Friday, August 28, 2009

Dedicatory Prayer of Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple

Church News

Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple: 'Magnificent edifice'


Published: Saturday, Aug. 29, 2009

Following is the text of the prayer offered in dedicating the Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple. President Thomas S. Monson, who wrote the prayer, offered it in eight of the nine dedicatory sessions Aug. 21-23. President Henry B. Eyring, first counselor in the First Presidency, read the prayer during the concluding session.


O God, our Eternal Father, Thou almighty Elohim, Creator of the heavens, the earth and all things thereon, in the name of Thy Beloved Son, Jesus Christ, we come before Thee this day with bowed heads, full hearts and subdued spirits.

Jason Olson, Deseret News
The Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple, perched on a hill in the southwest corner of the Salt Lake Valley, was dedicated by President Thomas S. Monson in nine sessions Aug. 21-23, including two on Sunday that were broadcast to stake centers throughout Utah. The temple is the Church's 130th.

We are grateful for the knowledge Thou hast given us that Thou art our Father, to whom we may turn for inspiration and guidance, for revelation and strength in time of trouble and distress.

O Father, wilt Thou grant unto us Thy guidance and Thy Holy Spirit while we are gathered on this sacred occasion. May the channels of communication between Thee and us be open, and wilt Thou smile upon us and cause us to feel and know that we are partakers of Thy divine Spirit. Overlook our follies and our weaknesses and let us come before Thee in sincerity of heart and purity of life, that what we say and do here will be in harmony with Thy mind and will.

We thank Thee for the gift of Thy Beloved Son, who came into the world according to Thy divine plan to establish on earth the way for us to return to Thy presence.

We thank Thee for the infinite love manifested in the atoning sacrifice of Thy Son, who gave Himself a ransom for all, who broke the bands of death and opened the gates of salvation to all of Thy children. We praise His holy name. His atonement gives purpose to our being and turns our thoughts heavenward.

Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
Situated on a hill with its namesake mountain range in the background, the Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple was dedicated Aug. 21-23. President Thomas S. Monson read the dedicatory prayer during the first session on Friday morning.

We are grateful for the gift of the Holy Ghost to lead us to a knowledge of Thy everlasting truth, and that as we accept and follow that truth and cleanse and perfect our lives, we may become worthy to stand spotless before Thee at the last day.

We express our gratitude for the ushering in of a new dispensation, even the dispensation of the fulness of times, by Thine own appearance and the appearance of Thy Beloved Son to the boy Joseph Smith, to open the heavens and to restore to the world the knowledge of Thee and Thy Son and Thy holy purposes.

We are grateful for this long-awaited day of dedication, when this, Thy Holy House, has been completed. Bless, we pray Thee, those faithful members here and throughout the world who have contributed their tithes which have made possible this magnificent edifice for Thy name's honor and glory and for the blessing of all who enter herein. We are grateful for those who have given so generously of their means, their time, their skills, and their strength to make possible this sacred house. May each contributor rejoice in the opportunity to assist in Thy holy work. Wilt Thou open the windows of heaven and pour out blessings upon them. May they be assured of the gratitude of those uncounted millions who have passed beyond this life, for whom the prison doors may now be opened and deliverance proclaimed through the devoted service of Thy people in this and other sacred temples.

The Plan of Salvation taught in the temple with simplicity, yet with power, will be as a never-failing beacon of divine light to guide our footsteps and keep them constantly on the pathway of eternal life.

Father in Heaven bless, we pray Thee, the President of the Church and his counselors who comprise the First Presidency, the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the Quorums of the Seventy and the Presiding Bishopric, that they might always have Thy guiding influence and inspiration. In every thought, word and act may they glorify Thy name.

Bless those who preside in the stakes and wards, the districts and branches of the Church, that they may be equal to the responsibilities placed upon them.

Bless thy servants who preside over the missions of the Church, together with all of the missionaries who have gone forth to proclaim to the peoples of the earth the restoration of the gospel and the Plan of Salvation. Protect them from all harm. Bless them with the gifts and powers of their ministry. Bless their families, that they may be sustained in peace and comfort.

Let Thy Spirit be poured out upon all who teach in Thy Church, that they may build the faith and increase the understanding of those they instruct in the principles of the gospel.

Frustrate the designs of the adversary against Thy people and Thy work, and may the efforts of all who fight against Zion come to naught. May Thy glorious work roll on in majesty and power to fill the whole earth.

Bless the temple president and his counselors, together with their wives, and all who will assist in the operation of this temple.

Bless thy children throughout the world who know hunger, who have no shelter and who face daily suffering. May we reach out in a spirit of love and true charity to those who yearn for our help.

In a time of departure from safe moorings, may youth of the noble birthright carry on in the traditions of their parents and grandparents. They are subjected to the sophistries of Satan. Help them stand firm for truth. Open wide to their view the gates of learning, of understanding, of service in Thy kingdom. Bless them with a lengthened view of their eternal possibilities.

We express our gratitude for all who have participated in the preparations for this day of dedication, as well as for those who made possible the successful open house event. We ask Thy blessings to attend all who walked within these sacred walls and felt stirring thoughts course through their minds and hearts. May the spirit of the temple continue with them.

Now, Father, according to the pattern Thou hast given, and in harmony with the course established by Thy servants who have gone before, and acting in the authority of that priesthood which is after the order of Thy Son and in His holy name, we dedicate this, the Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. We dedicate it as a house of baptism, a house of endowment, a house of sealing, a house of righteousness—for the living and for the dead.

We humbly pray, Father, that Thou wilt accept this holy edifice. Pour out Thy blessings upon it and let Thy spirit attend and guide all who officiate herein, that holiness will prevail in every room. May all who enter have clean hands and pure hearts, and may they participate with faith in the ordinances to be given herein and depart with a feeling of peace, praising Thy holy name.

We dedicate the ground on which the temple stands. We dedicate the beautiful structure, from the unseen footings to the majestic figure of Moroni crowning its highest point. We dedicate the baptistry, all of the facilities for administering the sacred ordinances, the endowment rooms, the sealing rooms with their sacred altars, and the lovely celestial room, together with all ancillary facilities and the beautiful grounds with their lawns, flowers, trees and shrubs. Protect all from any devastating influence, destruction or defacement.

May all that is done herein be done with an eye single to Thy glory and to the building of Thy kingdom here upon the earth.

O, Holy Father, bless us with the peace promised by Thy Son. Shield us from selfishness or sin and provide the power that we might rise above all that is sordid or below the dignity of Thy children.

And now we dedicate this temple as an abode for Thee and Thy Son. Wilt Thou place Thy ratifying seal of approval upon this dedicatory service and upon all we have done and shall do in this, Thy Holy House, which we now present to Thee.

May we, Thy children, merit Thy bounteous blessings and Thy watchful care, we pray, in the name of Thy Beloved Son, even the name of Jesus Christ, the Lord. Amen.


Text copyright Intellectual Reserve, Inc.

© 2009 Deseret News Publishing Company

Dedicatory Prayer of Draper Utah Temple

Church News

Draper Utah Temple: 'This, Thy Holy House'


Published: Saturday, March 28, 2009

Text of prayer offered by President Thomas S. Monson to dedicate the Draper Utah Temple on March 20, 2009.


O God, our Eternal Father, Creator of the heavens, the earth and all things thereon, we come before Thee this sacred and blessed day with bowed heads, full hearts and grateful spirits.

We pray to Thee, our Father, in the name of Thy Beloved Son, even our Redeemer and our Savior, Jesus Christ, the Lord. We know that through obedience to Thy divine commandments, we may return to Thee and be blessed with life eternal in Thy exalted presence.

Copyright Intellectual Reserve, Inc.
Under the blue skies of springtime, the Draper Utah Temple sits nestled against the Wasatch Mountains with a commanding view of the Salt Lake Valley. Once known as a beautiful rural spot, the area now burgeons with homes.

We are grateful for the completion of this, Thy Holy House. We pray that Thou wilt bless those faithful members here and throughout the world who have contributed their tithes which have made possible this magnificent edifice for Thy name's honor and glory and for the blessing of all who enter herein. Let peace prevail as we lift our voices in songs of praise and words of prayer unto Thee, our God.

We are thankful that Thou sent to this earth Thine Only Begotten Son, who gave His life as our Savior and our Redeemer. The Atonement wrought by Thy Son gives purpose to our being and turns our thoughts heavenward.

We thank Thee for the Prophet Joseph Smith and for the Restoration, and that Thou did appear to him in person to open the heavens and to restore to the world the knowledge of Thee and Thy Son and Thy holy purposes.

We thank Thee that Thou did reveal unto Thy priesthood even the sacred sealing power, by the hand of Elijah the prophet, so that in this temple and all Thy other holy houses Thy faithful Saints may be endowed with power from on high and may enter into those everlasting covenants which open the door to the receipt of all of the blessings of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and all the holy prophets.

The Plan of Salvation taught in the temple with simplicity, yet with power, will be as a never-failing beacon of divine light to guide our footsteps and keep them constantly on the pathway of eternal life.

Copyright Intellectual Reserve, Inc.
The beauty of the baptistry attests to the significance of the work performed here.

As we do the work in this temple for those who have gone beyond, we are reminded of the inspired counsel of President Joseph F. Smith who declared: "Through our efforts in their behalf, their chains of bondage will fall from them, and the darkness surrounding them will clear away, that light may shine upon them; and they shall hear in the spirit world of the work that has been done for them by their children here, and will rejoice."

We seek to be like Thee; we seek to pattern our lives after the life of Thy Son; we desire righteousness for ourselves and our children and our children's children. We plead with Thee to make us worthy to inherit the fulness of those blessings found only in Thy holy temples — even those blessings which grow out of a continuation of the family unit forever.

Bless Thy messengers of glory — even the missionaries of Thy Church — that they may proclaim with persuasion and power Thy truths. Protect them, watch over them, and lead them to those whom Thou hast prepared to hear, to believe, and to embrace the Gospel of Thy Beloved Son.

Father in Heaven bless, we pray Thee, those called to lead Thy Church here upon the earth, that they may have Thy guiding influence and inspiration.

Bless the temple president and his counselors, together with their wives, and all who will assist in the operation of this temple.

Bless Thy children throughout the world who know hunger, who have no shelter and who face daily suffering. May we reach out in a spirit of love and true charity to those who yearn for our help.

In a time of departure from safe moorings, may youth of the noble birthright carry on in the traditions of their parents and grandparents. They are subjected to the sophistries of Satan. Help such youth to stand firm for truth and righteousness. Open wide to their view the gates of learning, of understanding, of service in Thy kingdom. Bless them with a lengthened view of their eternal possibilities.

Today when the family unit is under attack and things long held sacred are often ridiculed by the world, we seek Thy help to make us equal to our tasks, that our homes may be havens of peace and happiness. In our families, may we pause to pray and think to thank.

We express our gratitude for all who have participated in the preparations for this day of dedication, as well as for those who made possible the highly successful open house event. We ask Thy blessings to attend that vast throng who walked within these sacred walls and felt stirring thoughts course through their minds and hearts. May the spirit of the temple continue with them.

And now, our Beloved Father, acting in the authority of the Holy Priesthood and in the sacred name of Jesus Christ, we dedicate unto Thee and unto Thy Son this, the Draper Utah Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. We dedicate it as a house of baptism, a house of endowment, a house of sealing and a house of righteousness, both for the living and for the dead.

We humbly pray that Thou wilt accept this edifice and let Thy blessings be upon it. Let Thy spirit attend and guide all who officiate herein, that holiness will prevail in every room. May all who enter have clean hands and pure hearts. May they be built up in their faith and depart with a feeling of peace, praising Thy holy name.

We dedicate the ground on which the temple stands. We dedicate the beautiful structure, from the unseen footings to the majestic figure of Moroni crowning its highest point. We dedicate the baptistry, all of the facilities for administering the sacred ordinances, the endowment rooms, the sealing rooms with their sacred altars, and the lovely celestial room, together with all ancillary facilities and the beautiful grounds with their lawns, flowers, trees and shrubs. Protect all from any devastating influence, destruction or defacement.

May this House provide a spirit of peace to all who observe its majesty, and especially to those who enter for their own sacred ordinances and to perform the work for those beyond the veil. Let them feel of Thy divine love and mercy. May they be privileged to say, as did the Psalmist of old, "We took sweet counsel together, and walked unto the house of God in company."

As we dedicate this sacred edifice, we rededicate our very lives to Thee and to Thy work.

O, Holy Father, bless us with the peace promised by Thy Son — even the peace which passeth understanding. Shield us, we pray, from selfishness or sin and provide the power that we might rise above all that is sordid or below the dignity of Thy children.

And now we dedicate this temple as an abode for Thee and Thy Son. Let Thy glorious light ever shine upon it. Wilt Thou place Thy ratifying seal of approval upon this dedicatory service and upon all we have done and shall do in this, Thy Holy House, which we now present to Thee.

May we, Thy children, merit Thy bounteous blessings and Thy watchful care, we pray, in the name of Thy Beloved Son, even the name of Jesus Christ the Lord, Amen.

(Copyright Intellectual Reserve, Inc.)

© 2009 Deseret News Publishing Company

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

The Boomerang Principle--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

The Boomerang Principle Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Boomerangs have been used for generations both as a weapon and for sport. Most of us are familiar with how these wooden, angular objects, when thrown correctly, fly right back to the thrower. But boomerangs aren’t the only things in life that behave this way.

One of Aesop’s fables tells of an ant who falls into a fountain and is about to drown when a dove, watching from a tree above, drops a leaf into the water. The grateful ant climbs on it and floats to safety.

Just then the ant sees a hunter approaching with a net to catch the unsuspecting dove. The ant quickly bites the hunter on the ankle, causing him to drop the net and allowing the dove to escape.1

Good deeds, like boomerangs, come back to us. This truth, which has been called the boomerang principle, is evident throughout our daily experience. We witness it on playgrounds and in corporate offices, in schools and stores and streets. When you interact with someone and strive to extend respect and friendliness, most respond in kind.

Of course, the opposite is also true: rudeness usually generates rudeness; anger tends to lead to more anger. More often than not, we find that our thoughts, attitudes, and actions are stamped with “return to sender.”

It may not happen immediately or directly. And it’s true that some people choose to hate even those who love them, just as some people continue to patiently love even those who despitefully use them.2 But eventually and overall, we will get back what we give out.

If we want kindness, we extend kindness. If we want more love, we give love more freely. If we want friendliness, forgiveness, and compassion, we offer the same to others. What we send out will come back to us, just like a boomerang.
1 See “The Ant and the Dove,” Aesop’s Fables, comp. Thomas James (1851), 174.
2 See Matthew 5:44.
Program #4171

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Flood relief provided by Church members

Church News

Flood relief provided by Church members

By Elder James Phillips and Sister Judith Phillips
Taiwan public affairs missionaries

Published: Saturday, Aug. 22, 2009

TAIPEI, TAIWAN

Typhoon Morakot slammed into the Pacific island home of 23 million people on Saturday, Aug. 8, Taiwan's Father's Day The giant storm brought with it the heaviest rainfall in 50 years.

Taiwan Taichung Mission President Michael Hoer described the more-than two meters (80-100 inches) of rain that fell during the storm as "the amount of precipitation that Utah would see in four years."

Elder James Phillips
Church members in Taipei, Taiwan, help load a truck with donated supplies for delivery to victims of the typhoon.

The result was devastating flash floods and landslides that buried villages, displaced thousands and brought a death toll that might top 500. On Aug. 19 there were 136 confirmed dead and 386 missing. Many from remote mountain villages are still not accounted for.

As of press time, no Church members were known to have lost their lives, although many had their homes damaged extensively. There was no serious damage to any Church buildings and all missionaries are safe.

Dozens of missionaries from the Taichung mission, along with hundreds of members from throughout Taiwan, put on "Mormon Helping Hands" vests and gave several days of service cleaning mud from homes and businesses. The clean-up work will continue for weeks to come.

Photo by Elder Dennis Sparrow
Missionaries of the Taiwan Taichung mission helped in the early stages of clean up in Qishan, Taiwan.

The mud left behind was 3 to 5 feet deep in places, reported humanitarian missionary Elder Dennis Sparrow.

President Hoer said, "Our elder and sister missionaries have helped residents clean over 40 homes and businesses in the township of Qishan the first week after the storm."

Photo by Elder James Phillips
Church members in Taipei, Taiwan, help load a truck with donated supplies for delivery to victims of the typhoon.

Elder Joseph Chung, Area Seventy for central and southern Taiwan, traveled to the region and met with government and local priesthood leaders to discuss plans for further Church assistance. Elder Chung was assigned by the Asia Area presidency to direct the Church's relief efforts in Taiwan.

Elder Stanley Wan, Area Seventy and Church welfare services manager for all of Asia, flew to Taiwan from his Hong Kong base to help develop a strategic recovery plan.

Photo by Elder Dennis Sparrow
Missionaries shovel mud deposited in a building by Typhoon Morakot flooding

Meanwhile, truckloads of donated relief supplies have been shipped out of the Church's Taiwan headquarters in Taipei where effects of the storm were minimal. Local chapels are being used as staging areas for supplies and Mormon Helping Hands recovery efforts.

© 2009 Deseret News Publishing Company

Church members rescue stranded, flooded friends

Church members rescue stranded, flooded friends

By Elder James Phillips and Sister Judith Phillips
Taiwan public affairs missionaries

Published: Saturday, Aug. 22, 2009

QISHAN, TAIWAN

Brother Ming-Yu Weng and Sister Huang-Qiung Weng of the Qishan Branch, Kaohsiung Taiwan Stake, were among the thousands whose homes were damaged by flash floods caused by Typhoon Morakot.

Brother Weng is second counselor in the Qishan Branch presidency and Sister Weng is an institute teacher. They have a daughter serving a full-time mission in the Taiwan Taipei Mission.

Photo by Elder James Phillips
Branch President Hsin-Hsiung Chen, left, and Elder Stanley Wan, right, discuss flooding with Sister Huang Qiong-Fen and Brother Ming-Yu Weng.

Their multi-story home sits two blocks back from the river levee designed to protect their town from floods. But Typhoon Morakot's rains were too much.

"With no warning, water started coming in our home," Sister Weng said. "In one minute the water was knee deep. In two minutes it was chest high. In three minutes our first floor was under seven feet of water."

The family sought refuge on the second floor.

That is where they remained trapped for three days without food or electricity. As the waters receded, the Wengs found their first floor furniture and kitchen appliances destroyed. Left behind was three feet of mud.

Photo by Elder James Phillips

"We were beyond feeling," recalled Brother Weng. "No one could get to us for three days." But on the fourth day after the storm began, government, military and private relief workers started to arrive.

"The first one to help was Branch President Chen," Sister Weng said with emotion. "He had been trying for two days to get into Qishan."

One week after the flood waters receded, Church members and missionaries of the Taiwan Taichung Mission were still working at the Wengs' home. Using pressure washers, the "Mormon Helping Hands" volunteers were preparing their first floor to be lived in once more.

"We feel blessed," said Sister Weng. "Our brothers and sisters in the gospel came to help us."

© 2009 Deseret News Publishing Company

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Michelangelo's Materpiece--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

Michelangelo's Materpiece Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

It was a pity that such a beautiful block of marble would be wasted. It was immense; the size of three men. Artists had eyed the stone before, and one had even started to carve it, but he had damaged it to the point that it appeared nothing could be done to salvage it. And so the once-magnificent stone sat discarded—abandoned for decades, a monumental mistake.

Then a young man of 26 years came to look at it. He noticed the chisel marks that had left the stone too narrow, too flawed. But as he looked deeper, he saw something within it. Inside that rejected block of marble, he saw an image of strength and beauty waiting to emerge.

The young sculptor acquired the marble block and set to work. Two and a half years later the young artist, Michelangelo, revealed the masterpiece he had carved from that abandoned stone—David, one of the greatest works of art in the history of the world.1

Like Michelangelo’s stone, we too may have flaws. Perhaps we have been abandoned. Perhaps we feel too imperfect, stained, or weak to be of any worth. Nevertheless, no matter how broken or marred we may appear to be, there is a masterpiece of breathtaking beauty, depth, and nobility inside each one of us just waiting to be revealed.

And the same is true, of course, of everyone around us. If we can look with an eye like Michelangelo’s—past the flaws and weaknesses we think we see in others—we will recognize priceless value and infinite potential in each person we meet. And with just the right amount of love and tender care, we can help each other turn the rough stones of our lives into our very own masterpiece.
1 See John Addington Symonds, The Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti, 2 vols. (1911), 1:89–93.
Program #4170

Sunday, August 16, 2009

美傳教士 助旗山人清家園

美傳教士 助旗山人清家園

更新日期:2009/08/12 04:09

〔記者曹明正/高雄報導〕救災無國界!一群來自美國的年輕人,本來自費到台灣傳教,為協助旗山災民重建家園,昨天「撩落去」,在爛泥中行走好幾公里,幫忙鏟土、清淤,儘管混身都是黃泥巴,救溺的心始終不減。

滿身黃泥 當作難得歷練

從美國猶他州來到高雄不滿3個月的鍾(Aston)是第1次目睹颱風威力,他說,看到旗山民眾維護家園的努力,讓他感到佩服;從以前就覺得台灣人民非常謙虛,這次有機會能夠貢獻己力,儘管只是鏟土、搬垃圾,卻是一段非常難得的歷練。

年僅19歲的司徒(Stucki)表示,在黑水、爛泥當中,他看到台灣人民展現的手足之情,大家心連心,努力恢復家園;20歲的白(Byington)則說:「我知道他們需要幫忙,所以得知可以來這裡協助時,我覺得這是我應該做的」。

這群外國友人都是「耶穌基督後期聖徒」教會的傳教士,昨天有20多人參與旗山善後,他們沿著中華、大同路一帶,協助將成堆的泥巴鏟出門外,身上佈滿黃土、臉上滴著汗珠,膚色雖然不同,救難的心卻是一樣。

該教會旗山分會長陳信雄表示,19、20歲在很多國家是要服役的年齡,這群年輕傳教士則選擇自費到別的國家傳教兩年,有人形容他們是「神的軍人」,昨天他們都是先擱下傳教的工作,來到旗山與災民站在一起。

Thursday, August 13, 2009

More News

Taiwan races to save typhoon survivors

CISHAN, Taiwan – Hundreds of villagers scurried from their homes minutes before floodwaters burst an embankment Thursday, as the military airlifted survivors from remote villages devastated in mudslides during last weekend's typhoon.

The military sent 4,000 new troops to join more than 10,000 soldiers already working to save thousands of survivors stranded in several villages in the island's south, the Defense Ministry said. Rescue efforts have been slow because many bridges and roads to hard-hit villages collapsed or were washed out by raging floodwaters.

Typhoon Morakot struck Taiwan over the weekend, dumping more than 80 inches (2 meters) of rain and unleashing the most devastating floods that the island has seen in 50 years.

The official death toll in Taiwan stands at 108, with 61 listed as missing. But several hundred more — nobody is sure how many — remain unaccounted for and are feared lost in the mudslides. The storm also killed 22 people in the Philippines and eight in China.

In the southern Taiwan township of Toayuan, 300 villagers were told to run to higher ground about 30 minutes before a lake created by floodwaters burst its banks, an official said, adding that two nearby lakes were expected to burst soon.

"There would be a massive amount of water flowing down the Laonung River, and we have alerted villagers around to flee," relief official Hsu Chin-biao said.

Mud and rocks rushing down from mountains over the weekend blocked the flow of floodwaters to form the lakes, officials said.

The rains halted Thursday, permitting army helicopters to ferry scores of survivors from the remains of their villages to an improvised landing strip in the town of Cishan. Again and again the helicopters set down on the grounds of a school, as anxious relatives stood in the background waiting to hear the fate of their loved ones.

Not all of the news was good.

"There's been a bad development at Minchu village," a police officer announced over a speaker as a dead body was unloaded from a Huey helicopter to a waiting ambulance.

But other choppers were ferrying the living — elderly men and women, small boys and girls, even infants — many looking dazed and bewildered.

The tension among relatives was palpable.

"I have my family members trapped out there," said a woman from Kaochung village who gave her surname as Yu. "They can't wait. If the rain resumes, the mountains around them will collapse."

The military has reported that it has traced some 1,000 villagers from the worst-hit village of Shiao Lin and two other stricken communities in the past two days. So far at least 300 of them have been airlifted to safety, said spokesman for relief operations Col. Chang Kuo-bin.

News reports said many villagers used their bare hands in the days after the mudslides to try to dig down to their buried homes in futile efforts to save their relatives.

Others sought to send messages for help.

On Wednesday, a wooden sign was seen being erected near a collapsed bridge in Hsinfa village in Kaohsiung saying "32 Buried SOS." Rescuers rushed to the scene and tossed ropes over the river to pull several survivors to safety, according to news reports.

Morakot, which means "emerald" in the Thai language, first struck the Philippines. After hitting Taiwan, it pounded eastern China, where authorities evacuated 1.5 million people and some 10,000 homes were destroyed.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Good in Good-bye--Spoken Word given by Lloyd D. Newell

The Good in Good-bye Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

On January 5, 2006, mine foreman Martin Toler and 11 fellow miners, trapped in a West Virginia mine, crouched together hoping to escape poisonous gasses released by an unexplained explosion. In his final minutes, Martin scrawled a note on the back of an insurance form. The message was simple: “Tell all—I [will] see them on the other side. It wasn’t bad. I just went to sleep.” At the bottom of the page he concluded, the words sliding off the edge, “I love you.”1

Even though we didn’t know Martin Toler, his note makes us we wish we had. With his own life in peril, he found a way to comfort his loved ones. That says something about him. Clearly, this 51-year-old miner, who had worked most of his life below ground, prized people and his relationships with them.

Meredith Willson, in a song from his Broadway hit The Music Man, asked the question “Where is the good in good-bye?”2 Perhaps Martin Toler answered that question with his parting words: “I love you.” Martin taught us much about how to say good-bye.

When we leave a job or move from a neighborhood, when we walk those final steps at graduation or simply drive off in the morning, our good-byes can reflect more than a passage of time. They can be expressions of love connected to that house, that town, that time, that friend.

Martin Toler’s older brother said of him: “I knew he would have left a note. It was heart-wrenching, but I was glad to get it.”3 Saying good-bye is not easy, but it is good. For us and our loved ones, it can inspire hope in the future, comfort in the present, and gratitude for cherished memories in the past. That is the good in good-bye.
1. In Felicity Barringer and Brenda Goodman, “Coal Miners’ Notes of Goodbye, and Questions on a Blast’s Cause,” New York Times, Jan. 6, 2006, http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/06/national/06mine.html.

2. “Sincere,” 1957.

3. In “Coal Miners’ Notes of Goodbye.”
Program #4169

Monday, August 10, 2009

LDS Missionaries Provide Language, Hosting Assistance at World Games

Dozens of Mormon missionaries provided language and hosting assistance at the recently concluded 2009 World Games in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. The World Games are held every four years and feature 35 non-Olympic sports. This year’s Games brought over 4,600 athletes and coaches from 103 countries to Taiwan’s second-largest city.

Months before the Games began in mid-July, missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from the Taiwan Kaohsiung Mission held weekly English classes at the request of the city government.

The classes were taught to government officials as well as officers of the Kaoshiung City Police Department. Students in the classes learned help words and phrases in English so they could accommodate the tens of thousands of international visitors who attended the Games.

“Because your missionaries speak such good Chinese and English, their training has been very effective for our police department," said Gao Yi-time, foreign affairs representative with the department.

Also, during the two-week run of the Games, Mormon missionaries from the United States serving in Taiwan were invited by the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) to act as greeters to welcome the public to the popular American exhibition venue.

The exhibition was one of many sponsored by countries and international businesses during the Games. It offered local Taiwanese and visitors from abroad a chance to learn of American culture and products.

“Your missionaries represent what is best about young people,” said Chris Castro, branch chief of AIT's Kaoshiung office.

At the request of AIT, missionaries were also invited to assist with hosting and translation at a gala reception that was attended by hundreds of athletes, coaches and officials.

Typhoon Morakot

Typhoon Morakot hit Taiwan on August 7 and for 4 days it has already set the rainfall record in more than 50 years of time, causing catastrophic damages to southern part of Taiwan. The major goal of this website is to collect information from twitter.com and plurk.com, parse it through human checks, and deliver it the the needed. At the mean time, we have volunteers situated in various emergency centers in local county government, thus making sure that all information is able to get through the rescue teams.

We are working on this 24 hours a day and more people are coming to join the task force. For further information, please email adct @ adct.org.tw. God bless Taiwan.


Typhoon Morakot caused severe damage to the southern part of Taiwan with record breaking rainfall of 2,900 millimeters (114 inches) in 3 days. The highest single day regional regional record was broken on August 8th, at 1403 millimeters (55 inches). To put it in perspective, Vancouver's average annual rainfall is only 1117 mm (44 inches). Some bulidings were flooded up to the second floor, many counties isolated. Military personels have been deployed to help with the rescuing and reconstruction efforts. In Taitung County, segments of freeway and railway were washed away, 20 houses were washed into the sea, and a major hotel collapsed.

More than 150,168 people remain without power, and 28,282 households have had their phone lines cut, according to the latest statement from the National Fire Agency. Electricity was restored in some areas after disruptions that affected 1.4 million people, according to the statement. The storm caused an estimated NT$754.8 million ($23 million) in damage to crops, the agency said.
A Taiwanese blogger Billy Pan created a public Google map documenting the affected areas. The latest development is constantly updated on a website, Twitter, and Plurk. The sources are in Chinese, but the Google map is a visual representation of how serious a damage typhoon Morakot had caused.

Typhoons hit Taiwan frequently every summer. People are usually well prepared. Morakot is certainly one of a kind with massive rainfall. The last major floor ocurred on August 7th, 1959, caused more than a thousand dead or missing, 20 thousand house collapsed. The damage totalled 11% of GDP back then. Today, even with much better building standard and diaster preparation, Morakot still created major disruption to the whole country.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Pruning Season--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

Pruning Season Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Gardeners know that pruning is one of the best things you can do for your plants, if it’s done the right way. Plants and trees may need to be pruned to remove diseased or damaged branches or to ensure that nutrients from the roots go to producing fruit. Too much pruning, however, can harm or even kill a plant. The gardener must use care and caution to get it just right.

If trees could speak, perhaps they would wonder why it is necessary to prune their branches. They may even complain that pruning is painful or that it stunts their growth. Why not just leave them alone? But eventually it becomes clear that the pruning has made the plant stronger, healthier, and more productive.

In a way, people are like trees. We too can benefit from occasionally examining ourselves and pruning a few things from our lives. Are we holding on to a grudge or resentments that need to be taken out of our soul? Do we think some things about ourselves or others that are negative or limiting that could be removed? Do we harbor in our heart some habits or feelings that we would be better off pruning from our lives?

We resist pruning, at times, because it can be painful. It’s not always easy to look deeply at our lives and question who we really are and what our life is really about. But we begin to feel the benefits almost immediately. When we shed our burdens through appropriate pruning, we actually feel lighter and freer, and we allow life’s sunlight to shine on us more fully. Over time, we find we are more able to give and receive love, more compassionate toward ourselves and others, and we see for ourselves that this pruning, this refining, really is one of the best things we can do.
Program #4168

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.