BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Our Founding Fathers--God Bless the USA!


My Thoughts:

Below is a background of the Founding Fathers and the kind of men they were. Much respect needs to be there for them, for they were looking after you and I, in my opinion. They were raised up for the very purpose of writing the Constitution. We must, as a nation, do all we can to preserve our Constitutional Rights and not allow the Constitution to be destroyed. America is a choice land and we must not take it for granted. The Church is very supportive of our right to be free and the Constitution as was inspired of God and written by these men.

Our Founding Fathers:

In the Doctrine and Covenants, [one of the Standard Works of the Church] the Lord said that he had “raised up … wise men” for the “very purpose” of writing the Constitution of the United States. (D&C 101:80.) President George Albert Smith added, “I am saying to you that to me the Constitution of the United States of America is just as much from my Heavenly Father as the Ten Commandments.” (Conference Report, April 1948, p. 182.)

Who were the men who wrote the Constitution? What personal characteristics qualified them for the task of creating a document which the Lord says he “established”? (D&C 101:80.)

We can divide the fifty-five men who attended the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787 into three groups. First, there were those who wanted a strong central government; their leaders were James Madison, James Wilson, Gouverneur Morris, Robert Morris (not related), and Alexander Hamilton. They believed that the states had already demonstrated their inability to survive as a loosely knit confederation and that governmental power must be centralized or America would be split into small, warring nations as was Europe.

Second, at the other end of the political continuum were Elbridge Gerry, Roger Sherman, William Patterson, and Luther Martin. This group feared the overpowering control of a strong national government above all else and felt that the states were the only place to trust the bulk of governmental power. They believed that the federal government’s chief function should be to protect the United States from foreign nations and wanted to limit the federal government to regulating foreign trade and to maintaining an army.

In the middle was a third group led by George Mason, John Dickinson, Oliver Ellsworth, and John Rutledge. This group wanted a strong central government, but also believed that the states must play an important role in the affairs of their own citizens.

There were two men whose roles in the Convention were so significant that they must be considered separately. One, George Washington, was elected president of the Convention and therefore did not participate in the debates except as a moderating influence. The other was the aged Benjamin Franklin, whose role was to mold divergent opinions into a working compromise. These men were so revered by their countrymen that their very presence gave the Convention’s work a stamp of approval.

The Philadelphia summer of 1787 was stifling hot. The members of the Constitutional Convention were so determined that their work would be free from outside pressures that one of their first rules prohibited talking with any outsider about Convention proceedings. To prevent some enterprising newspaper reporter from crouching below an open window and taking notes, the doors and windows were locked. No breeze softened the oppressive heat of Constitutional Hall or cooled the rising tempers of its occupants.

Few would have supposed that a worthy document could ever be produced under such difficult circumstances. Yet that was the situation in which the Founding Fathers did their work. Let us now examine the characteristics they had in common which qualified them for their task.

The framers of the Constitution were mostly young men, aggressive and energetic. Their average age was forty-four. That included Benjamin Franklin, who was eighty-one years old and at least fifteen years the senior to everyone else. Five of the delegates were in their twenties. Many others, including James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, were in their thirties. James Wilson, Luther Martin, and Oliver Ellsworth were between forty-one and forty-five. George Washington and a few others were fifty-five. Only four were sixty or older.

The Founding Fathers were well educated. Of the fifty-five, thirty-one had been to college, and these included all of the active participants. William Samuel Johnson of Columbia and Abraham Baldwin of Georgia were college presidents; James Wilson, George Wythe, and William C. Houstoun were or had been college professors; and a dozen others had taught grammar school at one time or another. James McClurg and Hugh Williamson were physicians. Four of the delegates had studied law at the prestigious Inns of Court in London.

Yet they were significantly more than scholars—they were men of wisdom. “In no other period of history,” writes Edmund Morgan, “would it be possible to find in politics five men of such intellectual stature as Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson; and there were others only slightly less distinguished.”

His point is well taken. In 1740, a mere generation before the Revolution, the intellectual life of America was dominated by clergymen; by 1840, a generation or so after the Revolution, it would be dominated by scientists and inventors. Only for the brief span of a single lifetime would America’s statesmen and her brightest thinkers be the same men.

They had at their fingertips the best wisdom of their age, for they were in constant touch with the exciting minds of the Enlightenment: Rousseau, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Hume, Pope, Mandeville, Locke, and Adam Smith.

In those days, no education could be considered complete without a thorough background in ancient and modern history. The Founding Fathers were conversant in the history and philosophy of the Greek democracies, the Roman republic, and the British constitutional system. Their study and their experience combined to qualify them for their role in the Convention by preparing them to test their theories against the whole history of mankind’s struggle for freedom.

The Founding Fathers were men of affairs. They had learned from experience to be down-to-earth, practical men. Most of the Southerners owned large plantations. George Mason, with 5,000 acres, was one of the most prosperous farmers in America. Pierce Butler was both planter and merchant. Their experience with the land had taught them to pay close attention to the myriad daily details of plowing, planting, harvesting, milling, marketing, and the like.

Their Yankee counterparts included many wealthy merchants who had built their success on careful attention to details. Boston’s Elbridge Gerry began as a shoemaker and became one of the wealthiest men in Massachusetts. Pennsylvania’s Robert Morris had once been a shopkeeper. Yet during the Revolutionary War he proved to be so talented at the art of high finance that he dominated both the politics and the economy of America by the time the Revolution ended.

Most of the Constitutional delegates were lawyers; eight were judges. All were accustomed to making decisions that affected the courses of other men’s lives. Each played important and complex roles in society. For example, Benjamin Franklin had often made decisions with international implications. He had associated with kings and generals, spies and pirates. He had little formal education, but he was one of the most learned men in America. He was printer, inventor, politician, wit, scientist, statesman, sage, and all-purpose, public-spirited citizen.

The framers of the Constitution were men of brilliance—but not the ivory-tower sort. They were practical-minded men who understood the enormity of their task and conducted themselves with a studied determination to succeed.

The Founding Fathers were men of vision and hope. George Washington expressed all of their attitudes when he wrote, “In the first place it is a point conceded, that America, under an efficient government, will be the most favorable Country of any in the world for persons of industry and frugality. …” They were all aware that they must not create a government which would stifle the individual enterprise of its people. They believed that America’s economic and cultural development depended upon the government they created.

John Adams predicted, “Many hundred years must roll away before we shall be corrupted. Our pure, virtuous public spirited, federative republic will last forever, govern the globe and introduce the perfection of man.”

Political freedom does not exist in a vacuum. The framers of the Constitution believed that political freedom would foster excellence in literature, the arts, science, and all other human achievements. Thomas Jefferson may have said it best of all: “We have spent the prime of our lives in procuring [for the youth of America] the blessing of liberty. Let them spend their lives in showing that it [freedom] is the great parent of science and of virtue; and that a nation will be great in both, always in proportion as it is free.”

The Framers were religious men—in their own way. But we must be careful about making them religious in ways they were not.

There is a tradition among many that the Constitutional Convention began each day with prayer. That is not true. At one point, when their debate was exceedingly hot and Franklin feared that the Convention might fall apart on account of its intensity, he suggested they have a prayer. Since there was no clergyman in the Convention, they would have had to hire an outsider to come in and say the prayer. But Alexander Hamilton pointed out that the Convention had been in session for some time, and if it sent for a preacher, it now would be taken as a public announcement of deadlock or imminent failure. In the end, someone observed that the Convention had no money with which to employ a minister anyway, so the matter was dropped and no official prayer was ever pronounced at the Constitutional Convention.

That does not mean, however, that the individual members did not pray. Only a minority of the Founders, such as James McHenry, who was president of the first Bible Society in Baltimore, considered themselves “religious” men in the sense that they attended a church. Most of the Convention’s leaders were Deists.

These men, like Washington, Madison, and Jefferson, believed that the world had been organized by a Divine Creator. They recognized his majesty and glory as reflected in the order and beauty of his creations, but they did not believe that the organized religions of their time represented the omnipotent power, majesty, or wisdom of this great Creator. Their political enemies often called them atheists, but such a characterization was false and slanderous. These framers of the Constitution saw man’s intellect and his ability to act for himself as the surest evidence of the wisdom and power of a Divine Creator. Consequently, they viewed any infringements upon the freedom of that intellect as the most flagrant obstructions of the divine purpose. Thomas Jefferson expressed this philosophy in this single sentence: “I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”

The writings of the Founding Fathers overflow with references to God and the divine nature of man. Freedom was their watchword, and reverence for the individual was their driving principle. In the Doctrine and Covenants the Lord says that he raised up these “wise men” to establish a government which would nurture and defend individual freedom, “that every man may act in doctrine and principle … according to the moral agency which I have given unto him.” (D&C 101:78.) The fundamental philosophy of the Founding Fathers was very consistent with that purpose.

Written by: Frank W. Fox and LeGrand L. Baker



Saturday, June 27, 2009

Mormon MESSAGES!


The Church does so many wonderful things to help all of us be uplifted and edified. To have something wonderful to view and keep in our hearts, in these 2-7 minute video clips, in this troubled and difficult world to live in, all the positive that we can plant in our hearts, does help to make the days go better and certainly does help to put perspective in all that we do.
Log on and ENJOY!
http://www.youtube.com/MormonMessages


By Marion G. Romney of the Quorum of the 12 Apostles, now deceased:
The gifts named in the 7th Article of Faith are gifts of the Holy Ghost. The enjoyment of them has always been a distinctive characteristic of the Church of Jesus Christ. As a matter of fact, without the gift of revelation, which is one of the gifts of the Holy Ghost, there could be no Church of Jesus Christ. This is apparent from the obvious fact that in order for his Church to exist, there must be a society of people who individually have testimonies that Jesus is the Christ. According to Paul, such testimonies are revealed only by the Holy Ghost, for said he, ". . . no man can [know] say that Jesus is the Lord. but by the Holy Ghost." (See 1 Cor. 12:3.) In the 46th section of the Doctrine and Covenants, the Lord specifically lists such knowledge as one of the gifts of the Holy Ghost, as follows: "To some it is given by the Holy Ghost to know that Jesus Christ is the Son of God (D & C 46:13.) Everyone who has a testimony of Jesus has received it by revelation from the Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost is a revelator, and everyone who receives him receives revelation.

Wherever and whenever revelation is operative, manifestations of other gifts of the Holy Ghost are prevalent. Among the gifts of the spirit manifest in the Apostolic Church, Paul lists wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, working of miracles, prophecy, discerning of spirits, diverse kinds of tongues, and the interpretation of tongues. The New Testament records numerous examples of the manifestation of these gifts.

MY THOUGHTS:
In Doctrine and Covenants 46:11 it reads "For all have not every gift given unto them; for there are many gifts, and to every man is given a gift by the Spirit of God."

In The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the gifts of the Spirit are manifest, which is a sign of the Lord's Church. In the verse quoted above, I fully believe it. I have gifts that have been given to me and they bless my life and the life of others. If someone were to say to me that they have not gifts, according to the verse above, that is not true. All have at least a gift given to them.

Revelation is another sign of the Lord's Church. If the Church is the Lord's then He is at the helm and directs it through His Prophets. We have a Prophet who stands at the head of the Church and is guided and directed by the Savior Himself. What the Prophet says to me is what the Savior is telling me. I know that the Prophet is the mouthpiece of the Lord and what He says is what the Savior says.

We need revelation in this world probably more than ever before. I am so grateful for it. That the Lord cares enough about us in our time and day to reveal His words to us through the prophets. I believe in living prophets, not just those of the past.

By President Uchtdorf

When the force that is pushing us heavenward is greater than the temptations and distress that drag us downward, we can ascend and soar into the realm of the Spirit.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Stories: Lessons Learned


Monday, January 12, 2009

Music: This is the Christ






My Thoughts:
I believe it is the Mormon Tabernacle Choir that is singing this song. I so love this one. Pres. Faust, who has since passed away was in the First Presidency of the Church. These words are his. The part that I love so much is the fact that the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles are "Special Witnesses of Christ." They know Him personally and can therefore testify of Him. The words here so testify of that statement. I have my own testimony of our Savior. I know that THEY know. It totally governs my life because of it. I read and study all I can of our Savior Jesus Christ. I so want to be like Him. Come to know the Savior and Redeemer of mankind. He CAN heal your soul, he is the only one who can.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

LDS Gems!


TOPIC: Seeking for the Honors of Men

Those who "shine as lights in the world" have no
need to seek the spotlight! (See Philip. 2:15.)
The world's spotlights are not only fleeting,
but they employ inferior light!

WATCHMEN on the Tower: Our Living Prophets & Apostles


Pres. Monson: Be strong. The philosophies of men surround us. The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance. Do not be deceived; behind that facade is heartache, unhappiness, and pain. You know what is right and what is wrong, and no disguise, however appealing, can change that. The character of transgression remains the same. If your so called friends urge you to do anything you know to be wrong, YOU be the one to make a stand for right, even if you stand alone. Have the moral courage to be a light for others to follow.

There is no friendship more valuable than your own clear conscience, your own moral cleanliness--and what a glorious feeling it is to know that you stand in your appointed place clean and with the confidence that you are worthy to do so.

My Thoughts:
Living a life where you are true to your own moral conscious is truly a wonderful feeling of happiness and joy. There is the outside of us that can be so easily influenced by the evil and wrong in the world; there is also the inside of us that truly knows right from wrong and it is when we betray the inside part of us that misery and unhappiness prevail. If we continuously betray what is right for that which is wrong, we can reach a point where we have no conscious at all, we have seared it. We have truly killed the true self when we do that.

Live a life that is good to God, mankind and self. Care, be kind, choose the right and listen to your own moral compass more than you listen to mankind, who can and will lead you astray.

Listen to the words of the Prophet. He will not lead you astray.

WE BELIEVE: Sixth Article of Faith


by James Talmage:
We find, operating in their sacred callings in the Primitive Church, apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers, elders, bishops, priests and deacons. The purpose of these several offices is declared to be "For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ." (Ephesians 4:12)

Every office so established is necessary to the development of the Church, which has been aptly compared to a perfect body with its several members, each adapted to particular function and all coordinated for the common good. In an organization planned and established through Divine wisdom, there are neither superfluities nor parts wanting. Eye, ear, hand, and foot, each is essential to the symmetry and physical perfection of the body; in the Church no one in authority can rightly say to his fellow: "I have no need of thee." (See 1 Cor 12:12-21).

The Primitive Church was of comparatively short duration. The world fell into spiritual darkness, and a restoration of power and commission from the Heavens became necessary to the reestablishment of the Church with its ancient blessings and privileges. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints proclaims the imperative need of "the same organization that existed in the Primitive Church," and solemnly avers that through the ministration of heavenly beings the Church of Jesus Christ is restored to earth, for the salvation of mankind both living and dead.

My Thoughts:
To me, when Christ was on the earth, He established his Church, for it WAS HIS CHURCH. He knew what was needed in this church to help bring souls back to Him.

To me, the question is asked: When Christ established His Church on the earth in the meridian of time, why do we think, as man, that we can change things around and expect it to be alright.

Christ who is perfect, knew exactly what we needed and thus the Church was established on the earth.

Why does man think he know more than God or Christ himself? What makes man think that he can change things to suit himself or appeal to mankind in general and still say it is Christ's church?

To me it is quite simple. The way the Church was intended and established ORIGINALLY is how it should be now. If you take away or change anything from the original, it is now not the Lord's. Since it is the Lord's church and if I want to know the way back to him, I want to do it the right way, the way the "author" intended, if you will.

Originally it was established with prophets, apostles, pastors, teachers and evangelists, all of which exist in His church today, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Why would anyway want to have a substitute church for the intended Church Christ established?

A pastor is a Bishop, an overseer or a shepherd; An evangelist is a patriarch and Apostles, prophets and teachers should be understood.

For me, I am grateful to be a part of the Lord's Church as He established it originally. It not the works or interpretations of man, it was from Christ himself.