Showing posts with label General Conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Conference. Show all posts

9.09.2011

What I Believe: At Their Feet is the Best Seat in the Room

We've been given living prophets to lead and guide us in these latter-days.  This was a true principle of Christ's ancient church then, and therefore a great indicator of and necessity in Christ's true church today.
 "Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God; ...And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone..."

Many members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, in the northwestern United States are preparing for a regional conference this weekend.  Where direction and inspiration pertinent to the details & needs of their lives where they are living, will be received.  Simply stated, the regional conference will be an opportunity to be spiritually fed by those in authority to receive revelation on that area's behalf.

Three weeks from now, members & officers of the church from all areas of the world, will gather in Salt Lake City, Utah, to receive counsel and instruction from their church leaders. Other members will gather in their homes & their meeting places for General Conference. The weekend of October 1st-2nd, 2011 (aka the 181st Semiannual General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints) will be devoted to learning once more at the feet of those in authority to receive revelation.  For this conference, the included feet will be those of the Twelve Apostles,  the Prophet and his two counselors --- these honorable men hold the authority & keys by which to receive revelation for the world.

The time which we have prior to each of these conferences is busy, and filled with not only our everyday tasks, but also much preparation.  To help us along the way, Heavenly Father has scattered preparatory resources throughout our lives.  Such as our own personal scripture study, prayer, church meetings & leaders, Family Home Evenings, and the study of past conference talks.

My friends, we have been given an extra special treat!

One more additional spiritual primer, available now in the form an article from our current prophet, President Thomas S. Monson.  His words have been published by the Washington Post, in regards to the 10th anniversary of 9/11:

"The calamity of September 11th, 2001 has cast a long shadow. Ten years later, many of us are still haunted by its terrible tragedy of lost lives and broken hearts. It is an episode of anguish that has become a defining moment in the history of the American nation and the world. This week, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, along with Tom Brokaw, will pay its own homage to the unforgettable events of September 11, 2001.
There was, as many have noted, a remarkable surge of faith following the tragedy. People across the United States rediscovered the need for God and turned to Him for solace and understanding. Comfortable times were shattered. We felt the great unsteadiness of life and reached for the great steadiness of our Father in Heaven. And, as ever, we found it. Americans of all faiths came together in a remarkable way.
Sadly, it seems that much of that renewal of faith has waned in the years that have followed. Healing has come with time, but so has indifference. We forget how vulnerable and sorrowful we felt. Our sorrow moved us to remember the deep purposes of our lives. The darkness of our despair brought us a moment of enlightenment. But we are forgetful. When the depth of grief has passed, its lessons often pass from our minds and hearts as well.
Our Father’s commitment to us, His children, is unwavering. Indeed He softens the winters of our lives, but He also brightens our summers. Whether it is the best of times or the worst, He is with us. He has promised us that this will never change.
But we are less faithful than He is. By nature we are vain, frail, and foolish. We sometimes neglect God. Sometimes we fail to keep the commandments that He gives us to make us happy. Sometimes we fail to commune with Him in prayer. Sometimes we forget to succor the poor and the downtrodden who are also His children. And our forgetfulness is very much to our detriment.
If there is a spiritual lesson to be learned from our experience of that fateful day, it may be that we owe to God the same faithfulness that He gives to us. We should strive for steadiness, and for a commitment to God that does not ebb and flow with the years or the crises of our lives. It should not require tragedy for us to remember Him, and we should not be compelled to humility before giving Him our faith and trust. We too should be with Him in every season.
The way to be with God in every season is to strive to be near Him every week and each day. We truly “need Him every hour,” not just in hours of devastation. We must speak to Him, listen to Him, and serve Him. If we wish to serve Him, we should serve our fellow men. We will mourn the lives we lose, but we should also fix the lives that can be mended and heal the hearts that may yet be healed.
It is constancy that God would have from us. Tragedies are not merely opportunities to give Him a fleeting thought, or for momentary insight to His plan for our happiness. Destruction allows us to rebuild our lives in the way He teaches us, and to become something different than we were. We can make Him the center of our thoughts and His Son, Jesus Christ, the pattern for our behavior. We may not only find faith in God in our sorrow. We may also become faithful to Him in times of calm."

So profound.  So true.

Like any other learning opportunity, the responsibility of the situation does not lie 100% squarely on the shoulders of those who teach.  In fact much of the responsibility is on the student as well.  The same is true in this weekend of remembrance, as well as with the upcoming conferences. 

...For instance, while sitting at a desk in geometry class, it can be easy to become distracted by the whimsical butterfly engaged in an aerial ballet just outside the window.  The butterfly is in fact beautiful & good, however it is still a distraction when the student's immediate attention is needed at the front of the room, in the lesson being offered.  This is the same when it comes to each one of us in our day-to-day lives.

Heavenly Father has an entire curriculum for us, that he is offering through instructors whom he has hand-chosen.  We should be more dedicated to the learning processes at the front of these coming conference "classrooms."  The beauty outside our windows will still be there when the class is dismissed.  May we be more attentive in our spiritual learning experiences, that the beautiful distractions of this unsettling world would not interfere with our learning the great eternal lessons necessary for our salvation.  This is where we can not only find increased strength in our lives but, more importantly, peace in our lives.  Thus allowing us to be more faithful to our Heavenly Father (who has ALWAYS been faithful to us) --- in our sorrows, as well as our calm times.

May we be ready to receive profound answers to the questions troubling our hearts, and a steady direction to the path that will lead us back to our Heavenly Father.  May we readily accept the blessings He has granted us in our mortal experience, that we can be prepared to weather the refining process necessary to grant us the ability to be in & remain in His presence.

"...Let virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly; then shall thy confidence wax strong in the presence of God; and the doctrine of the priesthood shall distil upon thy soul as the dews from heaven."


10.04.2010

Joining Kim on this Super Fun Dealio



I. loved. General. Conference.

Might sound like a silly statement, cause really who DOESN'T love General Conference, right?

But no, I really really loved Conference.  There was something, a little manna, in every single talk that was meant for me.  Whether it was something I knew I needed or something my family needed...it was all right there, unfolded in front of us!  

Is it possible to bask in the residual glory of Conference?  
If so, know that I am.  That's exactly how I'm feeling today.

So, from Cloud #9, I'm joining my friend Kim in this fun little General Conference quiz.  Apparently there are no wrong answers.  So if you're feeling it too, sit a few minutes, blurb out your gratitude through reflection and join us!


"Steph over at Diapers and Divinity is having General Conference Meme and Trivia Contest. Everyone is encouraged to play along. Here are my answers to the the Meme and then I'm heading right over to win the prize!"



1. Who were your three favorite speakers?
Hmmmmm.....that's a toughy, they're all fab, and were all spot-on for me...  
Elder Jeffery R. Holland for sure, Elder Neil L. Anderson, & Elder Quentin L. Cook. 


2. Favorite talk?

President Henry B. Eyring's talk on Trust


3. Favorite hymn sung during Conference?

#221- Dear to the Heart of the Shepherd


4. Who wore the best tie?

Elder Duncan's reminded me of warm & glorious sunlight.  So that's my fave!


5. Do you think conference had a “theme”?

It's not over....you can still come around....here's your toolbox to do so...now get to work (it's a verb, so just do it!)....


6. Share a few of your favorite quotes (paraphrasing is fine).
"...Choose faith over pessimism."
-Bishop Richard C. Edgley
"A law against nature would be impossible to enforce.  For instance, what good would a vote against the law of gravity do? ...Moral standards cannot be changed by battle and cannot be changed by ballot." 
-Elder Boyd K. Packer

"At this point some of you may be thinking,  'That's all very fine and good, but what does it have to do with flying the airplane? What does any of that have to do with aviation?' ...Well, well let me tell you." 
-President Dieter F. Uchtdorf

"Not one of us wants this journey to be a brief flirtation with spirituality, or even a notable, but finite chapter. The road of discipleship is not for the spiritually faint of heart."
-Elder Neil L. Andersen


7. Something that made you smile during conference.

"When I was appointed President of the Church, I said ,
'I'll take one assignment to myself.  I'll be the adviser to the Tabernacle Choir.'  ...I'm very proud of my choir!"  
-President Monson


8. Any evidence that your children paid attention?

  • Mini-Me said "YES! That makes me feel better." After hearing Elder Lawrence speak about sleepovers, and counsel parents be very careful about them.  For years we had a "no sleepover" policy in our family.  We really didn't know many people well enough while living in Idaho.  Since moving back home we've allowed only very few with my niece, our old Bishop's daughters, and a pair of sisters from our old ward who's family lives very close to the Gospel.  All sleepovers have come when I've felt the Spirit say its ok.  ONE though I wondered about when she & I went back to Idaho to visit last month.  I allowed it, even though my stomach wasn't sure, and while we were driving home I learned of one girl who'd also been invited who kept trying to pressure the other 3 girls to sneak out of the house down to the park in the middle of the night!  This talk & Mini-Me's recent experience connected for a HUGE epiphany for her.  And suddenly she understood why her mom puts her foot down some times, and why we have the rules we have.
  • Mini-Me hollered across the house to me that she loved me and said "thank you" after hearing President Monson spoke of gratitude.  Made my heart melt....not just cause she loves me or is grateful, but because her 13 year old ears & brain took the words of the living Prophet to heart!  It works people.  The Church is true, and our kids KNOW it when they hear it!


9. If you had to give a talk in General Conference (don’t faint, this is hypothetical), what do you think you’d speak about?

Forgiveness = Moving Forward


10. What are some of your post-conference goals? 
Reduce my "wasted" time for sure!     
(....and with THAT, I'm offline for the rest of the day!)

9.21.2009

Conference Talk Club Details for October are Posted!


You won't want to miss this night, which will perfectly kick off the season of many celebrations!  As life becomes busier & more stressful, why not fortify your spirit at Conference & Cocoa?!  October's gonna be so much fun, with new faces to get to know & a FANTASTIC talk to help us where we need it in the worst ways.  Click here for details, and plan on joining your sisters for an edifying & yummy night filled with coziness of all kinds!

8.19.2009

Enlightening Evening

Conference & LemonAIDE last night was fantastic! Special thanks again to Sister Simmons for opening her home for the evening! TWO talks were actually covered, which was a lot of fun & VERY helpful. The assigned talk was "Temple Worship: The Source of Strength and Power in Times of Need" by Elder Richard G. Scott. It was sooo timely & pertinent for everything we are all facing at this time. In addition, we went through "Sacred Homes, Sacred Temples" by Elder Gary E. Stevenson. The two talks melded together so well, and provided a great opportunity to reflect on how we can better focus on the importance of the Holy Temple in our lives & Home.
Think about it, if our home is not "Temple-Like" then how can we honor our covenants? Really, we MAKE sacred covenants in the Temple, however, we KEEP our covenants in the home. GREAT stuff!!! ...Definitely got the wheels turnin' in my mind.

8.17.2009

August Conference & LemonAIDE Reminder


Get served up a helping of Conference & LemonAIDE tomorrow night!!! Click here for details, and plan on being there (you can head straight over to the baby shower from there as Sis. Simmons' house isn't far from the Crossings). See you there!

7.25.2009

Making Sense of Self-Worth


Found this snippet o' interview with Mandy Moore (from People Magazine and Softpedia) & was extremely impressed, especially considering pressures she endures not only from the public eye, but her own as a woman (and let's face it, we are all our own harshest critics).
"Just Recently, Moore was speaking out about the healthy body image she has and that she’s trying to send off to other girls and young women as well. The first thing that we should all do, she was saying, would be to accept that our body changed with age and that we couldn’t all be the same no matter how hard we tried. Beauty is not necessarily in the eye of the beholder, but it is closely connected to how each woman individually sees herself, Mandy added at the time – and she was perhaps the best example for that, a normal-sized girl thrown in a see of size 0 stars. “I still have a love-hate relationship with [my hips]. I’m not a swizzle stick – I’m not 14 anymore. I appreciate when there are other women out there who are beautiful and aren’t, you know, a pound. I feel lucky that I don’t feel pressure... to have my whole life be controlled by whether I fit into a certain size. […] I’m very comfortable with the way that I look, but it’s not fair for women to use someone or something as a bar. It’s not reality, for anyone. I am happy to be myself and represent something different for women.” the singer and actress was stating a short while back. "
While reading this I remembered again how cool it is to be a woman...really how cool it is to be me! I'm not being conceited, my thoughts were turned to an October 2005 General Conference talk given by Elder Holland called "To Young Women" which was used in a book called "Modesty, Makeovers, and the Pursuit of Physical Beauty: What Mothers and Daughters Need to Know."
A Few of my favorite things Elder Holland taught us is: "You are literally a spirit daughter of heavenly parents with a divine nature and an eternal destiny. 1 That surpassing truth should be fixed deep in your soul and be fundamental to every decision you make as you grow into mature womanhood. There could never be a greater authentication of your dignity, your worth, your privileges, and your promise. Your Father in Heaven knows your name and knows your circumstance. He hears your prayers. He knows your hopes and dreams, including your fears and frustrations. And He knows what you can become through faith in Him. Because of this divine heritage you, along with all of your spiritual sisters and brothers, have full equality in His sight and are empowered through obedience to become a rightful heir in His eternal kingdom, an “[heir] of God, and joint-[heir] with Christ.” 2 Seek to comprehend the significance of these doctrines. Everything Christ taught He taught to women as well as men. Indeed, in the restored light of the gospel of Jesus Christ, a woman, including a young woman, occupies a majesty all her own in the divine design of the Creator. You are, as Elder James E. Talmage once phrased it, “a sanctified investiture which none shall dare profane.” 3
Be a woman of Christ. Cherish your esteemed place in the sight of God. He needs you. This Church needs you. The world needs you. A woman’s abiding trust in God and unfailing devotion to things of the Spirit have always been an anchor when the wind and the waves of life were fiercest. 4 I say to you what the Prophet Joseph said more than 150 years ago: “If you live up to your privileges, the angels cannot be restrained from being your associates. 5 ..."
"...In this same vein may I address an even more sensitive subject. I plead with you young women to please be more accepting of yourselves, including your body shape and style, with a little less longing to look like someone else. We are all different. Some are tall, and some are short. Some are round, and some are thin. And almost everyone at some time or other wants to be something they are not! But as one adviser to teenage girls said: “You can’t live your life worrying that the world is staring at you. When you let people’s opinions make you self-conscious you give away your power. … The key to feeling [confident] is to always listen to your inner self—[the real you.]” 8 And in the kingdom of God, the real you is “more precious than rubies.” 9 Every young woman is a child of destiny and every adult woman a powerful force for good. I mention adult women because, sisters, you are our greatest examples and resource for these young women. And if you are obsessing over being a size 2, you won’t be very surprised when your daughter or the Mia Maid in your class does the same and makes herself physically ill trying to accomplish it. We should all be as fit as we can be—that’s good Word of Wisdom doctrine. That means eating right and exercising and helping our bodies function at their optimum strength. We could probably all do better in that regard. But I speak here of optimum health; there is no universal optimum size.
Frankly, the world has been brutal with you in this regard. You are bombarded in movies, television, fashion magazines, and advertisements with the message that looks are everything! The pitch is, “If your looks are good enough, your life will be glamorous and you will be happy and popular.” That kind of pressure is immense in the teenage years, to say nothing of later womanhood. In too many cases too much is being done to the human body to meet just such a fictional (to say nothing of superficial) standard. As one Hollywood actress is reported to have said recently: “We’ve become obsessed with beauty and the fountain of youth. … I’m really saddened by the way women mutilate [themselves] in search of that. I see women [including young women] … pulling this up and tucking that back. It’s like a slippery slope. [You can’t get off of it.] … It’s really insane … what society is doing to women.” 10
In terms of preoccupation with self and a fixation on the physical, this is more than social insanity; it is spiritually destructive, and it accounts for much of the unhappiness women, including young women, face in the modern world. And if adults are preoccupied with appearance—tucking and nipping and implanting and remodeling everything that can be remodeled—those pressures and anxieties will certainly seep through to children. At some point the problem becomes what the Book of Mormon called “vain imaginations.” 11 And in secular society both vanity and imagination run wild. One would truly need a great and spacious makeup kit to compete with beauty as portrayed in media all around us. Yet at the end of the day there would still be those “in the attitude of mocking and pointing their fingers” as Lehi saw, 12 because however much one tries in the world of glamour and fashion, it will never be glamorous enough.
A woman not of our faith once wrote something to the effect that in her years of working with beautiful women she had seen several things they all had in common, and not one of them had anything to do with sizes and shapes. She said the loveliest women she had known had a glow of health, a warm personality, a love of learning, stability of character, and integrity. If we may add the sweet and gentle Spirit of the Lord carried by such a woman, then this describes the loveliness of women in any age or time, every element of which is emphasized in and attainable through the blessings of the gospel of Jesus Christ."
Do you get what I mean now?! It is sooo incredibly awesome to be who we are, exactly as we are! Cause that is who & how we are intended to be. God does not ask us to be anything else than the absolute best version of us we can be. He doesn't expect us to be a certain size, or to look a certain way. He expects us to be the best us, to take care of what he has gifted us in this life: our families, our minds, our bodies (I believe he DOES expect us to shower, which may be a challenge on a PMS day, but nonetheless he doesn't necessarily expect perfect hair or make-up, just a clean & healthy us those days)! So, those are my thoughts & appreciation for Apostolic counsel and positive examples of this in life. Am I saying Mandy Moore is perfect? No. But I appreciate her understanding of self-acceptance and its nice to hear her voice added to others' in the world echoing the same ideas we've been told by our leaders! Gives me hope to keep working on improving my own opinion of my self-worth.
Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.”
—Mark Twain

No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.”
—Eleanor Roosevelt

6.27.2009

Heads-Up for Conference & LemonAIDE

I'm VERY excited by the launch of Conference & LemonAIDE's own blog. Should be a lot easier to locate each month's info in a hurry, and not have to wade through all my personal posts! So, venture on over HERE to stay apprised of each month's Conference & LemonAIDE details including designated talk, as well as host/location. Tons & tons of thanks to those sisters who have made this feel like a worthwhile adventure. I know we all are blessed for making General Conference talks a larger part of our spiritual lives. See you next month!

10.21.2008

President Boyd K. Packer's Talk

In light of the "transcription" of President Boyd K. Packer's testimony (from a Utah Fast & Testimony meeting), the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints & President Packer have redirected us to President Packer's talk at the 178th October 2008 General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Out of respect for The Church, President Packer, and our Heavenly Father I've decided to post President Packer's October 2008 General Conference talk. As can be expected, an obviously great wealth of spiritual knowledge abounds in his address, however the Spirit has embedded such greater strength & power within this apostle's prophetic counsel...apparently we need to more carefully heed these words rather than those that are running rampant on the internet. We know Satan uses good tools, like the information Super-Highway, for wicked purposes. It being the last days, we shouldn't be surprised...proving even greater reason to cling to President Packer's inspired counsel from October's conference.

"The Test"
Given by
President Boyd K. Packer
President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
178th General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
Sunday Afternoon Session, October 5th, 2008
-----------------------------------------------------
"Neither mobbings nor the army could turn the Saints aside from what they knew to be true.

It is my purpose to show that in troubled times the Lord has always prepared a safe way ahead. We live in those “perilous times” which the Apostle Paul prophesied would come in the last days.1 If we are to be safe individually, as families, and secure as a church, it will be through “obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel.”2

On July 24, 1849, the Saints had been in the valley two years to the day. They finally were free from years of mobbing and persecution. That called for a great celebration.

Just a few years earlier under dreadful conditions, the Prophet Joseph Smith suffered in Liberty Jail for months while the mobs drove the Saints from their homes. The words liberty and jail do not fit together very well.

Joseph called out:

“O God, where art thou? And where is the pavilion that covereth thy hiding place?

“How long shall thy hand be stayed, and thine eye, yea thy pure eye, behold from the eternal heavens the wrongs of thy people and of thy servants, and thine ear be penetrated with their cries?”3

The Prophet Joseph Smith had earlier sought direction, and the Lord told the Saints to seek redress from the judges, the governor, and then the president.4

Their appeals to the judges failed. During his life, Joseph Smith was summoned to court over 200 times on all kinds of trumped-up charges. He was never convicted.

When they sought redress from Governor Boggs of Missouri, he issued a proclamation: “The Mormons must be treated as enemies and must be exterminated or driven from the state, if necessary for the public good.”5 That unleashed untold brutality and wickedness.

They appealed to President Martin Van Buren of the United States, who told them, “Your cause is just, but I can do nothing for you.”6

I will read the final paragraphs of their third petition addressed to the Congress of the United States:

“The afflictions of your memorialists have already been overwhelming, too much for humanity, too much for American citizens to endure without complaint. We have groaned under the iron hand of tyranny and oppression these many years. We have been robbed of our property to the amount of two millions of dollars. We have been hunted as the wild beasts of the forest. We have seen our aged fathers who fought in the Revolution, and our innocent children, alike slaughtered by our persecutors. We have seen the fair daughters of American citizens insulted and abused in the most inhuman manner, and finally, we have seen fifteen thousand souls, men, women, and children, driven by force of arms, during the severities of winter, from their sacred homes and firesides, to a land of strangers, penniless and unprotected. Under all these afflicting circumstances, we imploringly stretch forth our hands towards the highest councils of our nation, and humbly appeal to the illustrious Senators and Representatives of a great and free people for redress and protection.

“Hear! O hear the petitioning voice of many thousands of American citizens who now groan in exile . . . ! Hear! O hear the weeping and bitter lamentations of widows and orphans, whose husbands and fathers have been cruelly martyred in the land where the proud eagle . . . floats! Let it not be recorded in the archives of the nations, that . . . exiles sought protection and redress at your hands, but sought it in vain. It is in your power to save us, our wives, and our children, from a repetition of the bloodthirsty scenes of Missouri, and thus greatly relieve the fears of a persecuted and injured people, and your petitioners will ever pray.”7

There was no pity, and they were turned away.

In 1844, while under the avowed protection of Governor Thomas Ford of Illinois, the Prophet Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum were shot to death in Carthage Jail. Words cannot express the brutality and suffering the Saints had endured.

Now on this 24th of July in 1849, free at last from the mobbings, they planned to celebrate.8

Everything the Saints owned would come across a thousand miles (1,600 km) of desert by handcart or covered wagon. It would be 20 more years before the railroad came as far as Salt Lake City. With almost nothing to work with, they determined that the celebration would be a grand expression of their feelings.

They built a bowery on Temple Square. They erected a flagpole 104 feet (32 m) tall. They made an enormous national flag 65 feet (20 m) in length and unfurled it at the top of this liberty pole.

It may seem puzzling, incredible almost beyond belief, that for the theme of this first celebration they chose patriotism and loyalty to that same government which had rejected and failed to assist them. What could they have been thinking of? If you can understand why, you will understand the power of the teachings of Christ.

Their brass band played as President Brigham Young led a grand procession to Temple Square. He was followed by the Twelve Apostles and the Seventy.

Then followed 24 young men dressed in white pants; black coats; white scarves on their right shoulders; coronets, or crowns, on their heads; and a sheathed sword at their left sides. In their right hand, of all things, each carried a copy of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. The Declaration of Independence was read by one of those young men.

Next came 24 young women dressed in white, blue scarves on their right shoulders and white roses on their heads. Each carried a Bible and a Book of Mormon.

Almost but not quite as amazing as their choice of patriotism for a theme was what came next: 24 aged sires (as they were called) led by patriarch Isaac Morley. They were known as the Silver Greys—all 60 years of age or older. Each carried a staff painted red with white ribbon floating at the top. One carried the Stars and Stripes. These men were a symbol of the priesthood, which was “from the beginning before the world was”9 and had been restored in this dispensation.

The Saints knew that the Lord had told them to be “subject to kings, presidents, rulers, and magistrates, in obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law.”10 That commandment, revealed then, is true now of our members in every nation. We are to be law-abiding, worthy citizens.

The Lord told them, “I established the Constitution of this land, by the hands of wise men whom I raised up unto this very purpose.”11

And in another verse, the Lord told them that “it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another.”12 They were therefore antislavery. This was a very sore spot with the settlers in Missouri.

And so on that day of celebration in 1849, “Elder Phineas Richards came forward in behalf of the twenty-four aged sires, and read their loyal and patriotic address.”13 He spoke of the need for them to teach patriotism to their children and to love and honor freedom. After he briefly recited the perils that they had come through, he said:

“Brethren and friends, we who have lived to three-score years, have beheld the government of the United States in its glory, and know that the outrageous cruelties we have suffered proceeded from a corrupted and degenerate administration, while the pure principles of our boasted Constitution remain unchanged. . . .

“. . . As we have inherited the spirit of liberty and the fire of patriotism from our fathers, so let them descend [unchanged] to our posterity.”14

One would think that, compelled by force of human nature, the Saints would seek revenge, but something much stronger than human nature prevailed.

The Apostle Paul explained:

“The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. . . .

“. . . We have the mind of Christ.”15

That Spirit defined those early members of the Church as followers of Christ.

If you can understand a people so long-suffering, so tolerant, so forgiving, so Christian after what they had suffered, you will have unlocked the key to what a Latter-day Saint is. Rather than being consumed with revenge, they were anchored to revelation. Their course was set by the teachings still found today in the Old and the New Testaments, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price.

If you can understand why they would celebrate as they did, you can understand why we have faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, in the principles of the gospel.

The Book of Mormon teaches, “We talk of Christ, we rejoice in Christ, we preach of Christ, we prophesy of Christ, and we write according to our prophecies, that our children may know to what source they may look for a remission of their sins.”16

And so today in these strangely perilous times, in the true Church of Jesus Christ17 we teach and live the principles of His gospel.

Three things about that 1849 commemoration were both symbolic and prophetic: first, that the young men carried the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence; next, that each young woman carried the Bible and the Book of Mormon; and finally, that the old men—the Silver Greys—were honored in the parade.

After the program they had a feast at makeshift tables. Several hundred gold-rush travelers and 60 Indians were invited to join them.

Then they went back to work.

President Young had said, “If the people of the United States will let us alone for ten years we will ask no odds of them.”18

Eight years to the day after the 1849 celebration, the Saints were in Big Cottonwood Canyon to celebrate another 24th of July. Four horsemen rode in to report that an army 2,500 soldiers strong was on the plains. The army of the United States, commanded by Colonel Albert Sydney Johnston, was ordered by President James Buchanan to crush a nonexistent Mormon rebellion.

The Saints broke camp and headed for home to prepare their defenses. Rather than flee, this time President Young declared, “We have transgressed no law, and we have no occasion to do so, neither do we intend to; but as for any nation’s coming to destroy this people, God Almighty being my helper, they cannot come here.”19

My great-grandparents buried a child on the trail from Far West, when they were driven to Nauvoo, and another at Winter Quarters, when they were driven west.

Another great-grandmother, a teenager, was pushing a handcart along the south banks of the Platte River. They sang:

We’ll find the place which God for us prepared,
Far away in the West,
Where none shall come to hurt or make afraid;
There the Saints will be blessed.20

Across the river they could see the sun glinting on the weapons of the soldiers of the army.21

In St. Louis my great-grandmother bought a little enameled pin of the American flag. She wore it on her dress for the rest of her life.

Neither mobbings nor the army could turn the Saints aside from what they knew to be true. A settlement was negotiated, and the Utah War (later called Buchanan’s Blunder) was over.

We are guided by the same revelations and led by a prophet. When the Prophet Joseph Smith died, another took his place. The order of succession continues today.

Six months ago at general conference, Thomas S. Monson was sustained as the 16th President of the Church, just five months before his 81st birthday. He succeeded President Gordon B. Hinckley, who died in his 98th year.

The senior leaders of the Church will virtually always be seasoned by decades of preparation.

President Monson is ideally suited for the challenges of our day. He is sustained by two counselors and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles—all prophets, seers, and revelators.

That same Lucifer who was cast out of our Father’s presence is still at work. He, with the angels who followed him, will trouble the work of the Lord and destroy it if he can.

But we will stay on course. We will anchor ourselves as families and as a church to these principles and ordinances. Whatever tests lie ahead, and they will be many, we must remain faithful and true.

I bear witness of God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, that They live, that Thomas S. Monson is called of God by prophecy.

“The standard of truth has been erected; no unhallowed hand can stop the work from progressing.”22 Today the sun never sets on congregations of the Latter-day Saints. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen."
-------------------------------------------
NOTES
1. See 2 Timothy 3:1–7.
2. Articles of Faith 1:3.
3. D&C 121:1–2.
4. See D&C 101:86–88.
5. History of the Church, 3:175.
6. Martin Van Buren, quoted in Eliza R. Snow Smith, Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow (1884), 77.
7. Quoted in Biography, 152–53.
8. See Biography, 95–107.
9. D&C 76:13.
10. Articles of Faith 1:12.
11. D&C 101:80.
12. D&C 101:79.
13. Biography, 100.
14. Phineas Richards, in Biography, 102–4.
15. 1 Corinthians 2:14, 16.
16. 2 Nephi 25:26.
17. See D&C 1:30.
18. Brigham Young, “Remarks,” Deseret News, Sept. 23, 1857, 228.
19. Deseret News, Sept. 23, 1857, 228.
20. "Come, Come, Ye Saints," Hymns, no. 30.
21. See “By Handcart to Utah: The Account of C. C. A. Christensen,” Nebraska History, winter 1985, 342.
22. History of the Church, 4:540.

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