Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Lost and Found - Luke 15

How do you feel when you lose something that is valuable?

How hard to you try to find it?                                                        

How do you feel when that which was lost is found?  

10 TEAM POINTS - To those who read and tell me about the following article:
5 TEAM POINTS - To those who mark to following scriptures and show me in class tomorrow: 
Luke 15: 7, 10, 32, and Doctrine and Covenants 18:10-16. 
5 TEAM POINTS - To those who can describe moment of conversion in Mahmud's Story. 


HINT - It has a lot to do with jumping for:


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

For Megan...get well soon!


The Good Samaritan - Luke 10

Hopefully all of you will take a few moments this Thanksgiving Holiday to catch up on our class blog ! I want you all to know that each of you are among the blessings in my life that I am thankful for this year.  I love the opportunity that I have to be with you each morning.  You are good people who are destined to do great things, and I am so lucky to know you. 
This video is one that we did not watch in class that depicts the Parable of the Good Samaritan.  Imagine how this parable would apply to you if you assumed the role of the different characters in the story.  How are we all like the victim of the thieves on the road to Jericho?  How can we be like the Samaritan by giving charitable service to others?  How can we be willing and faithful Innkeeper who took care of the wounded man until he was well?  How can we avoid being like the Priest and the Levite who passed by the needy?

Monday, November 19, 2012

Our Seminary MTC


Our amazing class taught and learned important truths from Luke 9-10 today.
What did you learn in seminary today that Jesus taught his disciples as he prepared them to serve their missions?

STEWARDSHIP AND REPORTING – Luke 9:1-10
LOVE AND TOLERANCE – Luke 9:49-53
RESPECTING OTHERS RELIGIONS – Luke 9:50-56
OBEDIENCE AND SACRIFICE- Luke 9:57-62
PRIESTHOOD POWER- Read Luke 10:19-21

Check this video out about how you can serve the Lord while you are young. 
Luke 9: 23 And he said unto them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.  
Luke 10:2 ...the harvest is truly great, but the labourers are few: pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest.  



Congrats Green Team!

 
After a thrilling Scripture Mastery turkey shoot extravaganza, the winners of our seminary
 Fall Team Challenge is the GREEN team:  
Cade Parrish, Celina Coffey, Adam Fullmer, Jacob Barnes, 
Madaliene Osmun, and Sawyer Colvin. 
They will be getting a special treat this Wednesday for their hard work.
And speaking of scripture mastery, our class is doing very well with our memorization.
We have an average of 13 scriptures/student memorized. Great work!
We will be getting new team and seating assignments after Thanksgiving.  
Here is a list of devotional assignments for the next 6 weeks.
NOVEMBER
26th - Ashton
27th - Cade
28th - Sara
29th- Adam
30th - Kacey

DECEMBER
3rd - Zack
4th - Megan
5th - Rosemitha
6th - Steph
7th – NO SEMINARY

10th - Mike
11th - Cody
12th - Niko
13th- Jacob
14th - Brayden

17th – Celina
18th - Sawyer
19th - Madaliene
20th – CHRISTMAS VACATION

JANUARY
2nd – No devotional
3rd – Ashton
4th – NO SEMINARY

7th – Cade
8th – Sara
9th – Adam
10th – Kacey
11th – Zack

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Turkey Shoot Teaser

Does anyone know what we are going to be doing this Friday in Seminary?

Ten points to the first person who guesses correctly.....

hint.....it involves nerf guns and scripture mastery.

What Did the 1st Christmas Feel like?

We had a unique experience in Seminary the other day when our classes combined and were blessed to hear the words of the student's mothers.  They shared with us what it felt like for them to welcome their children into their homes.  Here are some of the words that they used to describe their feelings at that time.

PEACEFUL, HOPEFUL, LOVE, EXHAUSTED, RELIEVED, BEAUTIFUL, THRILLED, SWEET, CONCERNED, OVERWHELMED, INSPIRED, MOTIVATED, TREATED (NOT TRICKED), HUMBLED, AWESTRUCK, CONNECTED TO GOD, WORTHWHILE, PRIVILEGED, GRATEFUL, EXCITED, HAPPY, JOYFUL, ANXIOUS, INADEQUATE, BLESSED BEYOND MEASURE, FULFILLED, DEVOTED, COMMITTED.

I wonder if you can begin to identify now with how Mary and Joseph must have felt when the baby Jesus came into their lives.  Take a few minutes to watch this video about the birth of the Savior.


 Elder Holland: Dramatic Reading, “Christmas Doesn’t Come From a Store”

As a parent, I compare those feelings (which I have had with each succeeding child) with what Joseph must have felt as he moved through the streets of a city not his own, with not a friend or kinsman in sight, or anyone willing to extend a helping hand. In these very last and most painful hours of her “confinement” Mary had ridden or walked approximately one hundred miles from Nazareth in Galilee to Bethlehem in Judea.  Surely Joseph must have wept at her silent courage.  Now, alone and unnoticed, they had to descend from human company to a stable, a grotto full of animals, there to bring forth the Son of God.

I wonder what emotions Joseph might have had as he cleared away the dung and debris.  I wondered if he felt the sting of tears as he hurriedly tried to find the cleanest straw and hold the animals back.  I wonder if he wondered: “Could there be a more unhealthy, a more despicable circumstance in which a child could be born?  Is this a place fit for a king?  Should the mother of the Son of God be asked to enter the valley of the shadow of death in such a foul and unfamiliar place as this?  Is it wrong to wish her some comfort?  Is it right He should be born here?

But I am certain Joseph did not mutter and Mary did not wail.  They knew a great deal and did the best they could.  Perhaps these parents knew even then that in the beginning of His mortal life, as well as in the end, this baby son born to them would have to descend beneath every human pain and disappointment.  He would do so to help those who also felt they had been born without advantage.

I’ve thought of Mary, too, this most favored mortal woman in the history of the world, who as a mere child received an angel. It is here I stumble, here that I grasp for the feelings a mother has when she knows she has conceived a living soul, feels life quicken and grow within her womb, and carries a child to delivery.  At such times fathers stand aside and watch, but mothers feel and never forget.  Again, I’ve thought of Luke’s careful phrasing about that holy night in Bethlehem:

“The days were accomplished that she…brought forth her firstborn son, and (she) wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and (she) laid him in a manger.  Those brief pronouns trumpet in our ears that, second only to the child himself, Mary is the chiefest figure, the regal queen, mother of mothers – holding center stage in this grandest of all dramatic moments.  And those same pronouns also trumpet that, save for her beloved husband, she was very much alone.

I have wondered if this young woman, something of a child herself, here bearing her first baby, might have wished for her mother, or her sister, a friend, to be near her through the labor.  Surely the birth of such a son as this should command the aid and attention of every midwife in Judea.  We all wish that someone could have held her hand, cooled her brow, and when the ordeal was over, given her rest in crisp, cool linen.

But it was not to be so.  With only Joseph’s inexperienced assistance, she herself brought forth her firstborn son, wrapped him in the little clothes she had knowingly brought on her journey, and perhaps laid him on a pillow of hay. Then, on both sides of the veil, a heavenly host broke into song.  ”Glory to God in the Highest”, they sang, “and on earth, peace among men of good will.”  But except for these heavenly witnesses, these three were alone:  Joseph, Mary and the baby to be named, Jesus.

At this focal point of all human history, a point illuminated by a new star in the heavens revealed for just such a purpose, probably no other mortal watched – none but a poor young carpenter, a beautiful virgin mother, and silent stabled animals who had not the power to utter the sacredness they had seen.

First and Forever there was a family! without toys or trees or tinsel – with a BABY – that’s how Christmas began.
 


Monday, November 5, 2012

Cleansing the Temple

Today we studied a talk written by Boyd K Packer titled "Washed Clean".  As each individual shared what they learned from the talk, we all felt the spirit strengthen our testimony of the power of the Atonement.  Thank you for your participation and willingness to share.  Please watch the following video based on a talk by Jeffrey Holland. 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Palm Sunday/Fig Trees/Faith

Mark 11: 
With the triumphal entry into Jerusalem we learned that the people of the city gathered to welcome Jesus as he entered into Jerusalem.  They waved palms, placed their clothing and palm leaves in the path, and shouted Hosanna as Jesus entered the city riding on a young donkey colt.  We learned that strewing palm branches at Jesus' feet was a symbol of giving up of worldly goods, both necessities and luxuries, for someone of very high esteem or royalty. 
We also learned about fig trees and some interesting facts about figs:

1.    The fig tree is very common in Palestine.  Its fruit is a well-known and highly-esteemed article of food.
2.    The kind of a fig tree mentioned in Mark 11 produces an early fig, ripening about the end of June, even before it is full with leaves.
3.    The main crop of figs comes later in August.  If a tree produces no early figs, it will produce no fruit at all that year. The winter fig, larger and darker than No. 2, hanging and ripening late on the tree, even after the leaves were shed, and sometimes gathered in the spring. 
4.    It is well known that the fruit-buds of a fig tree appear earlier than do the leaves.  The fig flower grows inside the fruit! The blossoms of the fig tree are within the receptacle or so-called fruit, and not visible outwardly; and this fruit begins to develop before the leaves. 
5.    A tree with leaves should also have fruit, and by the time the tree is in full foliage the figs are well advanced toward maturity. Moreover, certain species of figs are edible while yet green; indeed the unripe fruit is relished in the Orient at the present time. 
6.    It would be reasonable, therefore, for one to expect to find edible figs even in early April on a tree that was already covered with leaves.

Knowing these facts about fig trees, we were then able to understand why the Savior was disappointed with the barren fig tree, as it pretended to be fruitful when it really wasn't.  We asked ourselves the question, are we producing the inward fruits of faith and true conversion, or are we going through the motions of appearing to be followers of Christ without true faith? Matthew 7:15-20..."by their fruits ye shall know them." What can you do to increase your faith?
 20 BONUS POINTS to the first person to answer the question in class on Monday
After cursing the fig tree and before the disciples discovered that the tree had withered and died, what important and symbolic thing did Christ do?