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I Got to go to Church today!!!

Dream Angel

Well-Known Member
I GOT TO GO TO CHURCH TODAY!!! :shout

Sorry I needed to shout that from the roof top...I think my friends from Church may be a little bored of my hyperactivity whenever I go to Church, so I thought I would irritate you guys instead! :p Dont you just love me..;)

My parents and whole family were out of the house...so I could go with no questions being asked and they dont even know! It was great being back there! Everyone is always so welcoming! They are amazing! I messed them around so many times yet they still smile and ask if I am OK. Oh and there was this most adorable 6week old baby girl I have ever seen! She was so tiny!!

I am disappointed it was a one off..but it was the boost I needed especially with everything that has been going on..I guess I just needed that extra spiritual support that only the Church itself could give..All the talks were great as they resonated a lot with me and inspired me!

I also got the prod to start paying tithing again as well...I cant remember which one of you told me to take each one at a time..but it is working! So thankyou! WOW is natural to me now..everytime someone asks me for a cup of tea at work my head is saying "oh that would be nice" but I automatically say no! Nice to let my heart speak for a change! I am viewing everything with a lot more clarity and understanding

I still have a long road to walk down and I am taking each step as it comes...but I am so happy today! :D
 

Katzpur

Not your average Mormon
I am SOOO happy! Thank you for sharing that. I was thinking earlier this morning that I needed to PM you and ask you how things were going. I was going to do that sometime today. Now I already know how things are going and it makes me feel so good knowing that you had a good experience.
 

zomg

I aim to misbehave!
I'm glad you were able to go and have a great time! Remember, a man (or woman) isn't expected to run faster than he or she has strength :)
 

Dream Angel

Well-Known Member
One of the sisters gave a wonderful talk on her testimony. She has had a very difficult time this year and has had many trials..yet she has remained strong..she is a true inspiration to myself..it put my problems in prespective a bit actually :eek:

One of the things she mentioned is when a butterfly hatches from its cocoon it is a very painful process, but it needs to do it, in order to have strong wings and fly. If the butterfly is helped in anyway and doe not go through the process, it will not be able to fly as its wings would not be strong enough...

Same can be said for us..we may have trials and hard times, but they make us stronger in the end.
 

DavyCrocket2003

Well-Known Member
Yea, that's so true.:)
We don't exactly always love it, but God gives us trials so we can grow. Even Joseph Smith had a hard time accepting his trials. One time, when it seemed like everything and everyone was against him, he cried out "Oh God where art thou...?" God's response was pretty incredible. "My son, peace be unto thy soul; thine adversity and thine afflictions shall be but a small moment..." He says a lot of other things but he ends with "...And if thou shouldst be cast into the pit or into the hands of murderers, and the sentence of death passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep; if the billowing surge conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if the heavens gather blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way; and above all, if the very jaws of hell shall gape open the mouth wide after thee, know thou, my son, that all these things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good. The Son of Man hath descended below them all. Art thou greater than he? Therefore, hold on thy way, and the priesthood shall remain with thee; for their bounds are set, they cannot pass. Thy days are known, and thy years shall not be numbered less; therefore, fear not what man can do, for God shall be with you forever and ever."

I know I've always found this a powerful example of how God works with us, his children. God knows us. I love how he says "thy days are known." And he knows just how much we can handle. He knows exactly what it is like: "The Son of Man hath descended below them all." He can give us strength when we just don't have any left. Sometimes we have to just turn it all over to him and let him carry our burdens for us when they are to heavy to bear. Anyway, hope it helps just a little.:)

*FYI the scriptural account I've referred to is found in D&C 121-123.
 

idea

Question Everything
And he knows just how much we can handle.

I often think that those who are given the most trials, are those with the strongest spirits, the ones who can handle the most...

There is a saying, "You'll never know that God is all you need until He is all you have."

This last GC - remember this one? She was taken to that point -
http://lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?h...toid=f318118dd536c010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD

The setting for my final example of one who persevered and ultimately prevailed, despite overwhelmingly difficult circumstances, begins in East Prussia following World War II.
In about March 1946, less than a year after the end of the war, Ezra Taft Benson, then a member of the Quorum of the Twelve, accompanied by Frederick W. Babbel, was assigned a special postwar tour of Europe for the express purpose of meeting with the Saints, assessing their needs, and providing assistance to them. Elder Benson and Brother Babbel later recounted, from a testimony they heard, the experience of a Church member who found herself in an area no longer controlled by the government under which she had resided.
She and her husband had lived an idyllic life in East Prussia. Then had come the second great world war within their lifetimes. Her beloved young husband was killed during the final days of the frightful battles in their homeland, leaving her alone to care for their four children.
The occupying forces determined that the Germans in East Prussia must go to Western Germany to seek a new home. The woman was German, and so it was necessary for her to go. The journey was over a thousand miles (1,600 km), and she had no way to accomplish it but on foot. She was allowed to take only such bare necessities as she could load into her small wooden-wheeled wagon. Besides her children and these meager possessions, she took with her a strong faith in God and in the gospel as revealed to the latter-day prophet Joseph Smith.
She and the children began the journey in late summer. Having neither food nor money among her few possessions, she was forced to gather a daily subsistence from the fields and forests along the way. She was constantly faced with dangers from panic-stricken refugees and plundering troops.
As the days turned into weeks and the weeks to months, the temperatures dropped below freezing. Each day, she stumbled over the frozen ground, her smallest child—a baby—in her arms. Her three other children struggled along behind her, with the oldest—seven years old—pulling the tiny wooden wagon containing their belongings. Ragged and torn burlap was wrapped around their feet, providing the only protection for them, since their shoes had long since disintegrated. Their thin, tattered jackets covered their thin, tattered clothing, providing their only protection against the cold.
Soon the snows came, and the days and nights became a nightmare. In the evenings she and the children would try to find some kind of shelter—a barn or a shed—and would huddle together for warmth, with a few thin blankets from the wagon on top of them.
She constantly struggled to force from her mind overwhelming fears that they would perish before reaching their destination.
And then one morning the unthinkable happened. As she awakened, she felt a chill in her heart. The tiny form of her three-year-old daughter was cold and still, and she realized that death had claimed the child. Though overwhelmed with grief, she knew that she must take the other children and travel on. First, however, she used the only implement she had—a tablespoon—to dig a grave in the frozen ground for her tiny, precious child.
Death, however, was to be her companion again and again on the journey. Her seven-year-old son died, either from starvation or from freezing or both. Again her only shovel was the tablespoon, and again she dug hour after hour to lay his mortal remains gently into the earth. Next, her five-year-old son died, and again she used her tablespoon as a shovel.
Her despair was all consuming. She had only her tiny baby daughter left, and the poor thing was failing. Finally, as she was reaching the end of her journey, the baby died in her arms. The spoon was gone now, so hour after hour she dug a grave in the frozen earth with her bare fingers. Her grief became unbearable. How could she possibly be kneeling in the snow at the graveside of her last child? She had lost her husband and all her children. She had given up her earthly goods, her home, and even her homeland.
In this moment of overwhelming sorrow and complete bewilderment, she felt her heart would literally break. In despair she contemplated how she might end her own life, as so many of her fellow countrymen were doing. How easy it would be to jump off a nearby bridge, she thought, or to throw herself in front of an oncoming train.
And then, as these thoughts assailed her, something within her said, “Get down on your knees and pray.” She ignored the prompting until she could resist it no longer. She knelt and prayed more fervently than she had in her entire life:
“Dear Heavenly Father, I do not know how I can go on. I have nothing left—except my faith in Thee. I feel, Father, amidst the desolation of my soul, an overwhelming gratitude for the atoning sacrifice of Thy Son, Jesus Christ. I cannot express adequately my love for Him. I know that because He suffered and died, I shall live again with my family; that because He broke the chains of death, I shall see my children again and will have the joy of raising them. Though I do not at this moment wish to live, I will do so, that we may be reunited as a family and return—together—to Thee.”
When she finally reached her destination of Karlsruhe, Germany, she was emaciated. Brother Babbel said that her face was a purple-gray, her eyes red and swollen, her joints protruding. She was literally in the advanced stages of starvation. In a Church meeting shortly thereafter, she bore a glorious testimony, stating that of all the ailing people in her saddened land, she was one of the happiest because she knew that God lived, that Jesus is the Christ, and that He died and was resurrected so that we might live again. She testified that she knew if she continued faithful and true to the end, she would be reunited with those she had lost and would be saved in the celestial kingdom of God.8

the above is not something to strive for. we were also told :
http://lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?h...toid=f318118dd536c010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD

Brothers and sisters, one of the great consolations of this Easter season is that because Jesus walked such a long, lonely path utterly alone, we do not have to do so. His solitary journey brought great company for our little version of that path—the merciful care of our Father in Heaven, the unfailing companionship of this Beloved Son, the consummate gift of the Holy Ghost, angels in heaven, family members on both sides of the veil, prophets and apostles, teachers, leaders, friends. All of these and more have been given as companions for our mortal journey because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ and the Restoration of His gospel. Trumpeted from the summit of Calvary is the truth that we will never be left alone nor unaided, even if sometimes we may feel that we are. Truly the Redeemer of us all said: “I will not leave you comfortless: [My Father and] I will come to you [and abide with you].”20

My other plea at Easter time is that these scenes of Christ’s lonely sacrifice, laced with moments of denial and abandonment and, at least once, outright betrayal, must never be reenacted by us. He has walked alone once. Now, may I ask that never again will He have to confront sin without our aid and assistance, that never again will He find only unresponsive onlookers when He sees you and me along His Via Dolorosa in our present day. As we approach this holy week—Passover Thursday with its Paschal Lamb, atoning Friday with its cross, Resurrection Sunday with its empty tomb—may we declare ourselves to be more fully disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, not in word only and not only in the flush of comfortable times but in deed and in courage and in faith, including when the path is lonely and when our cross is difficult to bear. This Easter week and always, may we stand by Jesus Christ “at all times and in all things, and in all places that [we] may be in, even until death,”21 for surely that is how He stood by us when it was unto death and when He had to stand entirely and utterly alone. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

Even if we get to the point that God is all we have, we can be assure that God is with us - we will never be left completely alone.
 
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