What Do You Have that Someone in the Past Would be Astounded By?
FEATURES
- The Command to Forgive When Your Heart Is Wounded by Roger Connors
- The Trojan Horse of AI by Marianna Richardson
- Stepping into Moses’ Shoes: Joshua’s Divine Commission by Daniel C. Peterson
- He Comes as Help: The Blessing Is His Presence by Patrick D. Degn
- Fooling the Supercomputer (Part 1) by Daris Howard
- Food Storage on a Tight Budget: You Are Not Too Broke to Prepare food by Carolyn Nicolaysen
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- Interested in Volunteering During the Salt Lake Temple Celebration? by Larry Richman
- The Invisible Ledger- Five Smooth Stones: Essays on Faith for Latter-Day Saints by Paul Bishop
- A Mother Remembers: On Losing Confidence by Maurine Proctor
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He Comes as Help: The Blessing Is His Presence
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The Invisible Ledger- Five Smooth Stones: Essays on Faith for Latter-Day Saints
By Paul Bishop -
Becoming Brigham Episode 18 — Was Persecution in Missouri Inevitable?
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The First Presidency Tours the New Humanitarian Center Ahead of Dedication
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The Faces of Morocco — The Parables Project, Episode 8
















Comments | Return to Story
Mary Alice CrowtherDecember 2, 2023
The ability to serve a Senior Service Mission with FamilySearch from home via the computer and internet. And to be able to access records from all over the world from my computer at home in order to grow my family tree and be able to do temple work for my ancestors.
LoraDecember 1, 2023
All of my children have lived to adulthood. None of them died of measles, cholera, or whooping cough. None of them got polio or tuberculosis. In the past, 1/4 of the population had TB, which they called "consumption". The pandemic was so common that no one thought it was remarkable. My daughters-in-law and I have all survived childbirth. Every single one of us. During WWI, more women died in childbirth than the men who died in the war, but it was so common that no one thought it was remarkable. My premature grandchildren are alive and growing toward adulthood. President Kennedy's premature son Patrick only lived for a couple of days, but because of him, medical science began to pursue neonatology to help premature infants survive.
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