Our Earthly Stewardship

Our Earthly Stewardship https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2022/10/31causse?lang=eng

Bishop Causse the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gave this memorable message in the Saturday evening session.

I am so excited to read and study his talk in depth. I have been a member of the group LDS Earth Stewardship for a couple of years. So many of the concepts spoken of by Bishop Causse are founding principles of LDS Earth Stewardship.

Check out the website for the group and consider joining. There is no fee for membership and your contribution of time and energy can be greatly magnified through participation in our service and learning activities.

Day#4 Family History Journey

It is 4:15 pm and I am just doing my Family History and blogging for the day. I didn’t get up at 4:15 am because Gil and I went to the Utah Jazz vs. Atlanta Hawks basketball game Vivent Arena last night. The Jazz won the game and we had fun watching the game from the Security National Mortgage suite at the arena with some of Gil’s co-workers. We did get home late and since I didn’t have my Intermountain job today, I decided to sleep in until 5:15 am.

Gil and I got up and went to Vasa. I did a light workout because I meet with a personal trainer at 8:00 am. That was an interesting experience in my weight loss/preparing to do the Lotoja relay journey. I learned that I have 32% body fat and that is after I have lost 25 pounds! I hate to think what my body fat was when I weighed close to 180! Brayden, the personal trainer, said I have weak gluteal muscles and tight hip flexors. He proposed that I continue the cycling classes and meet with him once a week. I told him I would think about it but I think I might do it as I tend to not push myself very hard in training and I get frustrated when Gil tries to push me.

I got a chance today to talk to my mother, Serena. She is such a wonderful woman who still serves many in her community through her work with the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, her ministering for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, her service and concern to her family, her indexing work and serving in the temple to mention a few of the things she does. Is it any wonder that I am on not content to just take it easy even though this is my “day off?” My mother told me that she had already texted her siblings asking them about how they celebrated the holidays when they were young so she could answer the Storyworth question for the week.

My father responded to the Storyworth question: What are you thankful for? with the following list:

My wife

My children

Our family

Our house/home

Our friends

Our garden

My health

Jesus Christ, my Savior, My Redeemer

My Father and Mother in heaven

My earthly father and mother

My brothers and sister

My extended family (aunts, uncles, cousins)

My wife’s family

Good food

My membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Priesthood authority

My sister-in laws and brother -in-laws

My ancestors – my family tree

My church leaders

My physical body

My life

This beautiful earth

I am so very grateful for truly amazing parents, Max and Serena Watt.

I just got back from the Oquirrh Mountain Temple where I was able to do ordinance work for distant ancestors. I love using the Ordinance Ready application in Family Search.

Oquirrh Mountain Temple at Sunset

Tomorrow night after serving dinner at the VOA Homeless Youth Resource Center, I am going to be watching this presentation on Zoom. LDS Earth Stewardship is a great organization that is working to help members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints be more aware and active regarding issues of how we use the bounteous resources of this earth.

2021 FALL FORUM”Conservation and Reverence for the Earth”, with Dr. Paul Alan CoxThursday November 11th, 7:00 – 8:30 PM

Attend in person at BYU (Provo, Utah)
or join us online via Zoom
“Reverence for the earth is taught both in scripture and in the temples. Care for the planet and compassion for the plants and animals we share it with can become an act of worship if we explicitly acknowledge the Creator and our contingency as stewards of His masterpiece. Modern revelation reaffirms our responsibilities to protect and care for the creation.” Dr. Paul Alan Cox has lived in remote island villages searching for new medicines. He was awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize, sometimes known as the Nobel Prize of the Environment and was named one of TIME magazine’s eleven “Heroes of Medicine” for his discovery of a new HIV drug candidate. His conservation foundation, Seacology, has set aside over 1.5 million acres of rain forest and coral reef in 60 countries around the world.

Cox was both a Danforth Fellow and a National Science Foundation Fellow at Harvard where he received his Ph.D. He currently serves as the Executive Director of the Brain Chemistry Labs in Jackson, Wyoming, a not-for-profit research institute focused on finding new treatments for ALS and Alzheimer’s disease.
REGISTER TO ATTEND IN PERSON
REGISTER TO ATTEND ONLINE VIA ZOOM