Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Erin's Last Rugby Games and "Vote For Craig!"

Erin Treasure will be playing in her last Rugby games on:
Friday, April 1st @ 11 am and Saturday, April 2nd @ 3 pm.
They will be held at the Provo City Rugby Field, Fort Utah Park, 200 North Geneva Road,
Provo, Utah 84601.
Also, her husband Craig needs your vote for his capstone group! 
His capstone group is entered in a Microsoft competition and they are having a peoples choice vote from now until April 9th.  You can learn more about his project if you go to the BYU home page. They are one of the news articles there.

You can vote by Facebook, or by texting BEARPAW to 23000, or both!  Be sure to check out the video they produced to promote their project on YouTube as well. 
 
So, go and watch Erin play and also vote for her husband Craig! :)

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Good News!

Here is good news about some of the sisters in the ward!

Heather Boren: graduated in December!
Brittany Morgan: is happy to be a mother and back at church!  And her book is going to press!
Jackie Lang: Her sister came home from her mission on March 2! She also graduates in April and they will be in Nebraska for the summer time! 
Keri Dockter: Rhyan got into IU so we are moving to Indiana in August!
Jessica Beckstrom: Found a job!
Cecilia Wilbur: Hopes to submit an article to an upcoming symposium!  Wish her luck!
Chelsea Decker: Brian got a $10,000 scholarship to UNM for law school!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Let There Be Light: Creating Spirit-Filled Homes

I sometimes worry about the increasing wickedness of the world, and the challenges my children will have to face.  I know many of you do as well.  I also know that we are not alone in our concerns.  Review the 2010 General Conference talks and it becomes evident that the Brethren are choosing to focus on teaching and strengthening the rising generation.  Some of their recent addresses include:

“Mothers and Daughters” by Elder Ballard
“Help Them on Their Way Home” by President Eyring
“Mothers Teaching Children in the Home” by Elder Perry
“Watching With All Perseverance” by Elder Bednar
Our Duty to God: The Mission of Parents and Leaders to the Rising Generation” by Elder Hales
“Tell Me the Stories of Jesus” by Elder Andersen
“Let There Be Light!” by Elder Cook

Consider these words from Elder Cook’s talk:

“The assault on moral principles has never been stronger…An ever-present danger to the family is the onslaught of evil forces that seem to come from every direction…If we do not black out evil from our homes and lives, do not be surprised if devastating moral explosions shatter the peace which is the reward for righteous living.”

That sounds pretty grim, doesn’t it?  However, Elder Cook goes on to promise, “If we make our homes holy places that shelter us from evil, we will be protected from the adverse consequences that the scriptures have foretold.”

So how do we black out evil and make our homes holy places?  By filling our homes with the Spirit.  And how do we do that?  In a lot of ways.  Here are a few ways that I think are especially helpful in not only bringing the spirit into our homes, but maintaining that spirit from day to day:

1.       Daily family scripture study, twice daily family prayer, and weekly family home evening.   
      There are as many different ways to implement these practices as there are families.  We talk about them all the time, but that is because these three habits are essential to having the spirit reside in the home.  

2.      Frequent expressions of love and acts of service.  Serving others helps us to feel the spirit.  This seems especially true in the home, when we are serving those we love the most.  

3.      Uplifting music and other media.  It’s amazing how quickly a little mo-tab or a video from the “Mormon Messages” YouTube channel will dissolve contention and bring the spirit. 

4.      Cleanliness and Order.  I know that this can be a touchy subject.  We’re busy and it’s hard to always keep the house clean, especially in small apartments without much storage.  Add to this equation a couple of children and the task may seem insurmountable.  However, Heavenly Father’s house is a house of order, and I believe that He desires our homes to be orderly as well.  This is not to say that our houses need to always be perfectly clean.  Sometimes there are dishes in the sink, laundry that needs folded, and trash that needs taken out.  But we should do our best to create a home of cleanliness and order.  Doing so will help create an environment where the spirit of the Lord can dwell.  

There are many other ways that we can help invite the spirit into our home and make them holy places that are a haven from the evil raging in the world today.  I know that if we listen carefully to the messages that will be given at the upcoming general conference, the Lord will inspire us to know what we can do in our homes to teach and strengthen our children against the challenges and temptations they will face. 

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Story Time with Sister Mower


When: Friday, March 25th, 2011 @12:30pm
Where: B-Basement

For all children 3 and older! Parents please drop your children off for stories, crafts, and a snack!
If your children are younger than 3, you are welcome to come, but Sister Mower would like you to stay with your child the whole time.

We hope to see everyone there! We're so grateful for Sister Mower being willing to do this!

Friday, March 18, 2011

New Baby Boy!!


Kristen Weidner had her baby on Wednesday, March 16! Her new baby boy was 7 pounds 5 ounces and 19 inches long.

Both Mom and Baby are healthy and doing well!
CONGRATS!  :)

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Family History Trip

Sisters!

Joe Ray has invited the ward to attend the
BYU Family History Library on
Sunday March 27, 2011 at 3:00 pm

It should be a great opportunity to learn more about the wonderful resources we can use to do our family history. It can be a perfect Sunday activity! 

Our lives are blessed in countless ways!

"This is a wonderful time to be on earth."

Those are words from President Monson's most recent talk given to us as members of the Church. I invite you to read his talk, entitled, "The Divine Gift of Gratitude," and see if it isn't an answer to your struggles and difficulties.  http://lds.org/general-conference/2010/10/the-divine-gift-of-gratitude?lang=eng

"While there is much that is wrong in the world today, there are many things that are right and good. There are marriages that make it, parents who love their children and sacrifice for them, friends who care about us and help us, teachers who teach. Our lives are blessed in countless ways.
"We can lift ourselves and others as well when we refuse to remain in the realm of negative thought and cultivate within our hearts an attitude of gratitude. If ingratitude be numbered among the serious sins, then gratitude takes its place among the noblest of virtues. Someone has said that 'gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.'"

Here are some questions that we as sisters may ask ourselves and the Lord:
1. What kind of woman does the Lord want me to become?
2. How can I be happy?
3. How can I overcome my worries and struggles?

Sisters, President Monson's talk is the answer to the above questions and to other questions you may be asking. The following story is long, but please read it!

"I share with you an account of one family which was able to find blessings in the midst of serious challenges. This is an account I read many years ago and have kept because of the message it conveys. It was written by Gordon Green and appeared in an American magazine over 50 years ago.
Gordon tells how he grew up on a farm in Canada, where he and his siblings had to hurry home from school while the other children played ball and went swimming. Their father, however, had the capacity to help them understand that their work amounted to something. This was especially true after harvesttime when the family celebrated Thanksgiving, for on that day their father gave them a great gift. He took an inventory of everything they had.

On Thanksgiving morning he would take them to the cellar with its barrels of apples, bins of beets, carrots packed in sand, and mountains of sacked potatoes as well as peas, corn, string beans, jellies, strawberries, and other preserves which filled their shelves. He had the children count everything carefully. Then they went out to the barn and figured how many tons of hay there were and how many bushels of grain in the granary. They counted the cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys, and geese. Their father said he wanted to see how they stood, but they knew he really wanted them to realize on that feast day how richly God had blessed them and had smiled upon all their hours of work. Finally, when they sat down to the feast their mother had prepared, the blessings were something they felt.

Gordon indicated, however, that the Thanksgiving he remembered most thankfully was the year they seemed to have nothing for which to be grateful.

The year started off well: they had leftover hay, lots of seed, four litters of pigs, and their father had a little money set aside so that someday he could afford to buy a hay loader—a wonderful machine most farmers just dreamed of owning. It was also the year that electricity came to their town—although not to them because they couldn’t afford it.

One night when Gordon’s mother was doing her big wash, his father stepped in and took his turn over the washboard and asked his wife to rest and do her knitting. He said, “You spend more time doing the wash than sleeping. Do you think we should break down and get electricity?” Although elated at the prospect, she shed a tear or two as she thought of the hay loader that wouldn’t be bought.

So the electrical line went up their lane that year. Although it was nothing fancy, they acquired a washing machine that worked all day by itself and brilliant lightbulbs that dangled from each ceiling. There were no more lamps to fill with oil, no more wicks to cut, no more sooty chimneys to wash. The lamps went quietly off to the attic.

The coming of electricity to their farm was almost the last good thing that happened to them that year. Just as their crops were starting to come through the ground, the rains started. When the water finally receded, there wasn’t a plant left anywhere. They planted again, but more rains beat the crops into the earth. Their potatoes rotted in the mud. They sold a couple of cows and all the pigs and other livestock they had intended to keep, getting very low prices for them because everybody else had to do the same thing. All they harvested that year was a patch of turnips which had somehow weathered the storms.

Then it was Thanksgiving again. Their mother said, “Maybe we’d better forget it this year. We haven’t even got a goose left.”

On Thanksgiving morning, however, Gordon’s father showed up with a jackrabbit and asked his wife to cook it. Grudgingly she started the job, indicating it would take a long time to cook that tough old thing. When it was finally on the table with some of the turnips that had survived, the children refused to eat. Gordon’s mother cried, and then his father did a strange thing. He went up to the attic, got an oil lamp, took it back to the table, and lighted it. He told the children to turn out the electric lights. When there was only the lamp again, they could hardly believe that it had been that dark before. They wondered how they had ever seen anything without the bright lights made possible by electricity.

The food was blessed, and everyone ate. When dinner was over, they all sat quietly. Wrote Gordon:
“In the humble dimness of the old lamp we were beginning to see clearly again. …

“It [was] a lovely meal. The jack rabbit tasted like turkey and the turnips were the mildest we could recall.…
“… [Our] home … , for all its want, was so rich [to] us.” 13
My brothers and sisters, to express gratitude is gracious and honorable, to enact gratitude is generous and noble, but to live with gratitude ever in our hearts is to touch heaven." (President Thomas S. Monson, November 2010 Ensign, p. 87-90).

Now get out a piece of paper and "take an inventory," of your life.
I testify that as you literally count your blessings, that your burdens will be light, your happiness will increase, and your family will be blessed.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Don't Forget Daylight Savings!

Daylight Savings starts on Sunday morning at 2 am, so make sure you set your clocks ahead before you go to bed! We want to see you bright and early on Sunday in Relief Society! :)

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

CONGRATS!

Exciting News!
Melissa Wilson and Lyn Liljenquist are both pregnant! 

Congratulations girls :)

Monday, March 7, 2011

Survival Skills For Visiting Teaching

On Sunday, Heather Boren, gave a great lesson on Visiting Teaching.
Here are the "Survival Skills For Visiting Teaching" that she talked about:

     Flashlight     D&C 88:67          Take a beam of light to your sister
     Boots           D&C 3:2-3           Walk on the path straight to your sister's house
     Food            2 Nephi 32:2        Help your sister feast on the word
     Water           1 Nephi 11:25;     Share the love of God with your sister
                            D&C 18:10 
      Spirit            D&C 121:46       Take your companion, both your sister and the Spirit

Don't forget to do your visiting teaching this month! :)

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Relief Society Workshop

Tuesday March 2nd @ 7pm
Relief Society Workshop in the Relief Society room!
Come learn about:
*Journal Writing
*Nutrition/Exercise 
*Beautifying Your Home/Crafts
*Recreation/Dating

Come ready to have fun and get educated!
Babysitting will be provided.

Welcome to our blog!

Hey 87th ward sisters! We have decided to start this blog so we can give you updates, announcements and keep you in the know of what's going on! We hope that you will find it helpful and we are looking forward to see how it works out.