Showing posts with label President Monson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label President Monson. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Why My Week Has Been Awesome

  1. I went running twice with Brady Anderson, and he's kinda' crazy, but really fun!
  2. I had a rockin' presidency meeting.
  3. I got to talk to my AWESOME second cousin, Louisa!!!
Jared and I waiting in line for Divine Comedy!
  1. I went to Divine Comedy with Jared, Sarah, Brady, and McKell. It was hilarious and super fun!
  2. I got to go shopping with Ryan and we got to be goofy and have people treat us like a married couple.
Emily and I mean business when we watch the arts

We walked up to Christmas around the world with Kara and Mary...I kinda got carried away with the picture taking...
 

  1. I went to Christmas Around the World with Emily and it was AMAZING! Plus, I knew six people in it (Will, Jordan, Ethan, David, Joseph, and Jamie) and they all did SO GOOD!
  2. My apartment has a sweet, peaceful spirit in it, thanks to all the wonderful people who came over (Jeremy, Ryan, Sarah, Quaelii, Scott, Gentry, Stephen, Drew, and others...)
  3. I spent hours preparing for the lesson I gave today. Preparing for church lessons is one of my favoritest things in the world.
  4. The testimonies--spoken and unspoken--today at church were inspiring. We have so many good people in our ward (and I love them ALL!!!)
  5. Dinner tonight with the clan. It was really yummy.
  6. Got to watch the Christmas Devotional with the clan. Amelia gave me a back rub. My back might be starting to recover from carrying around my laptop and Shakespeare bible, thanks to her!
  7. Stephen, Scott, Gentry, and Drew came over to our apartment tonight and made me really laugh! I haven't really laughed in ages!
  8. It's CHRISTMAS TIME and we have a REAL CHRISTMAS TREE in our apartment!!! Plus snowflakes and lights and nativities and wrapping-papered walls. Oh, and mistletoe. 
  9. I have A. MAZE. ING. roomates. They are seriously some of the greatest blessings in my life!
  10. I've gone from ups to downs and back again. Heavenly Father's really good and pulling me back up.
  11. I know that Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ love me and all those I associate with. It's so easy to love those around me when I remember how much They love them. 
  12. I feel that those around me sincerely care about and love me because they've shown it. Means the world to me.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

An Instrument in His Hands


"And this is the blessing which hath been bestowed upon us, that we have been made instruments in the hands of God to bring about this great work." -Alma 26:3

"The greatest thing in the world is love. And if we keep that always in our hearts, and give it as a message to those about us, we will be blessed and will be instruments in blessing those with whom we associate."  -Clarissa S. Williams, Sixth Relief Society General President, Daughters in My Kingdom page 74

"The sweetest experience I know in life is to feel a prompting and act upon it and later find out that it was the fulfillment of someone’s prayer or someone’s need. And I always want the Lord to know that if He needs an errand run, Tom Monson will run that errand for Him." -President Thomas S. Monson

"Is anyone sitting there?" I asked the lady on the plane. 

"You are!" she exclaimed. She moved the bag and bottle that had been sitting on the seat and I meandered my way down into the seat. The older lady was sitting on my left and to my right, sitting next to the window, was Kim Low--a girl from my home stake whom I happened to see out in the waiting area before we boarded the plane. I was feeling pretty lucky that the seat next to her was still open by the time I got onto the plane. 

Kim and I said hi to each other and started talking. 

"Why were you in Vancouver?"

"How are things at school?"

"You've graduated already, haven't you?"
"Where are you working right now?"

It occurred to me while we were talking that I should maybe take a second to say hi to the lady sitting to my left. I usually try to at least introduce myself to the people I sit next to on planes. But Kim and I were having a good time talking, and I figured I could introduce myself in a bit.

We were still waiting for the plane to take off when there was a brief lull in our conversation.  

"Do you two know each other?" piped up the lady, filling the pause.

Kim and I looked at each other and then back at the lady. We explained to her that we were from the same stake and also both went to BYU.

"I know the tennis coach at BYU," the lady said. "His name is Pierce. The tennis team is really good. You should look him up."

I asked her how she knew the coach.

"My son does tennis.  But he doesn't go to BYU. I'm not Mormon. But Pierce is really nice." 

I was beginning to feel like the lady really wanted to talk. Not about tennis or BYU or Mormons, necessarily, but that she just needed to talk. So I turned myself towards her, leaving Kim to read her Harry Potter book, and Paula and I talked for the next hour and a half while our plane made its way to Salt Lake City. 

The conversation I had with Paula is one of the best conversations I've had my whole life. It wasn't the content that made it so special, but the spirit that attended it. Throughout the conversation she mentioned that the reason she was in Oregon was because her father had just passed away and that she had been taking care of him and then, once he died, she had to take care of her mother. It seemed like she wanted to talk to someone about it, but I thought it would be good to talk about some other things first. So we did. We talked about her time as a nurse. She asked me what I was studying at BYU. We talked about God and serving people. We talked about Methodists (her choice of religion) verses Mormonism and about how sometimes it's hard for her to live in Utah because there are so many Mormons and she's not one of them. We talked about education. We talked about her son who's in Japan serving in the navy and her other son who's starting his senior year of high school and wants to go to NYU to study film. We talked about her involvement with a program her church does called Family Promise where they help single moms and their kids start over again. We talked about how she met her husband and my own dating life. 

In the middle of our conversation, when I felt like we knew one another a little better, I asked her about the experience with her father, and she was so glad to talk about it. She shared how hard of an experience it had been for her. She told me that her mother had althimers and that it was really hard to place her in a home. She told me about how, right after her father passed away, she went in the other room and suddenly felt a great sense of peace and love and knew that Jesus and her father were telling her it was okay and what she needed to do. She said most people thought she was silly for saying that and I told her it was the least silly thing I had ever heard. She really opened up and told me everything, and I had the sweet opportunity to be able to listen. 

"God sent you here to sit next to me," she told me several times during our flight. "You're not a coincidence, you're a God incident. He's always sending angles into my life. You're one of those angels."

At other times she would laugh and say: "I can't believe God sent me a BYU student to help me!" 

Paula and I laughed. We were serious. We hugged each other. When the plane landed I walked with her out to the baggage claim and pick-up area. 

We said goodbye to each other and gave one another one last hug. 

"Thanks again, Lindsey. You're so sweet. I would have cried the whole plane ride home if it hadn't been for you." 

I left, and that was it.

Now. I haven't shared this experience because I want to brag because I helped someone out who was having a bad day (Alma 26:11-12). I hate self-righteousness. I share this experience first of all, because it's something I want to always remember. I also share it because I want to add my testimony to President Monson's and testify that it is a truly humbling and sweet experience to know that the Lord has used you to help someone in need. I followed the Spirit when he prompted me to talk to Paula, and ended up having an incredible experience. I wasn't there to convert Paula or to shove a Book of Mormon down her throat. I was just there to be a friend. Through the experience, I got to feel the Spirit and the love Heavenly Father has for her. I know that she is special and that she is a daughter of God who is doing her best to be her best.  

I want my life to be filled with Paulas. Like President Monson, I want the Lord to be able to trust and rely on me to answer the prays of others. I cannot describe to you how humbling it feels to know that the Lord used me to help someone who was in need. That He trusted me. That I was an instrument in His hands. 

Seek out those promptings of the Spirit and determine to follow them when they do come. I promise you that   you will live with greater peace and joy when you let the Lord use you to do His work. When you do, some of the greatest experiences of your life will follow.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Come Listen to a Prophet's Voice


"And the king answered him, and said: Yea, I will believe all thy words. And thus he was caught with guile."   -Alma 18:23

"If we teach by the Spirit and you listen by the Spirit, some one of us will touch on your circumstance, sending a personal prophetic epistle just to you."   -Jeffery R. Holland, "An Ensign to the Nations", April 2011

Where do you and I stand in our willingness and determination to follow today's living prophets? 

I love King Lamoni's attitude in this scripture. He is so willing to be obedient. This is because he has gained a testimony that Ammon is a messenger from God and that the words Ammon speaks are from God. Do we realize this? When we listen to a prophet's voice, do we understand that he is merely there to express the thoughts, feelings, and desires from the Lord?

Last week, I had an experience that testified to me that the words spoken by today's general authorities are true. As my ward's Relief Society president, I had been praying to know what the Lord would have me do to help the sisters in my ward strengthen their testimonies. I received the distinct and strong impression that the sisters in our ward needed to read Daughters in My Kingdom. This is the same council that the General Relief Society Presidency has  been giving to the church across the world over the past year. It shouldn't have been a surprise, yet it was still a very humbling experience to realize that the words spoken to a worldwide audience of sisters weren't just general "this-might-apply-to-your-situation" pieces of advise. When Sister Beck testified that learning about the history of Relief Society would strengthen us sisters, it was meant for every single one of us. It was meant, on a very specific and personal level, for the girls in the Provo YSA 41st Ward. Every one of them. Including me.

Having the spirit bring to mind the council of Sister Beck as a way to answer my question has strengthened my testimony that the prophets and apostles in today's world truly are servants of the Lord. Although they may speak to a worldwide audience, their council is meant to provide very personal and direct answers to our questions. I know that God lives, and that because He loves us He has given us wise, loving, good-hearted leaders to help us make our way through today's challenges. These leaders have dedicated their lives to serving in the church as a testimony of their love for us and for God. I desire to be more like King Lamoni. I desire to listen to and follow all the words of God, spoken through today's living prophets.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Following the Promptings of the Spirit

“And now, verily, verily, I say unto thee, put your trust in that Spirit which leadeth to do good—yea, to do justly, to walk humbly, to judge righteously; and this is my Spirit.” -D&C 11:12
“Running the full length of the corridor on the fourth floor of the hospital, the young bishop saw a flurry of activity outside the designated room. A nurse stopped him and said, ‘Are you Bishop Monson?’
‘Yes,’ was the anxious reply.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘The patient was calling your name just before he passed away.’
Fighting back the tears, Thomas S. Monson turned and walked back into the night. He vowed then and there that he would never again fail to act upon a prompting from the Lord. He would acknowledge the impressions of the Spirit when they came, and he would follow wherever they led him, ever to be ‘on the Lord’s errand.’” -Jeffrey R. Holland, “President Thomas S. Monson: Man of Action, Man of Faith, Always “on the Lord’s Errand”, 1986
Today I received a spiritual prompting and didn't follow it. I knew I should have followed it, I knew that Heavenly Father knew better than I did, yet, I still ignored it. I was stubborn. I didn't want to do things His way because I didn't understand why I was receiving the prompting I was. I liked the way I wanted to do things. So I did them that way.
Six hours later I feel like a fool. In that short six hours I have come to understand things and see things as Heavenly Father knew they were. Like President Monson in this story, I regret the choice I made to rebel against the prompting He sent me.
Luckily, unlike President Monson, my choice wasn't so drastically hurtful. But really, when it comes down to it, it doesn't matter how big or small of a thing the Spirit was telling me to do; what matters is that I chose not to follow Him.
Today, right now, I am resolving to do as President Monson resolved to do decades ago: I want to never ignore a spiritual prompting. No matter how hard, no matter how confusing, I want the Lord to be able to count on me as someone who will follow His instructions. I want Him to know that if He needs something done that He can trust me to do it. Doing this is going to be really hard, but it's worth it because it's a way for me to show Heavenly Father that I love and trust Him.
The best part of this all is that if I mess up, He has the patience to forgive me and let me try again. I love the gospel. It's just awesome.