Thursday, March 31, 2016

Getting Answers

Answers to Personal Questions

General conference gives us an opportunity to learn from living prophets, listen to the Spirit, and receive answers to personal questions. Click here for examples of questions and inspired answers given during the October 2015 general conference. 

- From LDS.org -

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Refugee Relief: I Was a Stranger


two women hugging each other
Sisters around the world were invited to consider (in light of their time and circumstances) what they can do to serve in the "I Was a Stranger" relief effort. Click on the links below to learn about the opportunities available for you to serve refugees in your community.

Learn More:

“For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in; Naked, and ye clothed me; I was in prison, and ye came unto me.”   

Sunday, March 27, 2016

'Gethsemane'

A beautiful song with touching lyrics about our Savior, Jesus Christ. This is one song our primary children love to sing. A reminder to all of us of His love for us.

HAPPY EASTER!

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Sunday Lesson: Mar 13th

Chapter 5 from our Howard W. Hunter manual was our lesson this past Sunday, Joseph Smith, Prophet of the Restoration. 3 weeks after becoming President of the Church, Pres. Hunter traveled to Nauvoo for the 150th anniversary of the martyrdom of Joseph and Hyrum Smith. In a meeting Pres. Hunter said: "The responsibility I feel for the work the Prophet Joseph inaugurated fills me with a determination to do all I can in the time and season allotted to me. Surely Joseph was faithful and true to his time and season!" Are we true to our time and season? Are we doing what the Lord has asked us to do?

God the Father and Jesus Christ appeared to Joseph Smith to initiate the Restoration. The gospel was lost off the earth once again, and in 1820 the Lord appeared to the boy Joseph. Said Pres. Hunter, "This prophet...could testify of his own positive knowledge that God lives, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, a Resurrected Being, separate and distinct from the Father. He did not testify as to what he believed or what what he or others thought or conjectured, but of what he knew. How has your testimony of the 1st Vision influenced your life?

Jesus Christ reestablished His Church through the Prophet Joseph Smith. Humble, ordinary men and women gathered the day the Church was organized. "None of them laid any claim to special learning or significant leadership. They were honorable people and respectable citizens, but were virtually unknown outside of their own immediate neighborhood." Joseph Smith received divine revelation and therefore had already published the Book of Mormon. "Part of the divine revelation [Joseph Smith received] was instruction to reestablish the true and living Church, restored in these modern times as it existed in the day of the Savior's own mortal ministry." Subsequent evens were also restored in their fullness through the Prophet Joseph Smith: the priesthood, modern revelations, and the gospel in it's fullness. What blessings have come to your family because of the restored Church?

Praise to the man who communed with Jehovah. Joseph Smith not only communed with the Lord, but also with other personages of heaven. Joseph was tutored, visited and taught by many in these latter days. The Prophet Joseph also received hundreds of revealed scripture during his short lifetime. Pres. Hunter said of this, "It has been estimated, more marvelous pages of scripture passed through him than through any other human in history." We also praise Joseph Smith for not only enduring his many trials, but for "enduring them well" (D&C 121:8). He went through so many persecutions, imprisonments, deaths of many loved ones including his own children. He always looked to the Savior to whom he listened ever since Heavenly Father first instructed him saying, "This is My Beloved Son, Hear Him!"

Pres. Hunter shares his testimony of the Prophet Joseph Smith: "I am grateful for this man, for his teachings, for his revelations, for what he has left for us, for it was through him that the gospel was restored to the earth. I think there is no more beautiful story in all of history than the simple, sweet story of the lad who went into the woods near his home, kneeling in prayer and receiving heavenly visitors.....It is my prayer that as we commemorate this great prophet and reflect upon his life, that we have gratitude in our hearts for the things which have come into our lives by reason of his seership and his revelation to us - a choice seer, raised up by the Lord to guide us in these latter days, that we might turn our footsteps back to those paths which will lead us to exaltation and eternal life."

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Lesson: Mar 6th

The Relief Society is celebrating its 174th birthday on March 17th. Our theme for our activity this Thursday is “We are a light to the World.” The reason I wanted to about this today is so that I could remind you all how special are. We finished up visiting teaching interviews recently and I am always astonished by the good works and concern that you all have for each other. Not only do you think about others, but you take time to do small (yet big) things for one another. 

It is wonderful that the Relief Society is a restored work. Eliza R. Snow (2nd RS Pres) said, “Although the name may be of modern date, the institution is of ancient origin. We were told by our martyred prophet that the same organization existed in the church anciently.” We know little about a formal women’s organization at the time of the Savior. But the restoration of an ancient pattern is significant. Elder James E. Talamge of the 12 said, “The world’s greatest champion of women and womanhood is Jesus the Christ.” It has been really enlightening reading about the change Christ brought to women while he was on earth. I want to talk about women in Christ day and how he was towards women.

In Christ's day men and women were physically segregated. Men and women “should not mingle.”This physical segregation led to emotional segregation, which developed into misunderstandings. Women were seen as a cause of temptation, so they were veiled, silenced, and kept away from men as much as possible. Especially in the city, Jewish women were discouraged from going outside in order to avoid being seen by men. Marketplaces and council-halls, law-courts, gatherings, and meetings where a large number of people are assembled, and open-air life with full scope for discussion and action – all these are suitable to men both in war and peace. The women are best suited to the indoor life which never strays from the house . . . A woman should seek a life of seclusion. Even in the home, though, if a male guest came for a meal, the women and girls were not to eat at the same table, but could silently interact with the company as a servant. Synagogue worship was also segregated. Men were commanded to attend their Sabbath worship services, but women were not. If a woman chose to attend a synagogue service, she sat separately. Women did not read the Scriptures, give their opinion, teach, or pray verbally during the service, but they were allowed to listen in silence. Segregation often inhibited a woman’s ability to contribute within her community, to serve outside of her home, to join in public worship, and to access education. {taken from Here}

What changes did Christ make for women? How did He act around women?
The four Gospels describe Jesus refusing to follow the traditional social barricades that impeded relationships between men and women. As we read, the Lord speaks to women (John 4:7-27), motivate  them toward education (Luke 10:39-42), heals them (Mark 7:25-29), asks them to speak out as witnesses (Matthew 28:5-10), touches them (Mark 5:30-34; Matthew 28:9), and teaches the eternal nature of their marriage relationships (Matthew 5:3-11; John 17:21; Ephesians 5:25, 31). This was considered scandalous.

Jesus did not live by these segregating restrictions for women. He refused to isolate women and treated them as valued individuals. He allowed women and children to join the group of five thousand and later the group of four thousand who gathered to hear Him teach in Galilee (Matthew 14:21; 15:38). He refuted those who wanted to send the women and children away (Mark 10:13-14; Matthew 15:23). He welcomed women to stay in the same room as men (Luke 7:38-40). He did not segregate the unclean, whether they were sick or sinful or social outcasts. Jesus did not silence women, but spoke with them respectfully. {taken from Here}

How does knowing how Christ treated women make you feel towards him?
When I was reading about all of this and Christ’s love and respect for women I couldn’t help but feel even more love toward him. Such gratitude. He understands us. He appreciates us. He wants us engaged and involved in his work.

In the book, Daughter’s in My Kingdom. It talks about what Female Disciples did in the New Testament. Much of it sounds like what we do today. This is His restored organization.
     Women journeyed with Jesus and His Twelve Apostles. They gave of their substance to assist in His ministry. After His death and Resurrection, women continued to be faithful disciples. They met and prayed together with the Apostles. They provided their homes as gathering places for Church members. They participated in the work of saving souls, temporally and spiritually. I add.. they were doers..

Relief Society “is a temporal and a spiritual work,” said Sister Stephens. “That is what the women did in the Savior’s day, and that is what we continue to do.”

 So, what is it that we are celebrating about the Relief Society?
1- Who we are. 2-  What our work is. 3- Those who have gone before. 4- Our purpose.

Celebrate “who we are” 
“The First Presidency has told us who we are: beloved daughters of Heavenly Father and dedicated disciples of Jesus Christ who are part of a great worldwide sisterhood,” said Sister Burton, noting that there are almost 7 million Relief Society members in 185 different countries. “We are sisters,” she said. “We are covenant women,” added Sister Reeves. “The ordinances we receive and the associated covenants we keep set us apart from the world,” noted Sister Stephens.
Celebrate “our vital part” in the work – What is our work?
"This is our opportunity to be unified in the work—not just the temporal work, but the spiritual work,” said Sister Stephens. She said women are looking to accomplish something big. “But the extraordinary thing is that we do small things behind closed doors—small and simple things that make an extraordinary difference.”
Sister Stephens said as women “act on a prompting to do a small and simple thing, that small and simple thing may mean the world to someone else.”
Sister Reeves said Latter-day Saint women should petition the Lord about the needs of their sisters. Then they can express the love that He expresses. He is so anxious to bless our lives, and we help Him with His work.”
Celebrate those who have gone before - In Christ day and in 1842 when the Relief Society was organized.
The Relief Society was organized in Nauvoo, Illinois, on March 17, 1842. On that day, 20 women met with the Prophet Joseph Smith as he began what he later called “a select Society separate from all the evils of the world, choice, virtuous, and holy”

Today, we celebrate the significant contributions of past Relief Society leaders. “Their inspiring influence continues. “We have many of their words in Daughters in My Kingdom, side by side with modern-day prophets.”

Celebrate the purpose of Relief Society –
The purpose is to… Prepare women for the blessings of eternal life by:
-         Increase faith in Jesus Christ and His Atonement and personal righteousness
-         Strengthen families and homes as you make and keep sacred covenants
-         Seek out and help those in need.
-         Work in unity with priesthood holders (Sister Burton added)
Sister Burton said understanding the purpose of Relief Society will not only bless the lives of individual women, but it will also help them bless the lives of others “in their homes and families and also in their communities.”

Julie B Beck, former RS Pres.   -  Relief Society is a way of life. It is a way of keeping covenants. It is a discipleship that unifies us. 

I want to close with a quote from President Utchdorf. He said “Exaltation is our goal; discipleship is our journey. As you exercise a little faith and begin your walk as peaceable followers of our Lord Jesus Christ, your heart will change. Your whole being will be filled with light.” 

The light is Christ. The way we keep that light is by being his disciples. We can do that by serving those around us. I know that by being actively involved in the Relief Society will help us have the light of Christ with us always. 

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

March Newsletter

March 2016


Presidency Message by Lisa Lara
I find myself often marveling at the strength of the women around me. It seems like everytime I turn around I hear about someone who is having to deal with a health challenge, financial burden, or a struggling child. I am amazed at the perspective and outlook faithful women in the gospel have as they handle these challenges. It is not easy as they struggle through trials that they would never wish upon another, but so many times I see strong women do so with so much faith and stamina that I am amazed everytime. These women know how to use the gospel and the atonement to not only get through trials they may have, but to help better the world around them.

Pres. Russell M. Nelson in our last general conference says this: "Today, let me add that we need women who know how to make important things happen by their faith and who are courageous defenders of morality and families in a sin-sick world. We need women who are devoted to shepherding God's children along the covenant path toward exaltation; women who know how to receive personal revelation, who understand the power and peace of the temple endowment; women who know how to call upon the powers of heaven to protect and strengthen children and families; women who teach fearlessly."

How grateful I am that there are women like you with such strength in the gospel who surround me with endless examples of "converted, convenant-keeping women". Continue to be a light to the world and remember that your Savior is near you to lift you and even carry you. How I love you all for your devotion to your families and the gospel of Jesus Christ.


Birthdays
1 Renee Kubic
1 Kristina Stringham
4 Christine Topp
5 Christina Carrano
7 Merna Millet
11 Brianna Agnew
12 Claudia Bullock
13 Jennifer Ambrose
15 Patricia Gordon
15 Susan Sorensen
17 Sonya Evans
17 Kathy Hall
18 Susan Thomson
19 Marianne Monagle
20 Susan Lloyd
24 Amanda True
25 Danean Defauw
25 Judith Hart
25 Cheryl Seigal
26 Iris Ates
26 Krissa Kotarek
27 Sharon Ferguson
30 Kasey Grantham
30 Marrah Nielson

Lesson Schedule – (Ezra Taft Benson)
Mar 6 Presidency Message by Jan Welling
Mar 13 #5 “Joseph Smith, Prophet of the Restoration” taught by Jenny Maxwell
Mar 20 #6 “The Atonement and Resurrection of Jesus Christ” taught by
Mar 27 TFOT “What Lack I Yet” by Elder Lawrence taught by


Upcoming Events
Mar 10 Relief Society Meeting 7pm at the Quail Building
Mar 16 Stake All Day Temple Day
Mar 26 General Women’s Conference 6pm at the Stake Center
Mar 27 Easter
Apr 1&2 General Conference
Apr 10 Fast Sunday

Other Opportunities
Mar 8 Lunch Bunch at 11:30 at Jack-in-the-Box (5165 Kipling)
Mar 17 Book Group 7 pm at Pat Jentzsch’s "The 100 year old man who climbed out of the window and disappeared" by Jonas Jonasson
Thursdays 9:00 am playgroup (ask Jan)
Saturdays 8 am basketball Stake Center
Mon & Wed 9 am Aerobics