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  • #211363
    Anonymous
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    Getting it ready.

    #319799
    Anonymous
    Guest

    “My dear associates in the work of the Lord.”

    All else aside, I love Pres. Monson’s gentle humility.

    #319800
    Anonymous
    Guest

    I understand war framing, but it is not my favorite. It is interesting to see those who take a battle stance when it isn’t my own.

    I do like, however, the statement that how we teach our children is up to us. I also like the phrasing of sin-resistant and repentant better than the “not even once” stance of Sister Nelson, for example.

    #319801
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Ugh, more talk about Satan. I swear, I think we sometimes believe in him more than God.

    #319802
    Anonymous
    Guest

    I’m down with helping children keep promises. That’s a fine skill.

    #319803
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Conceptually, this is a good talk. It’s just the battle framing in the beginning I don’t like.

    #319804
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Old Timer wrote:


    Conceptually, this is a good talk. It’s just the framing I don’t like.

    Agreed. It’s bad for those who have done what they believe is a good job parenting but their children have “gone astray.” I’m not sure of her family status but she comes of as one without an adult child who had struggled.

    #319805
    Anonymous
    Guest

    This is a great example of why I respect people who believe passionately in a literal sense. The way eternity opens in our theology is one of my favorite elements.

    #319806
    Anonymous
    Guest

    I like the statement to look up during difficult times.

    #319807
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Can I go back to Pres. Monson? I’m thinking about one of my kids. She’s hearing that “a testimony” is about the Book of Mormon and Joseph Smith and priesthood authority. :-( She’s not hearing, “Do you believe in Jesus Christ as Savior and Exemplar? Then this is the church for you.”

    #319808
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Old Timer wrote:


    I like the statement to look up during difficult times.

    And appreciating what you have in the moment. The world is beautiful. Drink in the rain.

    #319809
    Anonymous
    Guest

    32 generations? 😯

    I don’t like the soft coercion in “weak link” analogies. Should I sit my children down and explain that if they don’t make the right choices, they’ll disappoint me, my wife, their grandparents, their great grandparents, etc.?

    Look up, not around, to learn what to do. Seems to apply to worrying about disappointing ancestors as well.

    #319810
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Ann wrote:


    Can I go back to Pres. Monson? I’m thinking about one of my kids. She’s hearing that “a testimony” is about the Book of Mormon and Joseph Smith and priesthood authority. :-( She’s not hearing, “Do you believe in Jesus Christ as Savior and Exemplar? Then this is the church for you.”

    I felt that too. I don’t like the”if joseph was a prophet the rest is true” concept because the opposite then can also be true – if he isn’t then the other things are false. It’s not so black and white or all or nothing.

    ETA the gospel is not about Joseph Smith or the Book of Mormon.

    #319811
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Ann wrote:


    Can I go back to Pres. Monson? I’m thinking about one of my kids. She’s hearing that “a testimony” is about the Book of Mormon and Joseph Smith and priesthood authority. :-( She’s not hearing, “Do you believe in Jesus Christ as Savior and Exemplar? Then this is the church for you.”

    We don’t normally say that, unfortunately. Also, worthiness interview questions give us some strong cues. Don’t know what else to say. Emphasize believing in the goodness of things she can’t believe the truth of, maybe?

    #319812
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Reuben wrote:


    32 generations? 😯

    I don’t like the soft coercion in “weak link” analogies. Should I sit my children down and explain that if they don’t make the right choices, they’ll disappoint me, my wife, their grandparents, their great grandparents, etc.?

    Look up, not around, to learn what to do. Seems to apply to worrying about disappointing ancestors as well.

    Nor do I like the repeated “where will you go?” question. This is where I don’t appreciate literal belief. The soft-coercion and conflation of church and gospel is real.

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