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Sabbath Devotional :: Charity: More Than Simply a Good Idea
Saturday — yesterday — was the funeral of a good friend. Her words go with the Sabbath devotion I prepared and I want to dedicate this devotional to her. I also want to thank the many women of MWEG for your remarkable examples of using love and peace to affect powerful change. From Berta: “Please remember those who are the unwashed, the Samaritan, the other. If you can please mourn with us, for we are mourning. Please remember us in your Sunday worship. Remember the leper who would worship beside you in the pews but is now consigned to a distant colony. Please do not cross the street or avert…
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Sabbath Devotional :: An Anniversary
Yesterday, June 16th, was the anniversary of my baptism. I remember being the nervous young college student who (after two years of being a “dry Mormon”) had finally persuaded my parents that what they feared was an “adolescent whim” was in fact a stable commitment to follow the path I sensed God calling me to. We gathered at the mission home in Mt Prospect, Illinois, and I was baptized in their small kidney shaped backyard pool. I remember clutching the poor missionary’s arm so tightly it probably left marks. I remember being nervous while changing into dry clothing, hoping I’d done the right thing — or at least a right…
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Sabbath Devotional :: But Now He is Comforted
The past few weeks have been pretty heavy. This is for anyone who, like me, sometimes wants to turn away altogether so as not to be crushed by the weight of it all. “There was a certain rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day: And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, full of sores, And desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man’s table: moreover the dogs came and licked his sores. And it came to pass, that the beggar died, and was carried by the angels into Abraham’s bosom:…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Be One / There is a Place for All
Be One, by Chante’ Stutznegger On Friday night, I had the opportunity of being part of the Be One choir at the 40th anniversary celebration of the 1978 revelation on the priesthood. The weeks leading up to this celebration were a roller coaster of emotions, to say the least. The fake apology letter that surfaced had many of us raw and so emotionally vulnerable that it was hard to swallow the word “celebration” as it relates to such a difficult and heartbreaking topic. Yet, my hope for what this monumental occasion could mean for us stayed strong. I continually fought the thought, “how can we celebrate so much pain?” Each…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Wounds, Doubt, and Hope
Introduction from Linda Hoffman Kimball: This has been a week of trial and heartache for many. How do we face the incomprehensible reality of another school shooting, plane crashes and bombings? How do we process the injuries set off by hoaxes, prejudice, cross-purposed journalism, intractable social issues and our own sometimes overwhelming brokenness? Today’s Sabbath Devotional comes from Erika E.p. Munson whose inspiration is drawn from the fine arts and her own heart of depth and compassion. She suggests that there is something miraculous about true discipleship that “involves a creative blend of deep pessimism and buoyant hope.” *************************************** At Temple Square last April I heard the Tabernacle Choir perform…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Spiritual Brothers and Sisters
When asked what I do for a living, I often give the tongue-in-cheek answer of Professional Volunteer. Whether it has been wearing multiple volunteer hats in my children’s school days or costuming shows for our local civic theatre, volunteering has pretty much been my vocation for the past 20+ years. One place in which my volunteering soul has found a home has been Stone Soup Community — a local organization in my city that assists those in need with paying their utilities, finding jobs, budgeting money, and family development. In my capacity as a volunteer, I sit and talk with clients about their emergent needs. Much of what I do…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Shipbuilding and a New MWEG Tree
The account of the Brother of Jared in the book of Ether is one of my favorite Book of Mormon stories because the Lord has used it over and over again to teach (and sometimes correct) me. A few years ago, I found myself thinking about scriptural shipbuilding and wondering why God had not told the Brother of Jared to build an ark like Noah’s or a ship like Nephi’s. Then I heard these words in my mind’s ear: “What do you think I was doing for those four years?” It was perplexing to think that the people of Jared, whom the Lord had guided in a cloud and given…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Waiting on the Lord
We knew exactly where we were going. When my husband and I were newly married, we had our whole life mapped out. I felt like I had known my own course from an early age, but we based our plans for my husband’s career on a very specific promise in his Patriarchal blessing. He had a work to do, and in order to accomplish that work, he would need to have a Ph.D. We were sure we knew what God expected of us. It would be a long road. We already had three little ones by the time James (my husband) completed his Master’s degree in International Relations at BYU…
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Sabbath Devotional :: Earth Day Perspectives
“But ask now the beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee: Or speak to the earth, and it shall teach thee: and the fishes of the sea shall declare unto thee.” (Job 12:7-8) Has the Earth “taught thee”? Has God spoken to you through His creations? How about sunsets? The lull of a river, the crash of waves? The majesty of mountains, the drama of a thunderstorm? The intricacy of a flower, the melody of birdsong? In tumultuous periods, I seek refuge in the natural world. Even day to day, I need regular, restorative outdoor experiences (and I think we…
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Sabbath Devotional :: The Parable of the Power Wash
“Unless the Lord builds the house, they that labor build it in vain.” (Psalms 127: 1) During the late winter of 2016-2017 lots of things were running amok. The government, yes, but also personally for our house. That season we had a series of ice dams and gigantic icicles from our deck dripping into the walls and ceiling of the family room just beneath it. Fixing this situation was an expen$ive project that took most of the Spring and Summer of 2017. The contractors had to remove the stone surfaces on the deck, strip off the siding of the house between the main and second floors, fill every crack in…