Friday, August 30, 2024

Living Endowment Matters

 Temple Experiences Matter 8.30.24

This afternoon while I was serving at the recommend desk of the Taylorsville Temple, a young man and his father came in through those breathtakingly beautiful stained-glass doors and offered their recommends to be scanned. The son’s recommend showed on the screen that he was there for his own endowment, so the brother at the desk asked to see his special “living ordinance” recommend, required for those making those ordinances and covenants for themselves. Sheepishly the young man explained, “Well, the dog got hold of it…my bishop said it would be okay…” The brother at the desk asked if he still had the living recommend. The young man pulled a half-eaten recommend from his backpack and offered it. It was accepted! Literally, the dog ate his recommend! That was a first.






Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Matters of Endings 8.27.24

 Sunday we reported our service mission at the HTI. Here is my talk and Cam’s talk:

Cam’s Missionary Report 8.25.24

I work 2 jobs. One job is at Smiths. Sometimes I have to get all the carts into the store. Maybe it is late at night or raining and my workers have not done their job. It is hard! So my dad comes to help me. My friend Calloway has helped me. My friend Mark Tyson has helped me. I love them for helping!

I like to help people, too. Many years ago I was a missionary at Temple Square. It was great! I like to help people at my jobs and my callings. I love all of you.

Almost 2 years ago I got called to be a missionary again! It made me SO happy. I LOVE to wear a missionary badge. I made books and backpacks for students. I smiled and greeted people for classes. I helped them. I took tickets for drawings. I took rolls. I helped wherever needed. Here is my book the mission made for me!

I want to serve more missions! I go to institute classes. I want to help there. I love the temple. I love my callings. I love the ward choir. I want to serve anywhere I can.

I know the Church is true. I know the Book of Mormon is true. I read it every morning and every night. I know Jesus and Heavenly Father love me. This is my testimony. In the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Janice’s Missionary talk 8.25.24        

Cameron and I have a new ritual. One day I was taking him to work, and he ran out before me and sat in the car, in the driving seat. So, most days I let him start the car. I don’t let him back it out of the garage, though! This has been our pattern in raising Cameron. We let him do everything he possibly can. And that is how he came to serve two missions.

One day I received a text from an old friend of mine. She had been a friend since 6th grade and through high school, but in fact, I hadn’t seen her for 54 years. Of course, we both look just the same as we did then—well, at least, our hearts hadn’t changed. Larraine began to tell me of a new assignment she and husband had as mission leaders in the Granger Hometown Initiative. She asked if Jim and I would consider serving there as education specialists. To tell the truth, I had a list of excuses: we were serving in the temple; we had trips planned; we were old; we had responsibilities with Cameron; we had plans with family; etc. She kept assuring me that it would all work out. It ended up that this new kind of hometown mission needed people to help with meeting the needs of people in the West Valley area, and The Lord softened my heart, and the three of us were called to serve. They didn’t really need education specialists—they needed us to teach and do the work. We began teaching English to a diverse group of learners. Cameron became the administrative assistant to the mission. We were working closely with West Valley City’s services, and it was really different than teaching the gospel like we had in seminary and institute in south Texas.—but we loved it! We loved the people. We loved helping them learn the language so they could better themselves with good jobs and integration into society. We made many friends. We learned more Spanish. We did NOT learn Arabic or Ukrainian or Vietnamese. Classes were taught in ESL, sewing, cooking, art, piano, ukulele, choir, immigration law, etc. The community service projects were like watching a miracle happen.

I am obsessed with Elder Kearon’s talk from April Conference. He emphasizes that Heavenly Father’s Fabulous plan of happiness has one intent: YOUR happiness and My happiness here on earth and in the worlds to come. President Nelson says the greatest thing happening on the earth today is the gathering of Israel on both sides of the veil.  What I have learned in serving missions is that happiness does not happen on the sofa watching television. It does not even happen doing all the good things we try to do. I would have been happy cruising along, trying to do what is right, but God had other plans. He could see that I would be happier serving a mission among immigrants in Laredo and Granger.

The Lord’s Plan of redemption has one intent: to save us, rescue us, redeem us. On this side of old age, this becomes more and more important to me. I cannot comprehend the premortal life. I cannot comprehend eternity. In his closing remarks, Elder Kearon says, “The Father’s design, His plan, His purpose, His intent, His wish, and His hope are all to heal you, all to give you peace, all to bring you and those you love home…”

So, for now, I take off my missionary badge with bitter-sweet feelings. I put aside that identity. I’ve had a few identities in my life: student, parent, wife, teacher, school leader, grandparent, missionary, and a few others. These are important to me, but they are all swallowed up in my eternal identity, which President Nelson reminds us is 1. a child of God, born as a spirit child of Heavenly parents 2. A child of the covenant, promising to make and keep the promises I have made with God 3. A disciple of Christ, serving where and when needed to the best of my ability. It’s funny but some of the things that made me happiest in my life were HARD: Teaching early-morning seminary. Graduating from college at age 34. Seven pregnancies. Learning languages so that I could serve. Teaching people who did not speak a word of English. Moving to South Texas for two years. Serving missions. Serving in the temple for the last two and a half years…

I love the retired life! I have learned more, studied harder, and stretched myself farther than I ever had time or inclination to do before. Doubt not. Fear not. Trust in Him. I have to trust Father in Heaven and Jesus Christ because I am weak. I have some social anxiety. (Sometimes I can’t believe that I left my house and enrolled at BYU as the mother of five or put in mission papers and got in the car and moved to south Texas). I am just a little controlling. I am vain and impatient. But I am happiest when serving, trusting, learning, and rejoicing in the PLAN to make me happy here and prepare me for all that God has. Serving in the temple is a blessing that helps me trust Christ. I love watching and helping people serve those who have gone beyond the veil and need the covenant blessings in His Plan of Happiness. I love seeing someone come to the temple for the first time—or as one sister whispered to me—her first time in 43 years. I love seeing old friends there. I love helping in the youth center and caring for an adopted baby who is being sealed to her parents.

A few months into my service as an ordinance worker, I was giving the initiatory blessing and as I looked at the name card the patron was holding I was overcome with a love for the person beyond the veil who was waiting for those blessings. The words that I was saying were, in fact, for a sister who awaited the resurrection and those blessings for a resurrected body. The older, crippled sister who was her proxy was being reminded of her own endowment from fifty or sixty years before and the promise of a celestial body that would work perfectly! Last week I printed a family name, a cousin from 1847 in Sweden. I sat in the Endowment session and realized that that day was the 55th anniversary of my own endowment. I was really there to serve Boel Hansdotter so that she could make choices on the other side of the veil to live with the Father and the Son for all eternity.

It’s like I have the keys. Father is standing beside me while I hear the power of the engine. I’m just starting the car and learning to back it safely out of the garage (without breaking the mirror off)  and onto the street. He is my guide and my salvation. I am doing what I can and what He will allow me to do. And that is how I came to serve two missions.

I am building trust and faith in Him with a zeal I never had before. I have a blessed life because of the gospel of Jesus Christ and His church, because of my covenants, because of my family. I bear testimony of the truth of His love through His plan for us. In the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.



Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Feeling Important Matters

Feeling Important Matters 8.6.24

Today Cameron called from the car while he and Jim were running errands. He was over-the-moon because he had picked up his prescription all by himself. He received notice that it was ready on his MYChart app. He said, “It was easy, Mom. I went up to the window and said, ‘Cameron Flanagan.’” He was so proud of himself. Sometimes I think we do too much for our special needs “kids” and deny them the pride of accomplishment. He loves to help others and himself!