Posts Tagged ‘family’
BYU Divine Comedy
I subscribe to a Youtube channel called BYU Divine Comedy. It didn’t used to post much but over the last few months they have filled their channel with some awesome videos of skits that they have performed. Some of them are pretty funny and some of the are hillarious. I’ll post a few of my favorites on this post. Most of them are about Mormon life as a college student, or just life as a college student. Most of them are based on the fundamental belief in the LDS Church so some of them assume that your are already a Mormon or know some of the Mormon traditions and culture. You know, sometimes we just have to step back and take a look at ourselves and laugh at ourselves. We are pretty funny sometimes and we don’t even know it.
Enjoy the video clips.
DTG Online
While wandering around the internet and through several pages of mormon magazines and mormon websites, I came across a link that told me that the LDS Church Website now offers a tracking system for Young Men to track their Duty to God.
As many of you know, the Mormon Church has recently re-tooled the DTG (Duty to God) program. We used to use spreadsheets to keep track of the Aaronic Priesthood’s progress but with the new system, we really didn’t have an electronic way to keep track of their progress.
So, I’m happy to say, there is a new way to track DTG progress online. Simply go to http://lds.org/young-men/duty-to-god?lang=eng and click on “Click here to get started” in the middle of the screen. Now, you should know that you will need a login to the LDS.org website. Well, actually, each young man that wants to manage their DTG progress online will have to have their own login. To create a login you will need your membership number and date of birth. Once this account is created, you can start using the “Interactive Version of Duty to God“.
Good Examples

Last Sunday we had a missionary in our LDS Ward return from his mission. He spoke in Sacrament Meeting and talked about his experiences while he served and LDS mission in Cambodia. What made this particular missionary important to us was that he was our neighbor. His family lives just across the cul-de-sac from our family. He had even helped coach my son’s baseball team a few years ago. I know that our boys look up to this young man as an example of what they want to be when they get older.
This return missionary gave a wonderful talk in church and really gave inspiring specific examples of how his testimony and the testimony of investigators grew. I could tell that my boys were soaking up this information and were interested in what he had to say. At the end of his talk, this return missionary bore his testimony in Cambodian. All of our kids were astonished that he could easily pronounce words in a foreign language.
While in Elders Quorum, I couldn’t help myself from commenting that this was a “big deal” in our family. We are so proud of this young man and his willingness to serve a mission and dedicate two years of his life to serve Jesus Christ and spreading the gospel around the world. We are blessed to have such a wonderful young man live next to our family so that he could show such a good example to our kids on how to live a righteous life.