Monday, November 30, 2009

Mastery of Good and Rejection of Evil

[imp] Today while I was reading for school about the Healthy People 2010 inititive I thought that its funny how it correlates to our ideas found in James of mastering the good and rejecting evil...also related to my lesson on virtue that I learned from E. Mickelson on my mission. The initiative talks about promoting health and preventing disease. There is a universal pull toward the negative in our lives, we see it with sin, we see it with clutter in our homes, we see it in the natural tendencies to anger or become offended. It was interesting to see it in a health setting, in my career. I love it when I can make gospel correlations to dentistry. I'm going to try to keep looking for those.

[imp] My second impression was that I am thinking with a gospel framed mentality today because I started the day with the Lord. That is a great principle.

Moroni's Promise

Moroni 10:5 is applicable to all the recent discussions we have had at church about personal revelation. I love this formula that he gives.

Read the Book of Mormon with a spirit of gratitude
Ponder its teachings
Pray with sincere heart, real intent, and faith in Christ
Feel the power of the Holy Ghost
Spiritual Knowledge/Revelation

Things I need to study:

I tried to be prayerful this morning and come up with a list of topics that the Lord feels like I should study. These are the topics that I was impressed to write down.

Redeem the dead
Perfect the Saints
Proclaim the Gospel
Leadership
Families
Virtue
Thoughts
Atonement
Friend
Priesthood
Temples
Restoration
Charity
Faith
Hope
Diligence
Moral Discipline
Steadfast/Consistent
Provident Living
Personal Revelation
Natural Man
Temptation
Sacrifice
Prayer and Fasting
Conference Talks
I've been thinking lately about how I can increase my gospel study efforts to a point where I am consistently feeling the spirit and receiving personal revelation on a daily basis. It is 6:30 AM right now. I am showered and dressed and sitting here ready to start studying. The following quote was given by the bishop yesterday in our 5th Sunday lesson and it shares some real specific ways to enhance our scripture study:

Further, for the gospel to be written in your heart, you need to know what it is and grow to understand it more fully. That means you will study it. 5 When I say “study,” I mean something more than reading. It is a good thing sometimes to read a book of scripture within a set period of time to get an overall sense of its message, but for conversion, you should care more about the amount of time you spend in the scriptures than about the amount you read in that time. I see you sometimes reading a few verses, stopping to ponder them, carefully reading the verses again, and as you think about what they mean, praying for understanding, asking questions in your mind, waiting for spiritual impressions, and writing down the impressions and insights that come so you can remember and learn more. Studying in this way, you may not read a lot of chapters or verses in a half hour, but you will be giving place in your heart for the word of God, and He will be speaking to you. Remember Alma’s description of what it feels like: “It beginneth to enlarge my soul; yea, it beginneth to enlighten my understanding, yea, it beginneth to be delicious to me.” 6 You will know that the gospel is being written in your heart, that your conversion is happening, as the word of the Lord from His prophets, past and present, feels more and more delicious to your soul.
D. Todd Christofferson, “When Thou Art Converted,” Liahona, May 2004, 11–13




Sunday, November 8, 2009

Making Outlines on Conference

At the back of the conference issue of the Ensign you can usually find talks by topic, news, etc. This November I was looking back there and found a nice Conference Story Index that I found interesting. Also I read a little section of the counsel for teaching for our times and saw that one of the suggestions said to make an outline of how to teach the principles and doctrines. It got me thinking back to my Living Prophets Religion course at BYU. The teacher gave us the assignment to make outlines for several key talks over the years and we would hand them in as papers to get feedback.

I want to set a goal to make outlines for all of the talks in the conference issue by the end of the year. I want the outlines to be somewhat formated on the suggested elements from my BYU course but I'm going to have to look that up. Making outlines is a great way to have spiritual thoughts at your fingertips, and be led by the Spirit, I think the biggest asset though is the act of making the outline really makes you digest the talk in a whole new way.