quotes tagged with 'life'

Love for Christ. This concept proclaims Jesus as the object of our love, and our lives should be an external expression of our gratitude for him. Sometimes that is difficult to do. I once visited a high priests group meeting where an older brother taught us. He noted that “as a people we often pray, ‘We thank thee for all the blessings we enjoy.’ But what about the blessings we don’t enjoy? It can be very hard to be thankful for those.” This dear man had just experienced his first Christmas without his sweetheart in more than fifty years. It is difficult to be grateful to the Lord under circumstances we don’t enjoy.


Our beloved President Benson told some of his experiences with the Saints in war-torn countries and shared the following: “One sister walked over a thousand miles with four small children, leaving her home in Poland. She lost all four to starvation and the freezing conditions. Yet she stood before us in her emaciated condition, her clothing shredded, and her feet wrapped in burlap, and bore testimony of how blessed she was.” (Ensign, Nov. 1980, p. 33.) Things we don’t enjoy must not overshadow our reasons to maintain our love for the Savior. Otherwise we may lose our perspective or become bitter, and our love for Christ may be lost.

Author: Elder C. Max Caldwell, Source: http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db0...Saved by mlsscaress in life circumstances jesuschrist gratitude love perspective expression situational bitter 3 weeks ago[save this] [permalink]

"We have raised the bar," says Elder Ballard. "But that doesn't raise it just for the youth. That raises it for the parents, who have the primary responsibility for teaching their children principles. That raises it for the leaders. That raises it for the teachers. We've all got to take a step up in a world that is unraveling as fast as this one is.

Author: Melvin J. Ballard, Source: http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db0...Saved by cboyack in religion life character children family teacher teacher mormonism youth parent raisethebar 1 month ago[save this] [permalink]

He who dies with the most love ...Wins!

Author: Marc Webster, Source: unknownSaved by p51mustang in life love 1 month ago[save this] [permalink]

Life is the struggle against the path of least resistance.

Author: unknown, Source: unknownSaved by bluesfreak in life struggle 2 months ago[save this] [permalink]
Ordinances and covenants help us remember who we are. They remind us of our duty to God. The Lord has provided them to help us come unto Him and receive eternal life. When we honor them, He strengthens us.
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2004. Quoted by Neil J. Anderson, Source: True to the Faith: A Gospel Reference. http://speeches.byu.edu...Saved by mlsscaress in life strength trust duty honor covenants eternal identity receive ordinance grounding comeuntohim 2 months ago[save this] [permalink]
She (Grandma Walker) said, "even though my days aren't very interesting, I am always excited to wake up and see what is going to happen that day." Isn't that great?? 91 years old and an outlook like that.
Author: Grandma Walker, Source: http://staciashaw.blogspot.com/2008/01/what-week.htmlSaved by mlsscaress in life perspective enthusiastic anticipate 5 months ago[save this] [permalink]
From such teachings we conclude that the Final Judgment is not just an evaluation of a sum total of good and evil acts—what we have done. It is an acknowledgment of the final effect of our acts and thoughts—what we have become. It is not enough for anyone just to go through the motions. The commandments, ordinances, and covenants of the gospel are not a list of deposits required to be made in some heavenly account. The gospel of Jesus Christ is a plan that shows us how to become what our Heavenly Father desires us to become.
Author: Dallin H. Oaks, Source: http://library.lds.org/nxt/gateway.dll/Magazines/Ensign/2000.h...Saved by cboyack in life obedience character action judgment behavior commandment 5 months ago[save this] [permalink]
All that I desire to point out is the general principle that Life imitates Art far more than Art imitates Life.
Author: Oscar Wilde, Source: The Decay of DyingSaved by trwth in life art oscarwilde 5 months ago[save this] [permalink]
The three basic purposes of the Church should consume our efforts until the end of our mortal lives. There's not much place in the Lord's kingdom for "retirement." In fact, the idea of retirement is, in my opinion, a sick, secular notion. We may retire from an occupation, but we retire to serve missions on both sides of the veil. If we study the literature in the field of stress, we find that the key to staying healthy and vibrant is to stay involved in meaningful projects that continually excite and energize us. Such projects actually retard the degenerative forces in the body and strengthen the immune system; they can literally give us ten or more years of life. I think that's one reason why many of the General Authorities are so active at an advanced age.

Since life is not a careeer but a mission, there's no better retirement concept than the gospel: the work goes on, we're in a constant learning mode, and we continue to grow to the very end of our lives. Every poerson has enormouse capacity, and we must not lose our opportunity to contribute as we get older.
Author: Stphen R. Covey, Source: Six Events, p. 182Saved by cboyack in life goal mission career retirement 5 months ago[save this] [permalink]
Two shallow substitutes which people unconciously take as happiness are activity and aquisition.
Author: ~Vernon Howard, Source: ~UnknownSaved by ritu in life wisdom vernonhoward 5 months ago[save this] [permalink]

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