Monday, July 31, 2017

Religious Freedom Matters - What's at risk?

  • You could lose your job or leadership positions for expressing religious beliefs—even outside of work. For instance, CEOs, newscasters, judges, teachers, doctors, professors, firefighters, Olympians, graduate students, and many others have been fired, pressured to resign, or intimidated for donating money or simply saying that they support the traditional view of marriage.
  • You might be required to hide your religion or perform tasks at work that go against your beliefs. Does it seem fair, for example, that a doctor who opposes abortion on a religious or moral basis be required to perform one even though numerous other doctors nearby are willing? Should you be forced to wear an immodest uniform when it’s not necessary for your job function?
  • You may be required to work on the Sabbath or religious holidays even when others are willing to take your shift and your employer accommodates other nonreligious interests.
  • Your children in public schools may be required to learn about sexual and gender theories that contradict basic Church teachings. Many public schools already teach sex education in a way that’s fundamentally contrary to Church teachings, and some have required reading lists with explicit content.
  • You may not be able to adopt children or become a foster parentbecause of your religious beliefs or views on thefamily.
  • As a business owner or professional, you might lose your license or be fined if you refuse to perform services that are contrary to your religious beliefs. You might even lose professional credentials if you don’t participate in certain activities, even if other co-workers are willing to perform them in your place.
  • You might not be able to create faith-based clubs on college campuses without being required to let people become club members—or even officers—who oppose the club’s religious beliefs.
  • Churches may be forced to employ people who disagree with or refuse to live core values of their faith, threatening their ability to carry out their religious missions.
  • Churches could lose their tax-exempt statusby maintaining doctrines, policies, and standards that conflict with secular beliefs regarding marriage, family, gender, and sexuality, resulting in a huge increase in costs to build houses of worship or to purchase and provide goods for humanitarian aid.
  • You might lose tax exemptions for charitable donations like tithes and offeringsif the Church loses its status as a tax-exempt, nonprofit organization.
  • Churches may not be able to access government lands for camps on equal terms with other groups,limiting youth conferences and camps.
  • Housing units, such as dorms, at religious colleges could be forced to abandon moral standards that protect privacy, modesty, and morality, denying people the right to room with those who uphold the same standards.
  • Religious schools that maintain honor codes may lose their accreditation and be denied research funds and even federal student loans and grants, diminishing the value of their degrees, undermining the quality of their education, and making it financially impossible for many students to attend.
There’s a lot at stake, and this is just a sampling. As society continues to move away from eternal truths and God-given commandments, we can’t predict all the consequences that may result if religious freedom and the right to act on our beliefs are taken away.
So we need to raise our voices to defend religious freedom. If we don’t raise them for the protection of religion now, vital religious freedoms will be lost.
When we join the cause together, we can make a difference that will protect religious freedom not just for Latter-day Saints but also for followers of all religions.

From July 2017 Ensign

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Drawing the Power of Jesus Christ into Our Lives

Drawing the Power of Jesus Christ into Our Lives

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Happiness of Your Companion

If every husband and every wife would constantly do whatever might be possible to ensure the comfort and happiness of his or her companion, there would be very little, if any, divorce. Argument would never be heard. Accusations would never be leveled. Angry explosions would not occur. Rather, love and concern would replace abuse and meanness. …

Gordon B. Hinckley

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Experience Repentance

"Experience repentance; nothing draws you closer to the Lord Jesus Christ than a desire to change."

Elder Joaquin E. Costa, "To the Friends and Investigators of the Church." April 2017 Conference

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Express Opinions without Hate

We, who are sinners, must, like the Savior, reach out to others with compassion and love. 

The message for us is clear: a repenting sinner draws closer to God than does the self-righteous person who condemns that sinner.

Everyone, including people of religion, has the right to express his or her opinions in the public square. But no one has a license to be hateful toward others as those opinions are expressed.

Our Good Shepherd

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Connect it back to the Scriptures

"The ideal teacher is constantly striving to connect class comments to doctrine. For example, a teacher might say, "The experience you shared reminds me of a scripture," Or, 'What gospel truths do we learn from the comments we have heard?' Or, 'Would someone like to bear testimony of the power of that truth we have been discussing?' "

Tad R. Callister, "Sunday School 'Discussion Is a Means, Not an End,' " Church News, June 9, 2016, deseretnews.com

Monday, July 10, 2017

Teaching Our Children the Language of the Gospel

The Language of the Gospel

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Overcoming the World

Overcoming the World