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Helping our children experience the spirit of Elijah

08.08.2019 by season // Leave a Comment

My 11 year old daughter has been nagging me to teach her how to start researching our family tree on @familysearch . I was willing, but a little hesitant… I was worried that it would be too complicated for her. This week, my daughter grew impatient with my excuses for putting her lesson off, got up one morning & started checking “Record Hints” on her @familysearch account. She sheepishly came into my room & told me that she thought she found some parents to one of our ancestors. Not only did I chuckle in my mind, but I was extremely skeptical. I have only ever found 2 of my direct ancestors in my 8 years of researching, I was sure this was a mistake. I came into the kitchen to check it out & to my complete & utter shock, she was RIGHT! She had just found a lead to parents of one of our direct ancestors! I felt the tears of pride fill my eyes. She did it & she didn’t let ME & my excuses get in her way!

I decided to tell this story today, to encourage you to NOT underestimate children! Whether it is your own children, your YW, or your Grandchildren, they have been prepared for this work! They can probably run circles around many of us on a computer! Make sure that you don’t make the same mistake as me. Give them the opportunities to try, fail, learn & succeed!

Something that we have been doing in my household all summer, has been to extremely limit screen time, EXCEPT for FamilySearch! They are allowed pretty much unlimited time on there. What an amazing experience it has been to see my kids shift their focus from video games to Family History! They have been indexing, digitizing, reading stories, & now will be researching. The 2 that have been participating are 9 & 11 years old. 
Elder David A. Bednar said, “…please help your children and youth to learn about and experience the Spirit of Elijah. But do not overly program this endeavor or provide too much detailed information or training. Invite young people to explore, to experiment, and to learn for themselves.”
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All week we are chatting about getting kids involved in Family History. What are some of your ideas? Have your kids surprised you with their abilities?


CAROLYNN REYNOLDS

branchesart.com
IG: @branches.art


Categories // Activities, Child, Family, Stories, Teen Tags // experiment, explore, family search, family tree, learn, opportunity, spirit of elijah, teen, youth

Family History Starts Now

07.30.2019 by season // Leave a Comment

Line Upon Line

Your family history starts NOW. 

If you’re me, and you typed (or read) something like that and then thought, “No, history is forever ago. It’s already happened,” well. You’re not wrong. When we think of family history, we generally think of our grandmothers, or great grandmothers, or great-great-great grandmothers who crossed the plains and churned their own butter and sewed their own dresses. But I think we can look at family history from a different point of view. Instead of thinking broadly, I propose we think of the people living around us. What is their history? What is your history? When you study the scriptures, what thoughts do you have? How will those thoughts change or help you in a year? Family history starts now. 

When I was growing up, my mother was a very big part of the 90s scrapbook revolution. She knew every trend, taught all the classes, was in loads of magazines, and took SO many pictures. I didn’t even realize that “not being in a picture” was an option. She made page after page, commemorating trips, accomplishments, and just every day moments. She wasn’t documenting history, she was just documenting now. 

Flash forward 10 (cough, twenty, cough) years, and now? Those pages are our history. My sisters and I can still spend an hour or two looking over those books that we’ve looked at a thousand times, laugh at jokes we’ve made before, and remember things that didn’t seem significant at the time, but are. Suddenly we’re grateful for all the times mom made us stop and take a picture. Those moments we spend looking at those books are special and sacred to us.

Elder John H. Groberg said, “In a very real sense, our properly written histories are a very important part of our family scripture and become a great source of spiritual strength to us and to our posterity.” 

Family scripture. Have you ever thought of your journals or notes that you make about your history as scripture? We know that the Bible and the Book of Mormon are simple records of people and families doing their best to follow the commandments and succeeding and failing and learning. Doesn’t that sound like our lives? The definition of scripture is “sacred writing,” and when we are moved by the Holy Ghost to write a thought, isn’t that sacred?

Recording our histories can feel like a chore or even unnecessary, especially when nothing “important” has happened that day. When we study the scriptures, we might not have any visions or astounding impressions. But what doesn’t seem astounding or important today will prove to be significant and a blessing tomorrow. You will see how the Lord has shaped your thoughts to prepare you for what was to come. You are writing the record of your people, as you go through trials, make mistakes, and see so many blessings come from your diligence, just like Nephi and Mormon.

My friend and I are the owners of Line Upon Line, creators of the wide-margin, Journaling Edition of the Book of Mormon, and one of the things I am most excited for is reading my own notes in my Book of Mormon a year from now, or two years. I’m excited to let my daughters read my notes and thoughts as I studied Lehi’s family or read over the wars in Alma or learned from Christ’s visit to the Americas. I know that even if what I write isn’t the most profound thing, it will be a blessing to them when they’re older. My thoughts on scripture can help my children get to know me and help me get to know myself. Knowing they’ll read it helps me write for them in their day, just like the prophets in the Book of Mormon wrote for us in ours. Heavenly Father speaks to us through revelation, for yourself and your family, and the more we write down and act upon that revelation, the more He will send. 

My company has also created a Primary Edition of the Book of Mormon, the text of the Book of Mormon, designed with kids in mind. It has coloring pages, testimony pages, wider margins—so much space for your little one to write down and color their thoughts on the gospel while you’re reading together. If that isn’t sacred, something you’ll keep forever and turn to over and over, I don’t know what is. 

Line Upon Line

Our hope for the Primary Edition of the Book of Mormon is to teach our children to interact with their scriptures and take ownership of their own spiritual grown, and we’ve seen that. As we’ve watched our own children study the scriptures, we’ve seen them learn to write down what they’re thinking, and in doing so, examine their thoughts on the stories and lessons in its pages. They are building lifelong habits that will hopefully give them a bank of family history and scripture to learn from and use to teach their own children.  

We hope we are teaching our children that family history starts now and they don’t need to wait to begin recording their own spiritual journey. What they write or draw today can help them grow tomorrow. And similarly, what we write today can become what we need to hear tomorrow. Heaven is waiting to pour out words of comfort, of knowledge, understanding, peace, and by writing them down, we are showing we are diligent and willing to do the work it takes to record and build that family history. 

Family history starts now. It might not be officially history when you started writing it, but it will be in a year or ten or twenty. We all know this, but regret is the worst. Almost every adult was given piano lessons when they were seven, and almost every adult wishes they didn’t quit when they were eight. Don’t quit on recording your family history. Don’t quit on reading your scriptures and recording your impressions. Learn to write your history now and you we be so grateful to yourself a year from now. 

I know that family history is important and that if we pray for even the desire to begin to record our histories, we will be blessed, and our prayers will be answered!  


Written by: Emily Liddle
IG: @lineuponline Website: lineuponlineco.com


Categories // Guest Posts, Journal, Stories, Thoughts, Traditions

Pioneer Courage

07.24.2019 by season // Leave a Comment

Handcart Pioneers- Sam Lawlor

The pioneers and their stories have always held a soft spot in my heart. Their stories are full of spirit, passion, determination, and grit. My 4th great grandma, Jane S. Richards, was healed from a priesthood blessing and courageously got baptized the next day by her brother in a hole cut out of the frozen river. Three hundred people attended, many who felt determined to arrest and imprison her brother for baptizing her. She traveled across the plains with many long, sick days; losing a father, brother, and children. She traveled much of the time without her husband who was serving a mission.

Jane Snyder Richards

Reading through many pioneer stories this month, I have come to see the tremendous hardships these men and women have had to overcome. They amaze me! Yet, I have come to truly believe that the pioneers didn’t want to be remembered for their hardships. They wanted us to remember their courage.

In the song Come, Come Ye Saints, one line reads, “fresh courage take”. I love that!! How many of us need a little courage today? How many of us need a little courage to start going to the temple more regularly? How many of us need the courage to pursue that new talent/skill we keep putting aside? How many of us need courage to befriend a new neighbor? Or to forgive someone who has hurt us? How many of use need the courage to connect better with our children? Or to find time for scripture study? How many of us need courage to commit to make time for family history? 😉

Today is truly a day to honor these great men and women. Not just to remember them, but to honor them as we take courage.

What show of courage will you do today to honor these pioneers?


KAYLA BERRETT

IG: @kaylaberrett


Categories // Stories, Trials Tags // ancestor, courage, Family History, pioneer

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