Tagged: lds

Apr 05

missing, my…

minnesota friends.
the young women.
laughs – lots & lots!
baking treats…like this!


thanks mrs. parrish!
but now it’s time for a trip.
and of course…
to find a home to unpack my kitchenaid
and cupcake wrappers (and this is exactly how i store mine!).

xo

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Sep 28

i am not forgotten.

you know those times when you can’t even articulate to yourself what you need or why you feel a certain way – i seem to be having a lot of those lately.

but then comes along a friend with a hug, some flowers (yippie), a phone call or just a kind word. we all struggle – some of us are better at covering it than others but all the same we each have our own burdens to carry.

for me this week was especially rough.
i was blessed as you probably guessed by my previous posts by friends and family but saturday night i was given a gift.

i listened to words of confidence and strength through several talks by president dieter f. uchtdorf – a leader and apostle in my church during our semi-annual relief society broadcast

his words were so inspiring that i encourage you to listen to his guidance for all of us women. whether or not you are lds – the message is the same – knowing our Father in Heaven knows us, listens to us and loves us.

below is an exert:

“as a child, when i would look at the little forget-me-nots, i sometimes felt a little like that flower—small and very insignificant. i wondered if i would be forgotten by my family or by my Heavenly Father. 

years later, i can look back on that young boy with tenderness and compassion. and i do know now i was never forgotten.

and I know something else. As an Apostle of our Master, Jesus Christ, I proclaim with all the certainty and conviction of my heart and soul—neither are you!

you are not forgotten.

sisters, wherever you are, whatever the circumstances may be, you are not forgotten. no matter how dark your days may seem, no matter how insignificant you may feel, no matter how overshadowed you think you may be, your Heavenly Father has not forgotten you. in fact, He loves you, with an infinite love.”

president dieter f. uchtdorf

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Jul 10

happy sabbath

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Jun 21

running home.

last night i came “home” to dinner and a little mini family.

jodi (aka: preggers, pregnant mama, pm) was quite the homemaker while i was at work!
that woman has more energy than anyone i know – to be up sick all night, clean the house, make dinner and keep it all looking good – she’s my hero.

i was ordered (yes, ordered) when i walked in the door after a 12 hour work day to change my clothes and come to dinner. no joke.
i so adore my favorite pm. just like old times.

dinner with the missionaries. a few laughs by tj and me at preggers expense.
chats about life back in minne.

some lovies by the two dogs (lola waited outside my bedroom door today).
i’m clearly a great house guest if the dogs can’t wait for me to get back!

lots of baby talk with the pregnant mama.
off for a walk together to stretch her legs.

then, i took my run.
i was in heaven. really.
i ran through the neighborhood at dusk with the fire flies.

tonight for the first time in a long time…
i felt connected.
i felt i belonged.
i felt at home.

it felt like the days running in edina and plymouth.
making dinner in shakopee – calamari to be exact.
even driving in a green little honda with two crazy girls.

these are the days to cherish.

 

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Jun 12

my buddies.

as many of you know i’m a latter-day saint, aka mormon.
i love the doctrine of the church and am grateful everyday for the blessings i’ve had in my life.

i wasn’t raised lds but i decided as an adult -
after much investigation, thought, reading, prayer and consultation
with the important people in my life that this was and is the right decision for me.

i’m not a big talker/preacher about religion.
it doesn’t mean i don’t believe or i’m not faithful, i’m just not an in your face kind of person when it comes to this area…
i was taught growing up that money, politics and religion are things you don’t talk about with just anyone.

well, i’m now in dc and i can’t avoid politics, even if i tried…
money, i don’t have enough of it to even make it a worthwhile conversation…
religion, well, i’d be happy to have a conversation with you but this is the internet that can be challenging
since it’s hard to sum up or capture how i feel, think or what i believe in a little old blog post.

i thought about some of the people i know, friends, who’ve changed my life.

i love all of these people. they make me laugh, they taught me, opened their homes to me…
i have such great memories with them all.
i couldn’t have been asked for better people in my life. each day is richer than the next because of them.

i’m grateful that they have sharing their stories with me and with the world.
i thought you might want to hear from them…
kyle
marla
andrew
paul
jenny
ann
paul
ora
sophie
gary
bill
chuck
laurie

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May 08

are we not all mothers?

- sheri l. dew, november 2001

This summer four teenage nieces and I shared a tense Sunday evening when we set out walking from a downtown hotel in a city we were visiting to a nearby chapel where I was to speak. I had made that walk many times, but that evening we suddenly found ourselves engulfed by an enormous mob of drunken parade-goers. It was no place for four teenage girls, or their aunt, I might add. But with the streets closed to traffic, we had no choice but to keep walking. Over the din, I shouted to the girls, “Stay right with me.” As we maneuvered through the crush of humanity, the only thing on my mind was my nieces’ safety.

Thankfully, we finally made it to the chapel. But for one unnerving hour, I better understood how mothers who forgo their own safety to protect a child must feel. My siblings had entrusted me with their daughters, whom I love, and I would have done anything to lead them to safety. Likewise, our Father has entrusted us as women with His children, and He has asked us to love them and help lead them safely past the dangers of mortality back home.

Loving and leading—these words summarize not only the all-consuming work of the Father and the Son, but the essence of our labor, for our work is to help the Lord with His work. How, then, may we as Latter-day women of God best help the Lord with His work?

Prophets have repeatedly answered this question, as did the First Presidency six decades ago when they called motherhood “the highest, holiest service … assumed by mankind.” 1

Have you ever wondered why prophets have taught the doctrine of motherhood—and it is doctrine—again and again? I have. I have thought long and hard about the work of women of God. And I have wrestled with what the doctrine of motherhood means for all of us. This issue has driven me to my knees, to the scriptures, and to the temple—all of which teach an ennobling doctrine regarding our most crucial role as women. It is a doctrine about which we must be clear if we hope to stand “steadfast and immovable” 2 regarding the issues that swirl around our gender. For Satan has declared war on motherhood. He knows that those who rock the cradle can rock his earthly empire. And he knows that without righteous mothers loving and leading the next generation, the kingdom of God will fail.

When we understand the magnitude of motherhood, it becomes clear why prophets have been so protective of woman’s most sacred role. While we tend to equate motherhood solely with maternity, in the Lord’s language, the word mother has layers of meaning. Of all the words they could have chosen to define her role and her essence, both God the Father and Adam called Eve “the mother of all living” 3 —and they did sobefore she ever bore a child. Like Eve, our motherhood began before we were born. Just as worthy men were foreordained to hold the priesthood in mortality, 4 righteous women were endowed premortally with the privilege of motherhood. 5 Motherhood is more than bearing children, though it is certainly that. It is the essence of who we are as women. It defines our very identity, our divine stature and nature, and the unique traits our Father gave us.

President Gordon B. Hinckley stated that “God planted within women something divine.” 6 That something is the gift and the gifts of motherhood. Elder Matthew Cowley taught that “men have to have something given to them [in mortality] to make them saviors of men, but not mothers, not women. [They] are born with an inherent right, an inherent authority, to be the saviors of human souls … and the regenerating force in the lives of God’s children.” 7

Motherhood is not what was left over after our Father blessed His sons with priesthood ordination. It was the most ennobling endowment He could give His daughters, a sacred trust that gave women an unparalleled role in helping His children keep their second estate. As President J. Reuben Clark Jr. declared, motherhood is “as divinely called, as eternally important in its place as the Priesthood itself.” 8

Nevertheless, the subject of motherhood is a very tender one, for it evokes some of our greatest joys and heartaches. This has been so from the beginning. Eve was “glad” after the Fall, realizing she otherwise “never should have had seed.” 9 And yet, imagine her anguish over Cain and Abel. Some mothers experience pain because of the children they have borne; others feel pain because they do not bear children here. About this Elder John A. Widtsoe was explicit: “Women who through no fault of their own cannot exercise the gift of motherhood directly, may do so vicariously.” 10

For reasons known to the Lord, some women are required to wait to have children. This delay is not easy for any righteous woman. But the Lord’s timetable for each of us does not negate our nature. Some of us, then, must simply find other ways to mother. And all around us are those who need to be loved and led.

Eve set the pattern. In addition to bearing children, she mothered all of mankind when she made the most courageous decision any woman has ever made and with Adam opened the way for us to progress. She set an example of womanhood for men to respect and women to follow, modeling the characteristics with which we as women have been endowed: heroic faith, a keen sensitivity to the Spirit, an abhorrence of evil, and complete selflessness. Like the Savior, “who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross,” 11 Eve, for the joy of helping initiate the human family, endured the Fall. She loved us enough to help lead us.

As daughters of our Heavenly Father, and as daughters of Eve, we are all mothers and we have always been mothers. And we each have the responsibility to love and help lead the rising generation. How will our young women learn to live as women of God unless they see what women of God look like, meaning what we wear, watch, and read; how we fill our time and our minds; how we face temptation and uncertainty; where we find true joy; and why modesty and femininity are hallmarks of righteous women? How will our young men learn to value women of God if we don’t show them the virtue of our virtues?

Every one of us has an overarching obligation to model righteous womanhood because our youth may not see it anywhere else. Every sister in Relief Society, which is the most significant community of women on this side of the veil, is responsible to help our young women make a joyful transition into Relief Society. This means our friendship with them must begin long before they turn 18. Every one of us can mother someone—beginning, of course, with the children in our own families but extending far beyond. Every one of us can show by word and by deed that the work of women in the Lord’s kingdom is magnificent and holy. I repeat: We are all mothers in Israel, and our calling is to love and help lead the rising generation through the dangerous streets of mortality.

Few of us will reach our potential without the nurturing of both the mother who bore us and the mothers who bear with us. I was thrilled recently to see one of my youth leaders for the first time in years. As a teenager who had absolutely no self-confidence, I always sidled up to this woman because she would put her arm around me and say, “You are just the best girl!” She loved me, so I let her lead me. How many young men and women are desperate for your love and leadership? Do we fully realize that our influence as mothers in Israel is irreplaceable and eternal?

When I was growing up, it was not uncommon for Mother to wake me in the middle of the night and say, “Sheri, take your pillow and go downstairs.” I knew what that meant. It meant a tornado was coming, and I was instantly afraid. But then Mother would say, “Sheri, everything will be OK.” Her words always calmed me. Today, decades later, when life seems overwhelming or frightening, I call Mother and wait for her to say, “Everything will be OK.”

Recent horrifying events in the United States have underscored the fact that we live in a world of uncertainty. Never has there been a greater need for righteous mothers—mothers who bless their children with a sense of safety, security, and confidence about the future, mothers who teach their children where to find peace and truth and that the power ofJesus Christ is always stronger than the power of the adversary. Every time we build the faith or reinforce the nobility of a young woman or man, every time we love or lead anyone even one small step along the path, we are true to our endowment and calling as mothers and in the process we build the kingdom of God. No woman who understands the gospel would ever think that any other work is more important or would ever say, “I am just a mother,” for mothers heal the souls of men.

Look around. Who needs you and your influence? If we really want to make a difference, it will happen as we mother those we have borne and those we are willing to bear with. If we will stay right with our youth—meaning, if we will love them—in most cases they will stay right with us—meaning, they will let us lead them.

As mothers in Israel, we are the Lord’s secret weapon. Our influence comes from a divine endowment that has been in place from the beginning. In the premortal world, when our Father described our role, I wonder if we didn’t stand in wide-eyed wonder that He would bless us with a sacred trust so central to His plan and that He would endow us with gifts so vital to the loving and leading of His children. I wonder if we shouted for joy 12 at least in part because of the ennobling stature He gave us in His kingdom. The world won’t tell you that, but the Spirit will.

We just can’t let the Lord down. And if the day comes when we are the only women on earth who find nobility and divinity in motherhood, so be it. For mother is the word that will define a righteous woman made perfect in the highest degree of the celestial kingdom, a woman who has qualified for eternal increase in posterity, wisdom, joy, and influence.

I know, I absolutely know, that these doctrines about our divine role are true, and that when understood they bring peace and purpose to all women. My dear sisters, whom I love more than I know how to express, will you rise to the challenge of being mothers in these perilous times, though doing so may test the last ounce of your endurance and courage and faith? Will you stand steadfast and immovable as a mother in Israel and a woman of God? Our Father and His Only Begotten Son have given us a sacred stewardship and a holy crown in their kingdom. May we rejoice in it. And may we be worthy of Their trust. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

 

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Mar 05

the family.

central. core.
fundamental. everything.
all things. forever.

i’ve been hip deep in more family history research.
finding lots of resources…
making connections with long lost relatives…
planning trips to where our family originated…

what a great blessing to know my family, be connected with them and most importantly…
be able to tell their stories long after they are gone.

here’s to a road tip at the end of the month with my uncle to tennessee to see some sights and talk to my great uncle Billy.

can’t wait!

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Mar 02

bear it.

there hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it. 1 corinthians 10:13



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Jan 20

thank goodness for rocky.

you have to, you must…

find the tender mercies in life to make you smile, to bless you, to lift your spirits.

i can’t image surviving without them.

this is why i am thankful i have faith,

i believe in God, and

i love rocky.

______________________________________________

this has been the last few weeks:

i’ve felt like this more times than i can even count or remember:

albeit small, i had a moment of this today:

thank goodness.

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Oct 26

Shadowlands

God loves us, so He makes us the gift of suffering. Through suffering, we release our hold on the toys of this world, and know our true good lies in another world. We’re like blocks of stone, out of which the sculptor carves the forms of men. The blows of his chisel, which hurt us so much, are what make us perfect. The suffering in this world is not the failure of God’s love for us; it is that love in action. For believe me, this world that seems to us so substantial is no more than the shadowlands. Real life has not begun yet.

“Shadowlands,” p. 1 — C. S. Lewis

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