Inviting Healing after Serious Conflict
FEATURES
- Brigham Young’s 225th Birthday: Remembering When He Outwitted Mark Twain by Daniel C. Peterson
- There Are Angels Among Us by Anne Hinton Pratt
- Aliens and Latter-day Saint Theology by C.D. Cunningham
- Crossing Our Own Jordan by Paul Bishop
- A Mother Remembers: On Losing Confidence by Maurine Proctor
- Against Wind and Tide: Wilford Woodruff’s Call to the British Capital by Steven C. Wheelwright and Kristy Wheelwright Taylor
- Are You Saying “Telephone Prayers”? by Ted Gibbons
- Nothing to Prove by JeaNette Goates Smith
- The Counsel of Early Church Leaders About Anger by H. Wallace Goddard
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
















Comments | Return to Story
Chuck SanfordMarch 9, 2018
A few years ago I served as a church-service missionary, conducting the church's 12-step program on Addiction Recovery and Healing in my stake. At one meeting, I observed that I did not hold grudges (although circumstances in my life would have facilitated such). One of our senior-service missionaries there said that it was very liberating to be that way, because the serious offenses did not have any power over one. A person can focus on doing what's right, and not on the negative. It works.
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