by the HOA so far. I might have to break it out though but we'll see.

We were still recovering from Thanksgiving so took it pretty easy yesterday. We tried to walk at University Place shopping center but it was jammed with people shopping so we gave up and went to see Beth and Karen. Had a nice visit with them and Julie stopped by with her kids.

Spent some time on preparing my talk for Sunday but there's still a lot to do. And I still have to finish the outside Christmas decorations but it's too cold and snowy for now.

Today we will be at the Bishops Storehouse and wondering how busy it will be. Personally I think we are going to be busy for the foreseeable future but it's a great service and worthwhile effort. 

Come Follow Me 

12 Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you:

13 But rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings; that, when his glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.

14 If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you: on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified.

1 Peter 4:12-14

These fiery trials are designed to make you stronger, but they have the potential to diminish or even destroy your trust in the Son of God and to weaken your resolve to keep your promises to Him. These trials are often camouflaged, making them difficult to identify. They take root in our weaknesses, our vulnerabilities, our sensitivities, or in those things that matter most to us. A real but manageable test for one can be a fiery trial for another...

Like the intense fire that transforms iron into steel, as we remain faithful during the fiery trial of our faith, we are spiritually refined and strengthened.

Elder Neil L. Andersen, October 2012

Friday, November 24, 2023

2023 November 24, Friday, Journal Entry

Today is "Black Friday" and just as I entered that short bit of information, Cathy came in to tell me she is having problems printing things that she is working on. So I've been trying to help her print and we think our printer might be kind of, sort of, maybe on the blink so to speak. I seem to be able to print from my iPad and my iPhone but she can't seem to print from the internet on her iPhone which she uses for virtually everything. One problem is when we got our phones, she got an "iPhone 13 Pro" and I got an "iPhone 13 Pro Max". She got hers because it is a little smaller and lighter. I got mine because it was bigger and could do more stuff. Unbeknownst to us at the time, my phone operates more like an iPad and so some of the basics are different from her phone. So when she has problems, it's sometimes difficult for me to help her.

So we enjoyed going over to Jake's for Thanksgiving dinner yesterday but Cathy can't just go there. She had to help somehow so Meredith agreed to let Cathy do the appetizers. She had wanted to do "bacon-wrapped smokies" which are little baby hot dogs wrapped in bacon so we did those and made a mess in our kitchen. Then she had fruit, chips, all kinds of dips, nuts... I mean a real feast. So we took all of that in our car which was seriously overloaded along with our backup microwave oven over to their house. By the time everyone was through with appetizers no one wanted any food. Anyway, it was very nice and we had a nice visit. Today I think we need to clean our oven.

I also need to finish our outdoor lights and prepare for my talk this Sunday.

Come Follow Me 

1 Peter 4:6 For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.

"...what we do know about the spirit world is that the Father’s and the Son’s work of salvation continues there. Our Savior initiated the work of declaring liberty to the captives, and that work continues as worthy and qualified messengers continue to preach the gospel, including repentance, to those who still need its cleansing effect."

President Dallin H. Oaks, October 2019

1 Peter 5:5 ...Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility: for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble. 6 Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: 7 Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you. 8 Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour:

 1st and 2nd Peter do a great job of explaining the Gospel. I have a new appreciation of Peter who is truly one of the greatest Apostles.



I spent yesterday taking down the Halloween and Fall season decorations at the front of the house and then installing Christmas lights. There are a few adjustments still to be made but what you see here is pretty much what you get.

I also took our car in to get it's 90,000 mile service. It still runs beautifully. That little Prius has been the best car I have ever owned and it still runs like new. 

I usually try to see if Jake is available to pick me up and he was. We went over to a nearby Del Taco and got breakfast together. He told me he was thinking about becoming an Ordinance Worker at their new Orem Temple and I encouraged him to pursue that goal. I think that would do great things for him.

Today I will try to finish off the decorations on the outside of the house then we are going to Jake's for a Thanksgiving Day get together.

Come Follow Me 

"Our job is not to teach someone who’s going through a rough patch that they are bad or disappointing. On rare occasions we may feel prompted to correct, but most often let’s tell our loved ones in spoken and unspoken ways the messages they long to hear: “Our family feels whole and complete because you are in it. You will be loved for the rest of your life—no matter what.”

Sometimes what we need is empathy more than advice; listening more than a lecture; someone who hears and wonders, “How would I have to feel to say what they just said?”

Remember, families are a God-given laboratory where we’re figuring things out, so missteps and miscalculations are not just possible but probable. And wouldn’t it be interesting if, at the end of our lives, we could see that those relationships, even those challenging moments, were the very things that helped us to become more like our Savior? Each difficult interaction is an opportunity to learn how to love at a deeper level—a godlike level."

By Sister Tamara W. Runia, First Counselor in the Young Women General Presidency, October 2023


1 Peter 3:15 But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear:

"If we are prepared to share the gospel, we are ready to respond to the counsel of the Apostle Peter, who urged, “Be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you.”

We will have opportunities throughout our lives to share our beliefs, although we don’t always know when we will be called upon to do so."

President Thomas S. Monson


1 Peter 4:6 For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.