Ask yourself these questions: Am I an example of respect in my home by the way I treat those I love the most? What is my demeanor during a sports event? If my child has a disagreement with a teacher, coach, or peer, do I listen to both sides of the issue? Do I show respect for the property of others as well as take care of my own? How do I respond to others with whom I disagree in matters of religion, lifestyle, or politics?
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Respect and Reverence
Ask yourself these questions: Am I an example of respect in my home by the way I treat those I love the most? What is my demeanor during a sports event? If my child has a disagreement with a teacher, coach, or peer, do I listen to both sides of the issue? Do I show respect for the property of others as well as take care of my own? How do I respond to others with whom I disagree in matters of religion, lifestyle, or politics?
Monday, June 29, 2009
The Friends
We are grateful for all that they have done for us and wish them all the best in their future undertakings.
Maybe Marcus will be sent here to serve his mission!
The good news is, we can still keep up with their adventures by reading from their blog at http://thejungletimes.blogspot.com
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Conversion Stories
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Conversion Story - Sister Susan Seet
Susan and Michael with the Elders who taught them the Gospel, Elder Andrew Confer and Elder Mathew Wall.
The year was 1994. My husband, Michael, and I were leading a worldly lifestyle. He was holding two jobs and I was teaching during the day and going to law school at night. Life was too hectic for us to enjoy anything.
My sister, Lillian had recently been widowed. Michael and I knew that she was hurting badly so we visited her often and even accompanied her to her church. It was the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She had been baptized into it eight years before.
Soon after our visiting the church with Lillian, two elders were sent by the mission to our little historical town of Melaka in Malaysia. We were wary of the elders at first and even hid from them, however, in no time, we became fast friends. We felt sorry for these two American young men who had nobody. There were no members and they were so far away from home.
Invitation to a Very Small Sacrament Meeting
They invited us to their sacrament meeting one day and we agreed. Sacrament meeting was held in their apartment. They did not even have chairs, so we sat on one of their beds. Week after week, there were just the four of us. We started asking them questions and they asked us to take the six discussions.
During one of the discussions, we were taught the principle of tithing and we both felt that it was right. We went home and discussed it and decided that if we felt a teaching to be correct, then the right thing to do was to act upon it.
We decided to pay our first tithe even though we were not baptized yet. ---The only problem was that we had spent our income without planning for a 10% tithe and if we were to go ahead, we would not have enough money for food for the rest of the month. ----It was a tough decision but we decided to go by faith.
Miraculously, we survived the month because my father visited us often and brought us plenty of food. We then had our first testimony of tithing and this has never been a challenge to us ever since. We continued to act upon everything that we were taught and felt to be right.
Everything that the missionaries taught us was very acceptable to me, as I was hungry for something more in my life. That which was seriously lacking in my life, I now seemed to have found.
Disagreements
It was harder for Michael to completely accept that this was the only true church and we used to have huge disagreements, especially on Saturday nights or Sunday mornings which made it extremely difficult for us to get to church. However, we always seemed to make it there somehow. It was so amazing that the elders would invariably talk about something that we had been arguing about even though we had never told them about it. The spirit was so strong, always, and tears would often flow freely.
I was sure that I had found that missing piece in my life and was ready to be baptized but it was not so with Michael. We had more arguments as a result. One day, however, he came home from work and ---to my surprise announced that he also wanted to be baptized! ---While driving home, he had a vision of us. In the vision we were members of the church and we were very happy!
Susan and Michael with Elder Brian Ashby who also helped teach them the truths of the Gospel.
Baptism
The elders set the date for November 5th. We had our biggest argument on November 4th, over nothing! My sister Lillian told us to pray and as we knelt down and prayed, all the anger and negative feelings just left us and we could not figure out what we had been arguing about.
We were baptized and at about the same time, a missionary couple was sent to our little town and a few months later another family moved in. With two families, a branch was formed and Michael was called as the branch president. It was quite overwhelming, as we were so new in the church. However, the missionaries continued to teach and train us.
Michael and I spent a lot of time reading from manuals and whatever church materials we could lay our hands on. We thought we were hungry, but we were practically starving. One couple described us as sponges trying to absorb everything.
Becoming Parents
One day, Michael read a quote by President Kimball stating that putting off parenting for the sake of studies or career was a form of idolatry. ---He thought about us and shared what he had read with me. I knew then that I had a big decision to make. I remember taking one whole day, praying and studying it out in my mind before I decided that I would give up law school to start a family. Michael agreed with me and almost a year later, our son Matthew (named after the first missionary who taught us) was born. His Chinese name is Jing Wei, meaning defender of the scriptures.
When Matthew was born, we decided that I would quit my teaching job to be a full time homemaker, just as the church teaches. This decision drew lots of criticism especially from some family members and most of our friends. ---Since Michael's sole income would not be able to sustain us, Michael also had to quit his job to look for a better paying one. Most people thought we were either stupid or crazy or both. In the scriptures, the Lord promised us that if we would do the things that He wants us to, He would provide a way and He did. Michael was able to provide for us with his new job.
When Matthew turned one, we made plans to go to our nearest temple, the Manila Philippines Temple. Lillian went with us and it was such a wonderful experience especially when we were sealed together and when Matthew was brought in to be sealed to us.
The Seets' three boys, named for the missionaries who taught them, Andrew Seet De Wei, Brian Seet Song Wei, and Mathew Seet Jing Wei.
As we continued to learn, progress and serve, my niece Claire, who was staying with us was observing us and learning as well. Claire wanted to be baptized, but she could not get her parents' consent. When she turned eighteen, however, she was baptized. She served a mission in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. She cycled about 15 kilometers a day. She worked so hard and touched so many lives. We are very proud of her.
My father Samuel, who was also staying with us, got baptized later. He was 71 years old at that time. He does not speak or understand English but he has faithfully attended church all this time. We do not have a Mandarin branch, all is in English, but he is able to say prayers, bless the sacrament, sing the church hymns and read his church manuals and other materials in Mandarin. He was 75 when he went to the Taipei Taiwan Temple to serve as an ordinance worker and then returned home with his proud granddaughter, Claire. He was not able to serve a regular mission, as he is a widower.
Michael and I later had another son, Andrew (named after the second missionary who came to Melaka and taught us). His Chinese name is De Wei, which means defender of virtues. Just before Andrew was born, Michael was retrenched from work and it was four months of refining and living by faith. Michael later got a better job but we will never forget the things that we learned during that ordeal. We have become more compassionate, more generous, more understanding and more grateful.
An Amazing Miracle
Sometime after this, something really wonderful happened. My uncle (my father's younger brother) who had just returned from one of his trips to visit our relatives in China, brought us a book. It was all written in ancient Mandarin and my father could not really make out what it was so he showed it to me. At first, I too did not know what it was but as I slowly studied it, I realized it was a record of my father's ancestors! If I am not mistaken, we have information on eighteen generations! ---I often wondered when I was growing up, why my parents had sent me to a Mandarin-medium school when all my siblings were sent to English-medium schools. Well, now I know! What a tremendous blessing this was. Our hearts were filled with so much gratitude. We made copies of the book and sent it to be translated. When we went to the Hong Kong Temple with my father for his endowment, we had the opportunity to do work for some of our ancestors. We can feel the love for our ancestors even though we only have names and dates to look at. My father finished doing work for all the names in the book when he served in the Taipei Temple.
Just before our third son Brian (named after the third missionary who came to Melaka and taught us) was born, Michael was offered a better job but this required us to move to the city of Kuala Lumpur. I have never been one who likes to live in the big city so I was very undecided about this. One day after praying about it, I was prompted to read the scriptures from where I had left off the day before. When I opened my Book of Mormon, I knew I had my answer because it was the chapter about Lehi moving his family from Jerusalem! The Lord has never failed to help Michael get a better job so that he can provide for us, as our family grows larger. We have a very strong testimony of this. By the way, Brian's Chinese name is Song Wei, which means defender of the mountain (as in mountain of the Lord).
There have been so many spiritual experiences in our lives that there is not the time nor space to share them all. We are so grateful for all that we have learned and for all the blessings that have come into our lives because of the gospel. We love our three beautiful boys so much and we are working hard to bring them up the right way by changing ourselves to be the best that we can be. We pray that they will grow up to be valiant young men. We want to make it to the celestial kingdom and we are trying our best to do it one day at a time.
In fulfillment of the vision that Michael had, we are indeed happy!
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Receiving the Ordinances and Blessings of the Temple
- The Saints are commanded by God to build temples.
- In the temple we learn the things of eternity and receive ordinances of salvation for ourselves and our ancestors.
“The doctrine of baptism for the dead is clearly shown in the New Testament; … it was the reason why Jesus said unto the Jews, ‘How oft would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!’ [Matthew 23:37]—that they might attend to the ordinances of baptism for the dead as well as other ordinances of the priesthood, and receive revelations from heaven, and be perfected in the things of the kingdom of God—but they would not. This was the case on the day of Pentecost: those blessings were poured out on the disciples on that occasion. God ordained that He would save the dead, and would do it by gathering His people together. …
“… Why gather the people together in this place? For the same purpose that Jesus wanted to gather the Jews—to receive the ordinances, the blessings, and the glories that God has in store for His Saints. I will now ask this assembly and all the Saints if you will now build this house and receive the ordinances and blessings which God has in store for you; or will you not build unto the Lord this house, and let Him pass by and bestow these blessings upon another people?”
“The question is frequently asked, ‘Can we not be saved without going through with all those ordinances, etc.?’ I would answer, No, not the fullness of salvation. Jesus said, ‘There are many mansions in my Father’s house, and I will go and prepare a place for you.’ [See John 14:2.] House here named should have been translated kingdom; and any person who is exalted to the highest mansion has to abide a celestial law, and the whole law too.”
“If a man gets a fulness of the priesthood of God, he has to get it in the same way that Jesus Christ obtained it, and that was by keeping all the commandments and obeying all the ordinances of the house of the Lord. …
“All men who become heirs of God and joint-heirs with Jesus Christ will have to receive the fulness of the ordinances of his kingdom; and those who will not receive all the ordinances will come short of the fulness of that glory.”
- The temple is a place of holiness where we receive the greatest blessings God has for His children.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
A Father Indeed
Friday, June 19, 2009
Happy Father's Day
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Quote - Coming to an Understanding with Ourselves
"President David O. McKay counseled: ' "The greatest battle of life is fought within the silent chambers of your own soul.". . . It is a good thing to sit down and commune with yourself, to come to an understanding with yourself and decide in that silent moment what your duty is to your family, to your Church, to your country, and . . . to your fellowmen' (in Conference Report, April 1967, 84-85)
--Thomas S Monson, "Choose You This Day," Ensign, November 2004, 68
Monday, June 15, 2009
Redemption for the Dead
In January 1836, many years after Alvin’s death, Joseph Smith received a vision of the celestial kingdom, in which he saw that Alvin, as well as his mother and father, would someday inherit that kingdom. Joseph “marveled how it was that [Alvin] had obtained an inheritance in that kingdom, seeing that he had departed this life before the Lord had set his hand to gather Israel the second time, and had not been baptized for the remission of sins” (D&C 137:6). The voice of the Lord then came to Joseph, declaring:
“All who have died without a knowledge of this gospel, who would have received it if they had been permitted to tarry, shall be heirs of the celestial kingdom of God; also all that shall die henceforth without a knowledge of it, who would have received it with all their hearts, shall be heirs of that kingdom; for I, the Lord, will judge all men according to their works, according to the desire of their hearts” (D&C 137:7–9).
Lesson highlights:
- God loves all His children and will judge all people according to the law they have received.
- The Savior, Jesus Christ, offers the opportunity for forgiveness and deliverance to both the living and the dead.
- God is perfectly just and merciful to all people, living and dead.
It is our duty and privilege to be baptized and confirmed for those who have died without the gospel.
(For the full lesson, click here)
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Are You Going To Finish Strong?
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Welfare Efforts Bring Jews, LDS Together
Rabbi Hirschfield recalled a statement from Jim Goodrich, manager of Welfare Square: "We are taught that you go to the temple to make covenants, and you come to Welfare Square to keep them."
Saying the statement moved him to tears, Rabbi Hirschfield added, "And the test of the covenants we make is whether or not they actually benefit other people beyond our community. And it was clear to me that I was in the presence of masters of that teaching, and so why not would I return? For me, this is a beginning of shared discovery of how to strengthen that capacity in two communities."
And Rabbi Borak said he witnessed the example of "love your neighbor as yourself" — a value shared both in the Jewish Torah and LDS scriptures — at Welfare Square, adding "nobody lives it better than those in the LDS Church, in my experience."
"I was humbled by what I saw, and at the same time was profoundly inspired by what I saw," he added. "So I want to support this organization and this effort, and I see it completely as a manifestation of God's will for man being in this earth. I want to learn from it, and I want to contribute in whatever way I can."
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Gospel is Answer to Challenges in Life
"When I passed the memorial where the Germans were stopped, my heart hurt. I was 4 years old when the war ended. There have been too many wars. Be positive. Build on the future. As a 4-year-old, I saw an American Army move into my hometown. Then the American Army moved out and the Russian army moved in. I saw how a country was destroyed. When my family thought about the future, there was no future.
"When we found the gospel, it gave us strength and hope for the future. This gospel is the answer to any challenges in life. There are challenges, but we have to overcome them by living the gospel."
--Dieter F Uchtdorf, "A Faithful People: 'We Can Feel the Spirit'", Church News
(For the full article, click here)
Monday, June 8, 2009
How Can I Find Happiness?
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Quote - Forgiveness
"When we forgive and let go of that which has weighed heavily on our hearts and taken us off the path, a great burden is lifted from our souls, and we are free--free to move forward and progress in our pursuit of the gospel of Jesus Christ with an increase of love in our hearts. We will be blessed with an increase of enthusiasm for life, and our hearts will be lighter. A surge of spiritual energy will propel us forward in joy and happiness. The problems of the past will be cast away like old, worn-out clothes."
--Ned B. Roueché, "Feed My Sheep," Ensign, November 2004, 30-31
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Faith in Action - Sister Tobi Sanders
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Self-reliance
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Be an Example, Kind in Word and Conversation
It's not just the big, public events where people are examples of the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It's in the smaller things, too, said Sister Bonnie D. Parkin, former general president of the Relief Society.
"We're not required to do what Moroni did and ride through the town with the title of liberty, but we do need to be kind in word and conversation and speak with kindness and respect," Sister Parkin said during the Mothers' Week fireside at Brigham Young University-Idaho on Sunday, May 31.