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1. They Are Not All the Same Person Sure, you know in theory that every human being is a complicated piece of work, but in practice it's always easier to lump together those who belong to a group a) we don't understand, b) we don't like, c) we do like, or d) whose constituent members dress almost exactly the same.
MR says: Elder D. Todd Christofferson, while in Philadelphia to make a presentation at the Catholic World Meeting of Families, talked about the death of Elder Richard G. Scott, his former mission president and colleague in the Twelve, and how President Monson calls new apostles.
How can a school bus teach us how to better listen to the Spirit and hear our Heavenly Father's love and counsel for us?
From the presidencies of three new stakes created in Tennessee, New Zealand, and Nigeria to those in the 32 stakes that were reorganized, learn more about the new stake presidents called in June:
The October 2011 issue of the Liahona and Ensign magazines is a special issue that focuses on the importance of the Book of Mormon. It addresses three basic questions: * What is the Book of Mormon? * Why do we have the Book of Mormon? * What does the Book of Mormon mean to me?
Are one of the 12 misconceptions about missionary work holding you back from sharing the Gospel? Here are 12 misconceptions about missionary work. We either tell ourselves these things, or we've been told them by others. Once we understand these are misconceptions, we can overcome them, and receive the blessings of sharing the Gospel. And, once we are true member missionaries, we truly will unleash an army that would make hell itself shake in fear.
Calling proxy baptism in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints "eccentric, not offensive," Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby wrote recently that "Mormons undergoing peaceful rituals in their own temples aren't on the list" of the "very real, very dangerous enemies" to Judaism. "In Judaism, conversion after death is a concept without meaning," wrote Jacoby, who is Jewish. "No after-the-fact rites in this world can possibly change the Jewishness of the men, women, children and babies whom the Nazis, in their obsessive hatred, singled out for extermination.