Saturday, November 29, 2008

Updated version of Mormon.org

Updated version of Mormon.org

Published: Saturday, Nov. 22, 2008

In a letter dated Oct. 30 and to be read in ward and branch sacrament meetings, the First Presidency announced a new version of the Church's mormon.org Web site.

The letter reads:

Dear Brethren and Sisters:

The Web site lds.org is directed primarily to members of the Church and has information to help members live the gospel and serve in the Church. We call your attention to the newest version of mormon.org, a Web site designed specifically for those not of our faith. This revised site is aligned with the missionary guide Preach My Gospel and contains information about the basic doctrines of the Church, including answers to some of life's greatest questions. The information is enhanced by video testimonies of recent converts.

We invite you to become familiar with mormon.org so that you might refer your friends and family members of all faiths to experience what is available there.

May the Lord bless you as you use these gifts of technology to invite others to come unto Christ by receiving His restored gospel.

I feel so touched by reading this remarks

Remarks by John McCain


November 5, 2008

Thank you. Thank you, my friends. Thank you for coming here on this beautiful Arizona evening.

My friends, we have -- we have come to the end of a long journey. The American people have spoken, and they have spoken clearly. A little while ago, I had the honor of calling Senator Barack Obama to congratulate him on being elected the next president of the country that we both love.

In a contest as long and difficult as this campaign has been, his success alone commands my respect for his ability and perseverance. But that he managed to do so by inspiring the hopes of so many millions of Americans who had once wrongly believed that they had little at stake or little influence in the election of an American president is something I deeply admire and commend him for achieving.

This is an historic election, and I recognize the special significance it has for African-Americans and for the special pride that must be theirs tonight.

I've always believed that America offers opportunities to all who have the industry and will to seize it. Senator Obama believes that, too. But we both recognize that though we have come a long way from the old injustices that once stained our nation's reputation and denied some Americans the full blessings of American citizenship, the memory of them still had the power to wound.

A century ago, President Theodore Roosevelt's invitation of Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House was taken as an outrage in many quarters. America today is a world away from the cruel and prideful bigotry of that time. There is no better evidence of this than the election of an African American to the presidency of the United States. Let there be no reason now for any American to fail to cherish their citizenship in this, the greatest nation on Earth.

Senator Obama has achieved a great thing for himself and for his country. I applaud him for it, and offer in my sincere sympathy that his beloved grandmother did not live to see this day, though our faith assures us she is at rest in the presence of her creator and so very proud of the good man she helped raise.

Senator Obama and I have had and argued our differences, and he has prevailed. No doubt many of those differences remain. These are difficult times for our country, and I pledge to him tonight to do all in my power to help him lead us through the many challenges we face.

I urge all Americans who supported me to join me in not just congratulating him, but offering our next president our good will and earnest effort to find ways to come together, to find the necessary compromises, to bridge our differences, and help restore our prosperity, defend our security in a dangerous world, and leave our children and grandchildren a stronger, better country than we inherited.

Whatever our differences, we are fellow Americans. And please believe me when I say no association has ever meant more to me than that.

It is natural tonight to feel some disappointment, but tomorrow we must move beyond it and work together to get our country moving again. We fought as hard as we could.

And though we fell short, the failure is mine, not yours.

I am so deeply grateful to all of you for the great honor of your support and for all you have done for me. I wish the outcome had been different, my friends. The road was a difficult one from the outset. But your support and friendship never wavered. I cannot adequately express how deeply indebted I am to you.

I am especially grateful to my wife, Cindy, my children, my dear mother and all my family and to the many old and dear friends who have stood by my side through the many ups and downs of this long campaign. I have always been a fortunate man, and never more so for the love and encouragement you have given me.

You know, campaigns are often harder on a candidate's family than on the candidate, and that's been true in this campaign. All I can offer in compensation is my love and gratitude, and the promise of more peaceful years ahead.

I am also, of course, very thankful to Governor Sarah Palin, one of the best campaigners I have ever seen and an impressive new voice in our party for reform and the principles that have always been our greatest strength. Her husband Todd and their five beautiful children with their tireless dedication to our cause, and the courage and grace they showed in the rough-and-tumble of a presidential campaign. We can all look forward with great interest to her future service to Alaska, the Republican Party and our country.

To all my campaign comrades, from Rick Davis and Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter, to every last volunteer who fought so hard and valiantly month after month in what at times seemed to be the most challenged campaign in modern times, thank you so much. A lost election will never mean more to me than the privilege of your faith and friendship.

I don't know what more we could have done to try to win this election. I'll leave that to others to determine. Every candidate makes mistakes, and I'm sure I made my share of them. But I won't spend a moment of the future regretting what might have been.

This campaign was and will remain the great honor of my life. And my heart is filled with nothing but gratitude for the experience and to the American people for giving me a fair hearing before deciding that Senator Obama and my old friend Senator Joe Biden should have the honor of leading us for the next four years.

I would not be an American worthy of the name, should I regret a fate that has allowed me the extraordinary privilege of serving this country for a half a century. Today, I was a candidate for the highest office in the country I love so much. And tonight, I remain her servant. That is blessing enough for anyone and I thank the people of Arizona for it.

Tonight, more than any night, I hold in my heart nothing but love for this country and for all its citizens, whether they supported me or Senator Obama, I wish Godspeed to the man who was my former opponent and will be my president.

And I call on all Americans, as I have often in this campaign, to not despair of our present difficulties but to believe always in the promise and greatness of America, because nothing is inevitable here.

Americans never quit. We never surrender. We never hide from history, we make history.

Thank you, and God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all very much.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Daily Gratitude and Thanksgiving--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

Daily Gratitude and Thanksgiving Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

A few years ago, two researchers conducted what they called the Research Project on Gratitude and Thankfulness. They found through science what most of us know intuitively: gratitude makes people happy.

For the study, several hundred people were divided into three groups and asked to keep diaries. The first group listed the day’s events in their diaries, the second group recorded any unpleasant experiences they had during the day, and the last group made a daily list of things they were grateful for.

The researchers found that the simple act of taking time each day to count your blessings makes a person more enthusiastic, determined, optimistic, and energetic. Those who expressed gratitude experienced less depression and stress, exercised more regularly, and made more progress toward personal goals. Researchers even noted a relationship between feeling grateful and feeling loved, and they observed how gratitude inspires acts of kindness and compassion.1

Remarkable, isn’t it? All this from daily gratitude and thanksgiving.

Of course, the best way to discover the benefits of gratitude is not by observing them in an academic study but by experiencing the miracle for ourselves: When we daily count our blessings, we feel better about life, even in the midst of adversity; we garner a strength of character and largeness of soul that will help us through hard times; and we see life as basically good, despite its challenges and heartaches.

Gratitude does not need to be reserved for holidays and special events. Every day is filled with miracles and blessings. If we open our hearts and look, we’ll find reasons for gratitude and thanksgiving each day, all around us.
1 See Robert A. Emmons and Michael E. McCullough, “Highlights from the Research Project on Gratitude and Thankfulness,” http://psychology.ucdavis.edu/labs/emmons; see also “Gratitude Theory,” http://www.acfnewsource.org/religion/gratitude_theory.html.
Program #4132

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Couple of Jokes

First Things First

The Primary president was presenting a Sharing Time lesson about the Celestial kingdom. She asked the children what they needed to do to get into the Celestial kingdom. She asked: “If I pay extra tithing, will that get me into the Celestial Kingdom ?” The kids said no and the Primary president continued: “If I go to church twice on Sunday, will that get me into the Celestial Kingdom ?” Again, they knew this wouldn't be enough. The Primary president asked again: “So, what do I need to do to get into the Celestial Kingdom ?” A little boy in the back called out: “Duh—you need to be dead !”

Jeanette Ross
Boise, Idaho

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Sing Us a Song

When our son was 5, I was the music director in our small branch. One Sunday he helped me pick the hymn The Spirit of God for the opening hymn. As we sang the song that week, it became apparent to all of us that he didn't know it as well as he thought he did. By the time we got through four verses of his loudly singing his mistake in the chorus, he was the only one singing. The rest of us were trying too hard not to laugh as he sang: "We'll sing and we'll shout with the mommies of heaven, Oh Santa, Oh Santa…."

Tina St. Onge
Hendersonville, Tennessee

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Finding Hope in the Gospel

M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E

Turn Off the Bad News of the World,
Tune into the Good News of the Gospel

By
Darla Isackson

2008 seems to be setting a record (at least in my limited perspective) for the most bad news! Although I've usually limited my news savvy to what I glean from the news summaries on Meridian , the last few months I allowed myself consistently to be sucked into the screaming headlines and troubling controversies. The day after the election, with the Proposition 8 verdict still too close to call, and all the negatives I'd heard about certain prevailing candidates fresh on my mind, my lower back went into painful spasms. This has long been my body's way of telling me I'm way over-tired and over-stressed.

I spent the next few days in bed, barely able to move, but given the opportunity to gain a better perspective.

Turning Into the Good News of the Gospel

Our wise stake leaders had given us the assignment to review and study all the October conference talks before our next stake conference the first week of December. I hadn't been making great progress, but this down time gave me just the “excuse” I needed to focus on them.

Partly because I've preferred to study conference talks in the Ensign , I hadn't until then discovered how amazingly easy the Church's web site (lds.org) makes it to click onto the conference videos. But laying helpless in bed, it was better for me to watch the conference videos on my computer than to try to sit up and read them. I began immersing myself in the hope-filled, Spirit-filled words of the Brethren and I never want to quit!

The contrast between the good news of the gospel and the bad news I'd been reading and hearing is something I'll never forget. There is such a direct connection between the focus of our minds and our feelings; as I focused on light and truth, the darkness I'd been feeling immediately lifted.

Pres. Uchtdorf's message of hope turned my focus from this world to a better and reminds me that joy need not be a missing commodity. His encouraging words and testimony are so heart-lifting that I want to go back to them over and over. Elder Holland 's testimony of the ministering of angels, and that we are never left alone in our problems and troubles is a balm to my soul. The strength of Elder Marcos Aidukaitis's testimony of the power of the Book of Mormon and the influence of his father's righteous decisions on him and his posterity lifted me. Elder Wirthlin's humor and sweet message to accept whatever comes and love it makes me smile every time I think of it. President Monson's peaceful countenance and words encouraging us to find joy in the journey and relish life reminded me of all the good in my own circumstances—despite what is going on in the world. I could go on an on.

In light of the frightening backlash to the passage of Proposition 8 in California , as I listened again to President Eyring's message on unity and Elder Hale's on Christian Courage, as well as many other pertinent messages, I marveled. Once again I could see so clearly the inspiration behind the words of the Brethren. By inspiration they knew beforehand exactly what we were going to need and they gave it to us!

I have been overcome with gratitude for the firm foundation of the gospel, of apostles and prophets, of words of faith and hope to light our way in this darkening world.

And I've been so heartened by the courageous and Christ-like responses of Church members to the swell of persecution that has followed our stand on marriage.

But How Can I Stay in Faith, Not Fear?

I'm well aware that my current personal challenges are minor, comparatively speaking. I'm safe and sound in a nice neighborhood in West Jordan , Utah , not likely at the moment to be targeted by hate groups. But what if the Church called on me to be actively involved in the foray? What if I had lived in California ?

Would I have had what it takes to carry “yes” signs and be called names . . . and worse? What if it was our family business that was being boycotted for our support of Proposition 8—our livelihood that was threatened? What if the persecution gets so fierce that I cannot attend a temple even in Utah without harassment?

That's where the rubber hits the road. I'm a chicken at heart, after all—a people pleasing, peace at any price wimp. Can the Lord really take my weakness and turn it into strength?

Mouthing gospel platitudes won't be enough as we head into these last days battles for the souls of men. Only a living faith that God is our ever-present help in trouble will be.

How do we get that kind of faith and keep it? A big part of the answer is to turn off the bad news of the world and tune into the good news of the gospel.

Immersing ourselves in the scriptures and conference talks—so easily available—won't solve all our problems. But it is the best way I know to keep tuned into the very real power of the Spirit. As we invite the guidance of the Holy Ghost and make our minds and hearts a place of faith, I know we will be given the strength we need, day by day to prevail. What more could we ask?

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Copyright 1999-2008 Meridian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

In Trying Times--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

In Trying Times Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

We live in trying times. People are losing their jobs, their savings, even their homes. Others face personal tragedies of various kinds. Even if you aren’t currently facing tough times, you probably know someone who’s there right now. What do we need to bounce back, to cope with such adversity and uncertainties? We need each other.

Perhaps you have a friend who stepped into your life at just the right time and shared your burden. Legendary singer Ray Charles benefited from the sensitivity of such a friend.

When Ray was five, his little brother fell in a washtub and drowned when Ray was unable to save him. Months later, Ray began to slowly lose his eyesight, eventually becoming completely blind. But at age 15 came the most devastating tragedy—the unexpected death of his beloved mother. Young Ray soon sunk into deep depression.

He later recounted: “There was an old lady in town we called Ma Beck. She was the kind of lady that—well, everybody in town used to say that if there was a heaven, she was certainly going to be there when she passed. . . . This elderly woman saw the trauma I was going through. So she took me aside one day and said, ‘Son, you know that I knew your mama. And I know how she tried to raise you. And I know she always taught you to carry on.’”

“That episode with Ma Beck,” Ray said, “shook me out of my depression. It really started me on my way. After that I told myself that I must do what my mom would have expected me to do.”[1]

Overcoming adversity, learning its painful lessons, is one of life’s great purposes. But no one should have to do it alone. As friends, neighbors, and family members, we can touch others’ lives in ways no one else can. If we are willing to watch and listen, we can say the right thing at the right time to lift another’s burden.
Program #4131

Latter-day Saints Laughs

Tips and Tricks

A few years ago at a Relief Society Homemaking meeting, we were discussing household hints. One sister suggested that when making a cake you could replace the oil with applesauce so that it would be moist but have fewer calories and less fat. One sister who had just recently moved to Utah from England came in a few minutes late and missed the part about the cake. She mistakenly thought we were talking about oil used to anoint the sick. She exclaimed: " Applesauce ? You sure do things differently here in Utah !"

SS
St.
George, Utah

FBI Sent the Suspicious Substance to Headquarters in Quantico for Further Tests

FBI to run more tests on mystery substance mailed to LDS Church

Published: November 18, 2008
A suspicious substance mailed to the headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is on its way to FBI headquarters in Quantico, Va., for further testing.

FBI agents in Salt Lake City said they received a final report from the state health department on the white powdery substance in an envelope mailed to Temple Square last week. Tests were conducted to ensure it wasn't ricin, anthrax or any other biological weapon.

"It is not any kind of biological agent or toxin or even a new strain," FBI Special Agent Juan Becerra said Monday.

Envelopes with white powder were mailed to Temple Square, the LDS Church's temple in Los Angeles and a printing press belonging to the Catholic-affiliated Knights of Columbus in New Haven, Conn. Both churches were heavy backers of California's Proposition 8, a constitutional amendment that banned same-sex marriage in that state.

The FBI has labeled its probe a domestic terrorism investigation. Becerra would not say whether the agency had identified any suspects in the case, but he reiterated Monday that the FBI had no evidence that linked the threats to Proposition 8 or its opponents.

Many gay rights organizations also have decried the threats.

— Ben Winslow

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Newly Called

KAOHSIUNG TAIWAN STAKE: (Sept. 14, 2008) President Shih-Ning Yang, 44, director of International Affairs Office, Chun Shan Vocational School, succeeding Shih-Jung Lee; wife, Mei-Chien Peng Yang. Counselors — Chia Ting Hsu, 35, sailor, ROC Navy; wife, Hsiu Feng Hsieh Hsu. Yung ta Huang, 46, technician, Tai Fei; wife, Hui Hsien Huang.

Friday, November 14, 2008

First Presidency Urges Respect, Civility in Public Discourse

Five months ago, the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sent a letter to members of the Church in California, encouraging them to join the millions of other Californians from many religious denominations, ethnic groups and political persuasions in a broad coalition to defend marriage as it has been defined for millennia.

During the election campaign, both sides of the argument on Proposition 8 had ample opportunities to express their viewpoint. The result was conclusively in favor of traditional marriage. More than 40 states in the United States have now voted to protect traditional marriage, either directly or through their elected representatives.

Today the First Presidency issued this statement about the democratic process:

Since the people of California voted to reaffirm the sanctity of traditional marriage between a man and a woman on November 4, 2008, places of worship have been targeted by opponents of Proposition 8 with demonstrations and, in some cases, vandalism. People of faith have been intimidated for simply exercising their democratic rights. These are not actions that are worthy of the democratic ideals of our nation. The end of a free and fair election should not be the beginning of a hostile response in America.

The Church is keenly aware of the differences of opinion on this difficult and sensitive matter. The reasons for this principled stand in defense of marriage have already been articulated elsewhere. However, some of what we have seen since Californians voted to pass Proposition 8 has been deeply disappointing.

Attacks on churches and intimidation of people of faith have no place in civil discourse over controversial issues. People of faith have a democratic right to express their views in the public square without fear of reprisal. Efforts to force citizens out of public discussion should be deplored by people of goodwill everywhere.

We call upon those who have honest disagreements on this issue to urge restraint upon the extreme actions of a few that are further polarizing our communities and urge them to act in a spirit of mutual respect and civility towards each other.

Official Web site of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
© 2008 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.

FBI: White powder mailed to temple harmless; church, gay-rights groups respond

By Ben Winslow
Deseret News
Published: November 14, 2008
Preliminary tests have found that a white powdery substance found in an envelope mailed to LDS Church headquarters is not hazardous, the FBI said.

"There is no known toxins or biological agents," FBI Special Agent Juan Becerra told the Deseret News.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' First Presidency issued a statement Friday urging respect and civility in public discourse. Gay rights groups are also condemning the threats.

Lab tests were conducted overnight to determine whether the powder that slipped out of an envelope opened in the annex of the Salt Lake Temple was ricin, anthrax, smallpox or any other deadly toxin. They came back negative, but further tests were being conducted on Friday by state health officials, Becerra said.

The FBI on Friday also said it has labeled their probe into the suspicious substances as a domestic terrorist investigation.

"Obviously it instills fear in the public eye and causes people not to feel safe," Becerra said. "It is illegal to mail something out and to threaten the use of a biological weapon or even pretend it's a biological weapon."

The LDS temples in Salt Lake City and Los Angeles received envelopes on Thursday containing a white powdery substance. So did the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic fraternal organization based in New Haven, Conn. Both organizations were heavy backers of Proposition 8, the measure in California that narrowly passed Nov. 4, banning same-sex marriage.

The FBI said it is a "strong possibility" that all three letters are linked, but federal investigators reiterated they have no information to point a finger of blame at the proposition and its opponents.

"The evidence does not lead to that right now and it would be irresponsible to say anything otherwise," Becerra said.

He would not say if federal agents had identified any suspects. No one has claimed responsibility for the mailings.

In a statement, the First Presidency of the LDS Church said that since the Nov. 4 election, places of worship have been targeted with protests and vandalism.

"People of faith have been intimidated for simply exercising their democratic rights. These are not actions that are worthy of the democratic ideals of our nation," the statement said. "The end of a free and fair election should not be the beginning of a hostile response in America."

The LDS Church said it was keenly aware of the "differences of opinion on this difficult and sensitive manner," but the First Presidency expressed disappointment in what it has seen since Prop. 8 passed.

"We call upon those who have honest disagreements on this issue to urge restraint upon the extreme actions of a few that are further polarizing our communities and urge them to act in a spirit of mutual respect and civility towards each other," the statement said.

In its own statement, the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center decried the threats.

"While the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center organized a peaceful demonstration against the involvement of the leadership of the Mormon Church in the deceitful Yes on Prop. 8 campaign, we decry the use or threat of violence," said Darrel Cummings, the center's chief of staff.

"Just as the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community seeks the right to be treated equally under the law, all Americans should have the right to live lives free from fear and violence."

The gay rights group Equality Utah also issued a statement Friday condemning violence, vandalism or intimidation.

"During such an emotional time, where wounds run deep, we must remind ourselves of the greater good," executive director Mike Thompson said. "We must make efforts to forgive where forgiveness is needed and fix what needs to be fixed. We must find ways to work together — families in our community are depending on us. As the LDS Church stated, we can build a better society. Equality Utah is committed to doing just that."

Thompson reiterated his call for the LDS Church to work with them on gay rights legislation including medical rights, housing and employment rights and domestic partnerships that past church statements said LDS leaders did not oppose.

"Equality Utah remains confident that the LDS Church will be true to its past public statements that it is not anti-gay," Thompson said.

LDS temples in California, Salt Lake City and New York have been the subject of mass demonstrations over the faith's heavy involvement in the campaign to pass Proposition 8. More demonstrations are planned this weekend over marriage and gay rights — including a pair of demonstrations in Salt Lake City.


E-mail: bwinslow@desnews.com

Police investigate powder scare at 2 temples



By Ben Winslow

Deseret News
Published: Friday, Nov. 14, 2008

Authorities are investigating a suspicious substance mailed to the headquarters of the LDS Church that prompted a hazardous materials response to Temple Square.

A similar scare was reported at the church's temple in Los Angeles, which closed its grounds for a few hours on Thursday, a church spokesman confirmed. A printing plant belonging to the Knights of Columbus in Windsor Locks, Conn., also received a white powder scare Thursday.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Catholic-affiliated fraternal organization are both major backers of the controversial Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in California. However, the FBI cautioned on Thursday that there is no evidence to link the threats to Prop. 8 opponents.

"We've got to follow the evidence and at this point we have not received anything that would lead us to believe the opponents of Prop. 8 are behind any kind of terroristic activity," FBI Special Agent Juan Becerra said from the agency's Salt Lake City office. "It would be irresponsible to say that at this point."

LDS Church security officials called Salt Lake police and firefighters about 4 p.m. Thursday when an employee in the recorder's office inside the Salt Lake Temple annex building opened a manila envelope.

"When the employee opened it up and looked inside it, there was actually another white envelope inside that had a white powdery substance in it," Salt Lake Fire spokesman Scott Freitag said.

The employee who opened it got some of the white powder on his hand, authorities said. He immediately set the envelope down and called church security officials, who came over wearing a respirator and plastic gloves. They sealed the envelope inside a plastic bag, Freitag said.

Three employees in the room at the time were quarantined. Security denied access to the room and shut off the air vents.

"They are not complaining of any injury or illness," Freitag said, adding that they did not have to undergo a decontamination process.

Hazardous materials teams sanitized the substance to ensure it was not a biological agent like anthrax.

On the Main Street plaza, missionaries and other church employees were allowed to come and go. A lone LDS security official stood behind the temple gates. He opened the gate for firefighters, then closed and locked it behind them.

A pair of FBI agents left Temple Square with the envelope in a black plastic bag. The envelope was taken to a lab to be tested.

"We are working to find out what it is and hopefully it's harmless," Becerra told the Deseret News.

Firefighters said they did not see anything of a threatening nature with the envelope.

Because the annex is a separate building, the temple itself was not evacuated. However, church security did not allow anyone to come or go while hazmat teams were there.

"At first, we thought it was maybe picketing again," said Poulsen Udall, who was inside the temple at the time.

He was referring to mass protests outside Temple Square last week against the LDS Church's backing of Proposition 8.

"It's a sad thing that all of this is going on," said Udall's wife, Pauline.

At the LDS Church's temple in Westwood, Calif., the grounds were closed after an employee opened an envelope similar to the one at church headquarters in Salt Lake City.

"They received an envelope with a suspicious white powdery substance," Los Angeles police officer Karen Smith told the Deseret News. "It's been cleared and there was no hazardous material."

In New Haven, Conn., workers at a printing plant discovered an envelope containing white powder. Hazardous materials crews responded and the powder was taken for testing, authorities said. The plant later re-opened. A call to a spokesman for the Knights of Columbus was not immediately returned late Thursday.

"We're working with local law enforcement and the FBI," LDS Church spokesman Scott Trotter said.



E-mail: bwinslow@desnews.com


MormonTimes.com is produced by the Deseret News in Salt Lake City, Utah.
It is not an official publication of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Copyright © 2008 Deseret News Publishing Company

FBI analyzing white powder sent to SLC Temple

The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune

Updated: 7:48 PM- The FBI was testing an envelope mailed to the Salt Lake City LDS temple Thursday to determine if the white powder it contained was dangerous.
At 4:05 p.m., a recorder's office employee working in the temple's annex opened a manila envelope that contained a smaller envelope with powder in it, said Salt Lake City Fire Department spokesman Scott Freitag.
"As soon as he saw it he put it down," Freitag said.
LDS security was summoned and put the envelopes and powder into a plastic bag. Security officers called 911 and the Salt Lake City Fire Department's Hazardous Material crew and FBI agents arrived.
The man who opened the envelope and two other employees were kept in the annex for more than an hour. Their clothes were washed on site. Only the man who opened the envelope got a small amount of powder on his hand, Freitag said. It was determined the employees were not injured and later went home.
HAZMAT crews used a bleach-like product to sanitize the annex just to be safe, Freitag said. The annex office is in a separate building near the temple. Temple Square was not evacuated while HAZMAT crews were there.
Two FBI agents left the temple grounds about 5 p.m. with a black plastic trash bag containing the envelopes and powder. The bag was taken to an FBI lab where it will be tested to determine what the powder is. Results were not expected until at least Friday, said FBI spokesman Juan Becerra.
Police blocked off eastbound traffic between Main Street and West Temple until about 5:25 p.m.
Freitag said he didn't know where the envelope was mailed from but that it didn't appear to contain a letter. Investigators are trying to determine who sent it.
Church spokesman Scott Trotter said he was unaware of any threats called into the temple Thursday that would indicate the envelope was coming.
Becerra said FBI agents in Los Angeles were investigating the discovery of a similar white powder Thursday at an LDS temple there.
"As to whether they are related or not remains to be seen," Becerra said.
jbergreen@sltrib.com

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Catholic Bishop Decries Religious Bigotry Against Mormons

Catholic Bishop Decries Religious Bigotry Against Mormons

SACRAMENTO - 7 November 2008 - (This news release was issued by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento) The following statement was released today by Bishop William Weigand, head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento and former Bishop of Salt Lake City, in response to attacks on (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) for supporting California’s Proposition 8, defending the traditional definition of marriage:

“Catholics stand in solidarity with our Mormon brothers and sisters in support of traditional marriage — the union of one man and one woman — that has been the major building block of Western Civilization for millennia.

“The ProtectMarriage coalition, which led the successful campaign to pass Proposition 8, was an historic alliance of people from every faith and ethnicity. LDS were included — but so were Catholics and Jews, Evangelicals and Orthodox, African-Americans and Latinos, Asians and Anglos.

“Bigoted attacks on Mormons for the part they played in our coalition are shameful and ignore the reality that Mormon voters were only a small part of the groundswell that supported Proposition 8.

“As the former bishop of the Diocese of Salt Lake City, I can attest to the fact that followers of the Mormon faith are a good and generous people with a long history of commitment to family and giving to community causes.

“I personally decry the bigotry recently exhibited towards the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — coming from the opponents of Proposition 8, who ironically, have called those of us supporting traditional marriage intolerant.

“I call upon the supporters of same-sex marriage to live by their own words — and to refrain from discrimination against religion and to exercise tolerance for those who differ from them. I call upon them to accept the will of the people of California in the passage of Proposition 8.”

SOURCE: Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento

---

Monday, November 10, 2008

Each Day Is a Day to Remember--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

Each Day Is A Day To Remember Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Etched on the U.S. Navy Seabee Memorial in Arlington, Virginia, are words that resonate with every member of the military—past and present:

“With willing hearts and skillful hands,
The difficult we do at once;
The impossible takes a bit longer

“With compassion for others
We build—we fight

For peace with freedom”

As a nation, we commemorate a special day of appreciation for veterans, the brave men and women who have willingly dedicated their lives to their country and the freedoms it represents. Over 50 years ago, United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower, himself a veteran of two world wars, issued this proclamation:

“I … do hereby call upon all of our citizens to observe Thursday, November 11, 1954, as Veterans Day. On that day let us solemnly remember the sacrifices of all those who fought so valiantly, on the seas, in the air, and on foreign shores, to preserve our heritage of freedom, and let us reconsecrate ourselves to the task of promoting an enduring peace so that their efforts shall not have been in vain.”1

For those who love freedom and country, for those who respect sacrifice and service in behalf of the common good, each day is a day to remember those who have donned the uniform and served their country.

A country is only as strong as the men and women brave enough, selfless enough, and honorable enough to serve their nation. All who have served gave some part of their life, and some made the ultimate sacrifice. Today each one of us is a beneficiary of their service. We remember and honor them, this day and always.
1 In “History of Veterans Day,” http://www1.va.gov/opa/vetsday/vetdayhistory.asp.
Program #4130

Saturday, November 8, 2008

An Inspiring Quote I love

Peace of Conscience

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"If our hearts are right before God, adversity will school us, help us overcome our carnal nature, and nurture the divine spark within us. Were it not for adversity, we would not know to 'choose the better part' ("Father in Heaven, We Do Believe," Hymns, no. 180).

Adversity helps us see where we need to repent, to bring into subjection baser instincts, to embrace righteousness and enjoy 'peace of conscience' (Mosiah 4:3)."

Keith B. McMullin, "Be Prepared . . . Be Ye Strong from Henceforth," Ensign, Nov. 2005, 11

Topics: Adversity, Repentance

LDS Church plans Hispanic Christmas concert

LDS Church plans Hispanic Christmas concert

Published: November 8, 2008
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will present a Hispanic Christmas concert, "Recibid al Rey" ("Receive the King") in the Tabernacle on Temple Square on Friday and Saturday, Dec. 5 and 6.

The performances will take place both evenings at 7 p.m. and Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.

Admission to "Recibid al Rey" is free, but tickets are required. They can be obtained by logging on to www.lds.org/events or by calling the LDS Conference ticket office at 801-570-0080 or 866-537-8457. Tickets can also be obtained in person at the Conference Center box office at 60 W. North Temple, door 4, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

There is a six-ticket-per-person limit.

The event will feature music, dance and narration surrounding "Las Posadas," a Hispanic Christmas custom. It will also include a Christmas message by one of the church's General Authorities.

Official Church Statement Regarding Proposition 8 Protest

Church Issues Statement on
Proposition 8 Protest


The Church issued the following statement today:

It is disturbing that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is being singled out for speaking up as part of its democratic right in a free election.

Members of the Church in California and millions of others from every faith, ethnicity and political affiliation who voted for Proposition 8 exercised the most sacrosanct and individual rights in the United States — that of free expression and voting.

While those who disagree with our position on Proposition 8 have the right to make their feelings known, it is wrong to target the Church and its sacred places of worship for being part of the democratic process.

Once again, we call on those involved in the debate over same-sex marriage to act in a spirit of mutual respect and civility towards each other. No one on either side of the question should be vilified, harassed or subject to erroneous information.

Official Web site of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
© 2008 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.

Michael Crichton dies of cancer

暢銷作家Michael Crichton癌病逝世
2008-11-06 13:27:00

創作過多部暢銷科幻小說包括《侏羅紀公園》(Jurassic Park)和《天劫屠城》(The Andromeda Strain)、並且是風摩全球的電視連續劇《仁心仁術》(ER)編劇的美國著名作家米高‧克萊頓(Michael Crichton),周二因癌症去世,終年66歲。  米高‧克萊頓是於美國大選日在洛杉磯去世的,他的家人於周三才正式公布他的死訊。由於消息來得很突 然,各方都感到十分詫異。家人表示,米高‧克萊頓勇敢及默默地與癌症搏鬥,終於離開這個世界。  家人發表聲明稱:「透過他的著作,米高‧克萊頓為各個年 紀的學生帶來激勵,在很多範疇上挑戰科學家,又用深入淺出的方法,為我們解開世界上很多謎團。他是一位好丈夫和好父親,對朋友忠誠,他鼓勵身邊每一個人用 一種新視野去看這個世界。」  把《侏羅紀公園》改拍成為電影、在全球各地大收旺場的美國名導演史蒂芬史匹堡(Steven Spielberg),也讚揚米高‧克萊頓才華橫溢,把科學和戲劇混合為一,令很多人無法想像的事情展現眼前,例如他竟然可以令恐龍重現地球。  米高‧ 克萊頓於於1942年10月23日在芝加哥出生,長大後考入哈佛大學醫學院,求學期間完成第一部小說。他的很多作品都以他的醫學知識和科幻情節作題材。

NEW YORK (AP) - Michael Crichton, the million-selling author who made scientific research terrifying and irresistible in such thrillers as "Jurassic Park," ''Timeline" and "The Andromeda Strain," has died of cancer, his family said.

Crichton died Tuesday in Los Angeles at age 66 after privately battling cancer.

"Through his books, Michael Crichton served as an inspiration to students of all ages, challenged scientists in many fields, and illuminated the mysteries of the world in a way we could all understand," his family said in a statement.

"While the world knew him as a great storyteller that challenged our preconceived notions about the world around us — and entertained us all while doing so — his wife Sherri, daughter Taylor, family and friends knew Michael Crichton as a devoted husband, loving father and generous friend who inspired each of us to strive to see the wonders of our world through new eyes."

He was an experimenter and popularizer known for his stories of disaster and systematic breakdown, such as the rampant microbe of "The Andromeda Strain" or the dinosaurs running madly in "Jurassic Park." Many of his books became major Hollywood movies, including "Jurassic Park," ''Rising Sun" and "Disclosure." Crichton himself directed and wrote "The Great Train Robbery" and he co-wrote the script for the blockbuster "Twister."

In 1994, he created the award-winning TV hospital series "ER." He's even had a dinosaur named for him, Crichton's ankylosaur.

"Michael's talent out-scaled even his own dinosaurs of 'Jurassic Park,'" said "Jurassic Park" director Steven Spielberg, a friend of Crichton's for 40 years. "He was the greatest at blending science with big theatrical concepts, which is what gave credibility to dinosaurs again walking the Earth. ... Michael was a gentle soul who reserved his flamboyant side for his novels. There is no one in the wings that will ever take his place."

John Wells, executive producer of "ER" called the author "an extraordinary man. Brilliant, funny, erudite, gracious, exceptionally inquisitive and always thoughtful.

"No lunch with Michael lasted less than three hours and no subject was too prosaic or obscure to attract his interest. Sexual politics, medical and scientific ethics, anthropology, archaeology, economics, astronomy, astrology, quantum physics, and molecular biology were all regular topics of conversation."

Neal Baer, a physician who became an executive producer on "ER," was a fourth-year medical student at Harvard University when Wells, a longtime friend, sent him Crichton's script.

"I said, 'Wow, this is like my life.' Michael had been a medical student at Harvard in the early '70s and I was going through the same thing about 20 years later," said Baer.

"ER" offered a fresh take on the TV medical drama, making doctors the central focus rather than patients. In the early life of "ER," Crichton, who hadn't been involved in medicine for years, and Spielberg would take part in writers' room discussions.

In recent years, Crichton was the rare novelist granted a White House meeting with President George W. Bush, perhaps because of his skepticism about global warming, which Crichton addressed in the 2004 novel, "State of Fear." Crichton's views were strongly condemned by environmentalists, who alleged that the author was hurting efforts to pass legislation to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide.

If not a literary giant, he was a physical one, standing 6 feet and 9 inches (1.8 meters), and ready for battle with the press. In a 2004 interview with The Associated Press, Crichton came with a tape recorder, text books and a pile of graphs and charts as he defended "State of Fear" and his take on global warming.

"I have a lot of trouble with things that don't seem true to me," Crichton said at the time, his large, manicured hands gesturing to his graphs. "I'm very uncomfortable just accepting. There's something in me that wants to pound the table and say, 'That's not true.'"

He spoke to few scientists about his questions, convinced that he could interpret the data himself. "If we put everything in the hands of experts and if we say that as intelligent outsiders, we are not qualified to look over the shoulder of anybody, then we're in some kind of really weird world," he said.

A new novel by Crichton had been tentatively scheduled to come next month, but publisher HarperCollins said the book was postponed indefinitely because of his illness.

One of four siblings, Crichton was born in Chicago and grew up in Roslyn, Long Island. His father was a journalist and young Michael spent much of his childhood writing extra papers for teachers. In third grade, he wrote a nine-page play that his father typed for him using carbon paper so the other kids would know their parts. He was tall, gangly and awkward, and used writing as a way to escape; Mark Twain and Alfred Hitchcock were his role models.

Figuring he would not be able to make a living as writer, and not good enough at basketball, he decided to become a doctor. He studied anthropology at Harvard College, and later graduated from Harvard Medical School. During medical school, he turned out books under pseudonyms. (One that the tall author used was Jeffrey Hudson, a 17th-century dwarf in the court of King Charles II of England.) He had modest success with his writing and decided to pursue it.

His first hit, "The Andromeda Strain," was written while he was still in medical school and quickly caught on upon its 1969 release. It was a featured selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club and was sold to Universal in Hollywood for $250,000.

"A few of the teachers feel I'm wasting my time, and that in some ways I have wasted theirs," he told The New York Times in 1969. "When I asked for a couple of days off to go to California about a movie sale, that raised an eyebrow."

His books seemed designed to provoke debate, whether the theories of quantum physics in "Timeline," the reverse sexual discrimination of "Disclosure" or the spectre of Japanese eminence in "Rising Sun."

"The initial response from the (Japanese) establishment was, 'You're a racist,'" he told the AP. "So then, because I'm always trying to deal with data, I went on a tour talking about it and gave a very careful argument, and their response came back, 'Well you say that but we know you're a racist.'"

Crichton had a rigid work schedule: rising before dawn and writing from about 6 a.m. to around 3 p.m., breaking only for lunch. He enjoyed being one of the few novelists recognized in public, but he also felt limited by fame.

"Of course, the celebrity is nice. But when I go do research, it's much more difficult now. The kind of freedom I had 10 years ago is gone," he told the AP. "You have to have good table manners; you can't have spaghetti hanging out of your mouth at a restaurant."

Crichton was married five times and had one child. A private funeral is planned.

___

Associated Press writer Colleen Long in New York contributed to this story.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Another Inspiring Quote

We Can Control Who We Are

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"We are living in the latter days, brothers and sisters, in the fulness of times. We must remember that we have control over who we are no matter how difficult the world becomes. Like those in 1 Nephi, the true and faithful will be able to withstand the fiery darts of the adversary when he is loosed upon this earth (see 1 Nephi 15:24). Despite all the turmoil in the world, when the Savior comes to His temple, as He did in the Book of Mormon, those who are true and faithful will be there. May we be among them."

Robert D. Hales, "Holy Scriptures: The Power of God unto Our Salvation," Ensign, Nov. 2006, 27

Topics: Righteousness, Adversity

Inspirational Quote

Our Personal Quest to Know His Will

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"My life's journey is different from yours. Each of you could teach me much from your experiences of submitting your will to the Lord's as you earnestly seek to know His will for you. We can rejoice together in the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, gratefully acknowledging the blessing of having a testimony of the Savior and His Atonement for each of us. This I know—our individual efforts to become instruments in the hands of God have not been easy and have stretched us spiritually, enriching our mortal journeys in the most personal, glorious ways. . .

"May the Lord bless each of you in your personal quest to know His will for you and to submit your will to His. . . . Our individual will 'is the only possession which is truly ours to give' (Ensign, Nov. 1995, 24)."

Anne C. Pingree, "Knowing the Lord's Will for You," Ensign, Nov. 2005, 114

Topics: Testimony, Adversity

Taiwan Church History Timeline




1956 Four missionaries arrived Taiwan to start preaching the gospel
1959 Apostle Mark E. Peterson offered dedicatory prayer to dedicate
Taiwan for missionary work
1964 Book of Mormon translated into Chinese
1965 First edition of Chinese Book of Mormon published
1968  Doctrine and Covenant translated into Chinese
1971 Taiwan Mission organized
1975 President Spencer W. Kimball presided over Taiwan regional
conference
1975 First edition of Doctrine and Covenants published
1976 Taipei Stake –Taiwan's first stake organized by Apostle
Gordon B. Hinckley
1976  First Chinese edition of Pearl of Great Price published
1976  Kaohsiung Mission organized
1979 Taichung Mission organized
1980 President Spencer W. Kimball presided over Taiwan regional
conference
1981 Kaohsuing Stake organized
1982 Taichung Mission consolidated with Taipei and Kaohsiung Missions
1982 Taipei East and West Stake organized from Taipei Stake
1983 Kaohsuing Mission moved to Taichung and renamed Taichung Mission
1984 Taipei Taiwan Temple dedicated
1984 Apostle Howard W. Hunter presided over Taiwan regional conference
1988 Apostle M. Russell Ballard presided over Taiwan regional conference
1993  Apostle Joseph B. Wirthlin presided over Taiwan regional conference
1993 Taoyuan District organized from Hsinchu District
1994 Tainan District organized from Kaohsiung Stake
1994 Taichung Stake organized
1996 President Gordon B. Hinckley presided over special conference
1997 President James E. Faust of the First Presidency and
Apostle Russell M. Nelson presided over Taiwan regional conference
1998 Taipei Central Stake organized from Taipei East and West Stake
1998 Chung Hisn District organized from Taichung Stake
1998  Kaohsiung Mission reorganized
1999 Church magazine The Voice of Saints renamed as Liahona
2000 Kaohsuing CES Office reorganized
2000 Taipei Employment Resource Service Center (ERSC) started
2001  Church's Chinese name changed from 耶穌基督末世聖徒教會
to 耶穌基督後期聖徒教會
2001 Apostle Tom L. Perry presided over North Taiwan conference
2002 Apostle Dallin H. Oaks presided over Taiwan conference
2005 President Gordon B. Hinckley dedicated Church Administration
Building –Taipei
2005 Apostle Dallin H. Oaks presided over South Taiwan conference


Dedicatory Prayer of Taipei Taiwan Temple




Dedicated 17–18 November 1984
by Gordon B. Hinckley

Thanks be to Thee, O God our Eternal Father, for this sacred occasion when we dedicate Thy house. We come unto Thee in the name of Thine Only Begotten Son. We worship Thee and Him in love and gratitude.

This is a long-awaited day. Our thoughts go back more than sixty years when, as Thou knowest, Thine apostle, David O. McKay, standing on Chinese soil, offered a dedicatory prayer on the great Chinese realm and on Thy work among the generations of the Chinese people.

In that prayer he said, "Heavenly Father…break the bands of superstition, and may the young men and young women come out of the darkness of the past into the glorious light now shining among the children of men. Grant, our Father, that these young men and women may, through upright, virtuous lives, and prayerful study, be prepared and inclined to declare the message of salvation in their own tongue to their fellowmen. May their hearts and the hearts of this people be turned to their fathers that they may accept the opportunity offered them to bring salvation to the millions who have gone before."

So spoke Thine ordained servant long ago, and now we thank Thee, Father, for Thy response to that prophetic prayer. Missionaries have come here from afar to teach the everlasting gospel. Likewise, there have been many Chinese young men and women who have served faithfully and diligently as messengers of Thine eternal truth, speaking to their own people in their own tongue. Thousands have responded to their teachings. We thank Thee for the firm foundation on which Thy Church is now established in this part of the earth. We thank Thee for this day when those who will use this temple may turn their hearts to their fathers, participating in this Thy holy house in those ordinances which will make it possible for their deceased forebears to move forward on the way that leads to eternal life.

Thou art the Father of all men and women. Thou lovest Thy children of all nations. In Thy great wisdom and love, beginning with a glorious vision, Thou hast restored the gospel in this dispensation through the Prophet Joseph Smith for whose life and works we thank Thee. Thou hast established Thy true Church and given it the name of Thy Son. Thy work is spreading over the earth. Now, with the dedication of this house, all of the ordinances, all of the powers of the priesthood under delegation from Thy prophet, and every blessing of Thy gospel is available to Thy faithful saints in this part of Thy vineyard.

Bless them, we pray Thee, Father. May they grow in faith and devotion. May they share the gospel with their friends and associates. May they enjoy the good things of the earth as well as the glorious things of heaven. Wilt Thou pour out upon them blessings that they shall not suffer hunger or privation. Bless their posterity after them that they shall walk in faith and loyalty and be worthy of Thy generous gifts.

We pray for the government of this nation which has been hospitable to Thy servants and Thy work. May peace and prosperity reign in the land. May Thy work spread from here to the vast numbers of Thy Chinese sons and daughters wherever they may be found. Touch the hearts of those who govern that they may open the doors of their nations to Thy messengers of eternal truth. May Thy work grow in beauty and strength in the great Chinese realm.

Now, as Thy servants, acting in the authority of the Holy Priesthood which comes from Thee, and in the name of Thy beloved Son Jesus Christ, we dedicate to Thee and to Him this the Taipei Taiwan Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. We dedicate it as Thy holy house and pray that Thou and Thy Son may accept it and visit it. Sanctify it always with the presence of Thy Holy Spirit. May Thy watchful care be over it that it may be preserved from the storms that sweep this land and from the desecrating hands of any with evil intent. May it be sacred to all who enter its portals, and may they rejoice in the eternal ordinances to be performed herein.

Father, bless this temple, its hallowed rooms and altars, its facilities, furnishings and equipment, together with the grounds and ancillary structures associated with it, that all may combine to give beauty and inspiration to those who look upon it and to all who serve within it.

Bless Thy saints that their gratitude for this house may be expressed by using it for their own blessing and the blessing of their forebears.

Our Eternal Father, we pray for Thy Church and Thy people in all the earth. We pray for Thy prophet, President Spencer W. Kimball, that Thou wilt bless and sustain him. We pray for all associated with him, and for all who have responsibility in Thy kingdom.

We pray for peace in the earth that the brotherhood of man, which comes of the Fatherhood of God, may strengthen throughout the earth. May men everywhere recognize Thy Beloved Son as their Savior and Redeemer who gave His life as a ransom for all. May they acknowledge Him as the Prince of Peace. May they in their own lives seek for that perfection which was exemplified in His life.

O God, our Eternal Father, accept our offering of this Thy house. Smile upon us as we return to Thee our love and rededicate ourselves to Thy service, we humbly pray in the name of Thy Beloved Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.




Church News 25 Nov. 1984: 4.

Missionary fought lupus to complete mission

By Wade Jewkes
Deseret News
Saturday, Jul. 05, 2008

SANDY, Utah -- Lindsay Newbold is a walking, talking example of someone who makes a habit of overcoming obstacles and turning lemons into lemonade.

Friends, associates and doctors label her going on a mission as a miracle. Ever since the sixth grade, Newbold nurtured a desire to serve a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. But at the age of 15, she contracted lupus, and it was difficult just to finish high school. Somehow, she pulled the grades to get into Brigham Young University and was in and out of various semesters there.

When she turned 21, she began to fill out the requisite paperwork to serve a mission. But there was that little obstacle of getting a doctor to certify a clean bill of health. Her doctor said "no."

She thought about doing a service mission and continued to pray and look for ways to serve.

After another year, her mother encouraged her to fill out the papers again. She went to another doctor -- who didn't really know her history -- and was certified to go. But she wanted to be honest, so she returned to her regular doctor, who this time finally authorized her -- noting all the restrictions. Her stake president supported her, saying if she could serve but three months it would be a successful mission.

Newbold was scared. Everyone thought she would get some sort of special mission call. It took six weeks, and a call to Canada finally came. She called the church and spoke to a doctor there about how to find a doctor in Canada. This doctor told her that before she could find a doctor there she would be dead and said he would talk with the brethren. Her mission was changed to Long Beach, Calif.

At the time of her call to Canada, her parents had no insurance, and Canadian health care requires no insurance. By the time her call was changed, her parents had acquired insurance but regardless of all else, Lindsay was ecstatic to be going on a mission.

In the Missionary Training Center, she met an elder from Long Beach who had a friend he tried to convert but had been unsuccessful. Lindsay said she would look him up, but the elder said there was no chance because sister missionaries never were assigned to his ward.

Well, you can guess the rest of the story. But after being assigned to that area, Newbold didn't even know it was this elder's ward until she was talking to a member couple who turned out to be his parents, and they immediately informed her that the friend was coming to a family home evening. That friend was eventually baptized.

Six months into her mission, lupus reared its ugly head again. Newbold found herself on the floor one night not knowing how she got there. She crawled back into bed, but in the morning when she looked in the mirror, blood was splotched on her face.

After four days in the hospital and a special fast back in her home ward, tests were inconclusive and she begged and pleaded with the mission president to let her stay. He agreed and only asked that she do her best.

"We continued to have success," she said, "as much as anyone else."

During that time, she was finding ways to teach the gospel. On a subsequent visit to the hospital, the nurse remembered her teaching her while Newbold was lying in bed.

On another occasion, when a telemarketer called, Newbold said, "I can't buy anything but I can give you something," and she proceeded to share the gospel with him. It turned the caller had previously talked with missionaries and then had moved and lost contact. They exchanged information so he could re-establish contact. He then looked down at his phone list and said, "I wasn't supposed to call you." Her name was apparently in another category.

Newbold had many successful experiences and will now return to BYU, where she has one year remaining to get her degree in social studies.

She did complete her mission and attributes her energy and happy disposition to her mother, who taught her: "Feel the hurt and feel the pain and move on."

"Everyone calls it a miracle," Newbold said.



E-mail: wjewkes@desnews.com

Church Responds to Same-Sex Marriage Votes

COMMENTARY
Since Proposition 8 was placed on the ballot in June of this year, the citizens of California have considered the arguments for and against same-sex marriage. After extensive debate between those of different persuasions, voters have chosen to amend the California State Constitution to state that marriage should be between a man and a woman.

Voters in Arizona and Florida took the same course and amended their constitutions to establish that marriage will continue to be between a man and a woman.

Such an emotionally charged issue concerning the most personal and cherished aspects of life — family, identity, intimacy and equality — stirs fervent and deep feelings.

Most likely, the election results for these constitutional amendments will not mean an end to the debate over same-sex marriage in this country.

We hope that now and in the future all parties involved in this issue will be well informed and act in a spirit of mutual respect and civility toward those with a different position. No one on any side of the question should be vilified, intimidated, harassed or subject to erroneous information.

It is important to understand that this issue for the Church has always been about the sacred and divine institution of marriage — a union between a man and a woman.

Allegations of bigotry or persecution made against the Church were and are simply wrong. The Church’s opposition to same-sex marriage neither constitutes nor condones any kind of hostility toward gays and lesbians. Even more, the Church does not object to rights for same-sex couples regarding hospitalization and medical care, fair housing and employment rights, or probate rights, so long as these do not infringe on the integrity of the traditional family or the constitutional rights of churches.

Some, however, have mistakenly asserted that churches should not ever be involved in politics when moral issues are involved. In fact, churches and religious organizations are well within their constitutional rights to speak out and be engaged in the many moral and ethical problems facing society. While the Church does not endorse candidates or platforms, it does reserve the right to speak out on important issues.

Before it accepted the invitation to join broad-based coalitions for the amendments, the Church knew that some of its members would choose not to support its position. Voting choices by Latter-day Saints, like all other people, are influenced by their own unique experiences and circumstances. As we move forward from the election, Church members need to be understanding and accepting of each other and work together for a better society.

Even though the democratic process can be demanding and difficult, Latter-day Saints are profoundly grateful for and respect the ideals of a true democracy.

The Church expresses deep appreciation for the hard work and dedication of the many Latter-day Saints and others who supported the coalitions in efforts regarding these amendments.

Prop 8 backlash: Gay marriage backers to protest outside Salt Lake LDS Temple

By Jessica Ravitz
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune

If Jacob Whipple gets what he's hoping for, at least 1,000 Utahns will turn out Friday night to protest the involvement of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in helping pass Proposition 8, a California ballot measure that effectively killed, at least for now, same-sex marriages in that state.
The call for people to gather at 6 p.m. at North Temple and State Street in Salt Lake City is to show solidarity with those protesting in California, Whipple explained. Among those hitting the streets were about 3,000 who gathered Thursday afternoon outside the LDS Temple in Westwood, a neighborhood of Los Angeles, bearing signs including one featuring a photo of a gay couple with the words,"Why is this joy and love so scary," The Los Angeles Times reported.
"We want to show we share their pain, and here, at the heart of the church, we want to stab it," said Whipple, of Salt Lake City.
The 29-year-old former LDS Church member, who served a mission in Argentina, was helping to get the word out late Thursday about the Utah protest. He said he and others were seeking support through e-mails, text messages, social networking Web pages and old-fashioned phone calls.
Valerie Larabee, executive director of the Utah Pride Center, said her organization would "absolutely" be there to stand with others.
"Millions in California, including our friends and families, stood up and voted for equality while the LDS Church stood for discrimination," she said. "Friday's message will be one of hope for steady progress towards equality and fairness - a message everyone can believe in."
The LDS Church got into the thick of the California battle when officials issued statements encouraging members to actively support the ban. All told, Latter-day Saints are estimated to have given, by some counts, as much as $22 million to the effort.
But while many rallied for the cause, other church members have stepped up in protest. The hot issue has created rifts in ward houses and after the initiative passed, a church leader Wednesday called on members to treat one another with "civility, with respect and with love."
Whipple, who is engaged to Drew Cloud, 24, of Orange County, Calif., said the two men - who had planned to marry on April 11, 2009 - will go ahead with their ceremony and celebration, "whether it's recognized or not."
"Gays are people, too," he said. "We're your neighbors, your friends. . . We deserve every right everyone else has."
And it's for this reason that he will join the others in circling Temple Square, the international spiritual hub of the LDS Church, as well as the headquarters office building. It'll be part of the journey the returned missionary began when he left LDS Church-owned Brigham Young University after two years of study.
"I gave up on trying to pretend to be straight and started to live my life."
jravitz@sltrib.com

Finding power after a mission

By Carrie A. Moore
Deseret News
Friday, Nov. 07, 2008

LDS missionaries are often told they won't be able to feel God's spirit or guidance as well or as often when they return home, but a former mission president tried to dispel that notion at Brigham Young University on Thursday.

Russell Osguthorpe, former president of the South Dakota Rapid City Mission, told dozens of returned missionaries they renew their covenant with Jesus Christ each week as they partake of the sacrament. "That they may always have his spirit to be with them," is part of that prayer, he said. "We can have the spirit of the Lord with us all the time."

After serving God full-time for 18 months to 2 years, depending on whether they are women or men, LDS missionaries return with two categories of learning they can fit all of their mission experiences into, he said.

First, "it increases your power of personal agency, and increase in your power to choose the right." God-given agency is a doctrine other faiths don't build on, but it is key for Latter-day Saints, he said. "What you discover is that you can exercise your agency to choose more than you ever thought possible before."

Second, missionaries return with "an increased capacity to love others. If you served a dedicated mission, I'm totally convinced you came back seeing the capacity to love others as you see them grow.

"For possibly the first time in your life, you've had another person's well-being in your care," he said, referring to potential converts who work to change their lives in order to prepare for baptism.

He urged missionaries to use those two methods of learning to expand their lives in every way, from dating and marriage to study, vocation and community service.

President Gordon B. Hinckley was an example of employing that philosophy, he said, re-telling the story of his experience as a young missionary in England. The mission president summoned him one day and asked him to go to the office of a book publisher.

The company had just published a book purporting to contain a "history" of the Latter-day Saints that was false, and he wanted Elder Hinckley to speak with the president of the company about it.

President Hinckley said he wondered to himself why the mission president would ask him to go, rather going himself. But rather than voicing his fear and concern, he simply said, "yes sir," and went to the man's office.

After telling the secretary he would be willing to wait as long as necessary, he finally gained an audience with the company president. After stating his concern and waiting to be dismissed, the man's demeanor softened, and he ended up agreeing to recall the books and add a page that stated the information was fictional, rather than factual.

The man kept in touch with Elder Hinckley until his death, sending him a Christmas card each year.

Osguthorpe said the story exemplifies the power of faith that can come through exercising personal agency when one is asked to do something for God.

Teach Mandarin(教外國人中文記)

本文引用自

http://www.wretch.cc/blog/eswallow1979/11895037

說真的,我也不知道當初自己怎麼學會國語的...也許就像別的國家的人學會自己的母語一般

Teach Mandarin(教外國人中文記)


當你看著眼前的電腦,充滿密密麻麻的中國字,
你會感覺看得懂、而且還會寫中國字,是一件幸福的事情嗎?

會問這個奇怪的問題,就又要提到我們的德國好朋友Alex。
話說他對於中國文字非常的有興趣,
有天晚上我用電腦查資料時,他感覺非常的好奇,
因為我們的鍵盤和他們長的一樣,
但他不瞭解我們又不是輸入ABCD,怎麼能夠打出那麼複雜的字體呢?

我告訴他,因為我們有37個注音符號(phonetic symbols),很像英文KK英標,
這個輸入軟體只要知道這個字的讀音,就可以打出我們要的字體....

接下來,他繼續問到一些問題,
例如這些相同讀音的字,意義都相同嗎?還有我們怎麼記得那麼多文字?
這還真的考倒我,因為我不確定自己是否能用英文解釋的清楚...
我試著用一些例子,跟他分享中文跟英文的不同。
例如"愛"跟"礙",相同的讀音卻有著不同的意義....
另外字與字的組合,表面意義(literal meaning)又有很大的不同....
例如"我愛你"的英文是 I love you。I 代表我、love 代表愛、you 代表你,
但是"電腦"就是兩個字形組成,若分成"電"跟"腦",就變成不同的意思....

他搖搖頭說,疑惑我們怎麼能記得住那麼多奇怪的符號呢?
老實說,我還沒有仔細想過我們怎麼學得會這麼多複雜的文字...
感覺好像就是天天上學,自然而然就學會了...
這就跟他們自然而然就學會德文一般,
而且他們覺得學英文很容易,因為文法跟單字,兩個語言感覺很像...
但後來想想,的確學說中文比較容易,我在這裡見過很多會說中文的外國人,
但若要學寫中文,則需要漫長的一段時間來學習,
這就是我們小學需要天天寫生字簿的原因吧....

後來,我教他幾句打招呼的用語:
第一句話是"你好嗎?",而第二句話是"我很好,謝謝"
我才發現,原來我們的四聲,就可以讓外國人搞的頭昏腦脹....
這跟外國的發音方法很不一樣....

最後更有趣的,是他要我教他用中文寫他的名字!
他的筆記本有他的中文名字"艾力克斯",是去上海旅遊時,朋友寫給他的。
開始的時候我也很苦惱要怎麼教他寫,
因為對他來說太多筆畫,每個字都像一幅畫一般,太困難了!
突然我想到可以把字拆成一筆一劃讓他練習寫,
如同我們國小所練習的生字練習本!
果然他就覺得簡單多了,非常認真的一筆一劃來練習....


這是一個很特別的經驗!我重新思考習得語言的過程!
他說很感謝我,因為我是一個非常棒的老師!
但其實我才真的想向他道謝,因為為了解釋如何學好中文,
讓我的 English Conversation 瞬間進步!
而且因為他,我才知道原來會寫中文,是非常幸福的事情!

我想,學寫英文感覺比學寫中文簡單多了...
以後我再也不會抱怨學英文是一件痛苦的事情了...!

Our New Blog

http://findingfaithinchrist.blogspot.com/
My BYU-Hawaii teacher, Joyce, and I were inspired to create that new blog to share what we learn from our New Testament study. Everyone is welcome to stop by our new blog and leave comments, insights.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Air Cars: A New Wind for America's Roads?

Air Cars: A New Wind for America's Roads?

by Jim Ostroff
Thursday, October 30, 2008
provided by
Air1.gif
Courtesy of MDI

A new carmaker has a plan for cheap, environmentally friendly cars to be built all over the country

An air-powered car? It may be available sooner than you think at a price tag that will hardly be a budget buster. The vehicle may not run like a speed racer on back road highways, but developer Zero Pollution Motors is betting consumers will be willing to fork over $20,000 for a vehicle that can motor around all day on nothing but air and a splash of salad oil, alcohol or possibly a pint of gasoline.

The expertise needed to build a compressed air car, or CAV, is not rocket science, either. Years-old, off-the-shelf technology uses compressed air to drive old-fashioned car engine pistons instead of combusting gas or diesel fuel to create a burst of air to do the same thing. Indian carmaker Tata has no qualms about the technology. It has already bought the rights to make the car for the huge Indian market.

The air car can tool along at a top speed of 35 mph for some 60 miles or so on a tank of compressed air, a sufficient distance for 80% of consumers to commute to work and back and complete daily chores.

Air2.gif
Courtesy of MDI

On highways, the CAV can cruise at interstate speeds for nearly 800 miles with a small motor that compresses outside air to keep the tank filled. The motor isn't finicky about fuel. It will burn gasoline or diesel as well as biodiesel, ethanol or vegetable oil.

This car leaves the highest-mpg vehicles you can buy right now in the dust. Even if it used only regular gasoline, the air car would average 106 mpg, more than double today's fuel sipping champ, the Toyota Prius. The air tank also can be refilled when it's not in use by being plugged into a wall socket and recharged with electricity as the motor compresses air.

Automakers aren't quite ready yet to gear up huge assembly line operations churning out air cars or set up glitzy dealer showrooms where you can ooh and aah over the color or style. But the vehicles will be built in factories that will make up to 8,000 vehicles a year, likely starting in 2011, and be sold directly to consumers.

There will be plants in nearly every state, based on the number of drivers in the state. California will have as many as 17 air car manufacturing plants, and there'll be around 12 in Florida, eight in New York, four in Georgia, while two in Connecticut will serve that state and Rhode Island.

The technology goes back decades, but is coming together courtesy of two converging forces. First, new laws are likely to be enacted in a few years that will limit carbon dioxide emissions and force automakers to develop ultra-high mileage cars and those that emit minuscule amounts of or no gases linked with global warming. Plug-in electric hybrids will slash these emissions, but they'll be pricey at around $40,000 each and require some changes in infrastructure -- such as widespread recharge stations -- to be practical. Fuel cells that burn hydrogen to produce only water vapor still face daunting technical challenges.

Second, the relatively high cost of gas has expedited the air car's development. Yes, pump prices have plunged since July from record levels, but remain way higher than just a few years ago and continue to take a bite out of disposable income. Refiners will face carbon emission restraints, too, and steeply higher costs will be passed along at the pump.

Tata doesn't plan to produce the cars in the U.S. Instead, it plans to charge $15 million for the rights to the technology, a fully built turnkey auto assembly plant, tools, machinery, training and rights to use trademarks.

The CAV has a big hurdle: proving it can pass federal crash tests. Shiva Vencat, president and CEO of Zero Pollution Motors, says he's not worried. "The requirements can be modeled [on a computer] before anything is built and adjusted to ensure that the cars will pass" the crash tests. Vencat also is a vice president of MDI Inc., a French company that developed the air car.

The inventor of this technology is Mr. Guy Negre, who is the founder and CEO of MDI SA, a company headquartered in Luxembourg with its R and D in Nice, France.

Copyrighted, Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc.

Monday, November 3, 2008

The Ultimate Test--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

The Ultimate Test Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Warren Buffet is one of the world’s richest men, but he doesn’t measure success by how much money he has accumulated. Now in his late 70s, Buffet lives frugally considering his great wealth and has pledged to give most of his fortune to charity. He seeks no buildings or monuments to his name. He has said:

“I know people who have a lot of money, and they get testimonial dinners and hospital wings named after them. But the truth is that nobody in the world loves them. When you get to my age, you’ll measure your success in life by how many of the people you want to have love you actually do love you. That’s the ultimate test of how you’ve lived your life.”[1]

Of course we want to live in the present, but good can also come from looking ahead—for each of us, the day will come when we leave loved ones behind with only thoughts and feelings, memories of our lives. What will others think and feel when our time comes? What will be our legacy? Most of us will never have a wing of the hospital bear our name, but no matter our worldly wealth, we all have loved ones who carry our name in their heart. As Warren Buffet said, that’s the ultimate test of a life well lived.

We know that no one takes any money or possessions with them hereafter, and so they don’t deserve undue focus in the here-and-now. Instead, we can strive to nurture loving relationships, strengthen family bonds, and focus our attention and priorities on the things that really matter. As we do, we come closer to passing the ultimate test.
1 In Alice Schroeder, “10 Ways to Get Rich,” Parade, Sept. 7, 2008, http://www.parade.com/hot-topics/0809/
10-ways-to-get-rich.
Program #4129

About Me

我是在1996年12月29日受洗加入耶穌基督後期聖徒教會. 我在此留下我對這復興的福音的見證,我知道約瑟斯密確實是神的先知; 藉由約瑟斯密,神復興了耶穌基督的教會即耶穌基督後期聖徒教會; 摩爾門經是耶穌基督的另一部約書,與聖經共同見證耶穌是基督.而我們今日仍有一位活著的先知,多馬孟蓀會長 I joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on December 29, 1996. I know that Joseph Smith was and is a prophet of God. The Book of Mormon is indeed Another Testament of Jesus Christ. We have a living prophet today, even President Thomas S. Monson.

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