Skip to main content

Ten Things of Thankful: Prayer Edition

Right off the bat, to be clear and to alleviate any concern, let me state that this week has been fairly typical.  There have been no personal tragedies, no natural disasters in my area, no close calls to remind me of my own mortality.  I titled this TToT the Prayer Edition simply because I've been thinking about prayer this week. 

I taught the lesson in Relief Society today.  The basis of the lesson can be read at this link, if you are interested.  

1.  I'm thankful that Heavenly Father is quite literally the father of our spirits.




2.  I'm thankful that through prayer, we can talk to Him, as a child would to a parent.

3.  I'm thankful that He is willing to listen, and can provide guidance and direction in our lives.  
Perhaps no promise in life is more reassuring than that promise of divine assistance and spiritual guidance in times of need.  It is a gift freely given from heaven, a gift that we need from our earliest youth through the very latest days of our lives. . . . (Howard W. Hunter)
 4.  I'm thankful for all the tender mercies He provides, which can be seen in difficult times as well as easy times.  


5.  I'm thankful that we don't have to be perfect in order to approach our Heavenly Father in prayer.  


6.  I'm thankful that prayer takes many forms: silent, spoken, individual, family, even musical.  
For my soul delighteth in the song of the heart; yea, the song of the righteous is a prayer unto me, and it shall be answered with a blessing upon their heads. (Doctrine and Covenants 25:12)
7.  I'm thankful for those who pray for others.

8.  I'm thankful for those who are the answers to prayer.


A photograph of a woman sanding a ceiling, paired with a quote by President Dieter F. Uchtdorf: “Often, the answer to our prayer [comes] while we’re … serving.”
Photo caption:  "Often, the answer to our prayer does not come while we're on our knees but while we're on our feet serving the Lord and serving those around us."(Dieter F. Uchtdorf) source

9.  I'm thankful that the Relief Society sisters shared their experiences with prayer today, so the lesson was more of a discussion.  I always feel like lessons are better when everyone who wants to has the opportunity to share their insights.  

10.  I'm thankful for John, who had a very busy Sunday today, and yet always has a smile on his face.



Pin It

I'm obviously very late in posting this TToT, and I haven't been very connected this week.  I apologize for that, and apologize in advance that I will probably miss the next two TToT weekends. Though our house will not be empty nor unattended, John and I are going on vacation.  We're even leaving the laptops at home!  Unless I get super organized and get a post written ahead of time and scheduled to post (and at the rate I'm going with other preparations, I doubt this will happen), I will miss joining in.  So when I don't comment on your blogs, don't take it personally.  I look forward to catching up with you all when I return!


Ten Things of Thankful


 Your hosts

Join the Ten Things of Thankful

Comments

  1. "We're even leaving the laptops at home!"
    ayiiee! lol… I joke, being connected to the internet is not nearly as critical as being connected to the world around us.

    that being said, you will, I trust, be taking along your camera! vacation photos are surely the pre-internet manifestation of the online community! (" …and in this one you can see how we're standing right at the edge of….")

    ReplyDelete
  2. Vacation!?!? YAY!! I hope that you'll have an amazing and relaxing time. I never leave my laptop at home... maybe I should... Also, I've found that when I am searching for answers and praying that they so often come later when I'm living and being. Thanks for the reminder of that.

    ReplyDelete
  3. oh have a wonderful ... and we will be here when you get back

    I am thankful for prayer too - the power of a pray circle is quite strong. :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wonderful thoughts on prayer.
    HAVE A GREAT TIME ON YOUR TRIP!! Can't wait to hear all about it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is a very uplifting post, Kristi, but then, your posts are always uplifting.
    If you decide to schedule your TToT posts, let me know and I will be happy to link you up. Have a wonderful trip!

    ReplyDelete
  6. A beautiful, faithfuilled post. The song, "I'm a Child of God." and the video is a blessing. Have a wonderful vacation. There is something very freeing about enjoying the moment without social media and the internet.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Prayer is extremely powerful. My sister is in ICU and we're very thankful for all the prayers the last three weeks.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I love lessons and discussions that involve a lot of sharing. Everyone benefits more. As a young child I first began my journey of developing my relationship with God through prayer. I still remember the details of that day.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hope you have a wonderful vacation with no computers!!! I'm thinking of disconnecting everything one day a week. People have meatless Mondays, I'm going to try Technology Free Tuesdays! Maybe!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Conversations are so much nicer when more than one person does the talking. :-) Please leave a comment and let me know your thoughts; I'd love to hear from you!

Popular posts from this blog

Ten Things of Thankful: Live from Oregon, part 2

stock photo of old computer monitor When I was 10 or 11, I remember sitting next to my dad in our living room and reading computer code to him as he entered it into an Apple computer. We would finish the exercise and he would hit enter (or was it "run"?) and wait expectantly for the green type to appear on the screen. If we were lucky, the whole conversation would occur. Most often, there would be an error either in my dictation of the code, or in the typing of the code. We would then go painstakingly back through the lines, character by character, to find and correct the error. After what seemed like hours (and might have been), we would succeed and the computer would finally run the entire program. It was magical! My dad designed and built an earth-sheltered, passive solar home decades before solar panels were commonplace. He also was on a 9-month waiting list for a Prius, when hybrids were not seen on every street.  While my dad is definitely on the cutting edge of technol...

Monday Mentions: Equate Crutches

Have you ever needed crutches? I hadn't, until a week ago.  I'm pretty sure I strained a muscle while running a half-marathon.  (That sounds kind of cool, doesn't it? I'm not actually that cool; the last time I strained a muscle it was from carrying too many shopping bags at once.) In any case, I found myself in need of some crutches. I sent my husband to the store to get some. Photo: A pair of crutches leans against a wall  Not that crutches are all that complex, but because I hadn't used any before, I wondered if I could figure out how to adjust them to fit me properly. I shouldn't have worried. John came home from Walmart with their generic store brand of crutches, complete with instructions. First, I needed to take out a long bolt that went through the hand grip. Then I needed to find my height range, push down two metal pieces, and slide the crutches until the little metal pieces came up in the hole near my height range. (Having two people for this...

What a Wonderful World! (An #AtoZChallenge Post): Z is for Zion National Park

  Visitor Center sign in Zion National Park My husband recently re-retired, and we are front-loading travel. My #AtoZChallenge posts this year will explore our adventures--some pre-retirement, some post. Today's location: Zion National Park in Utah.  Zion is a bit of a shibboleth. People from outside of Utah (or those who are not members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) tend to pronounce Zion as "ZIE-on." Locals (or tourists who are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) use more of a schwa sound, pronouncing Zion to rhyme with lion. However you choose to pronounce it, it is an amazing, beautiful national park and has some amazing hikes. The last time my husband and I visited Zion National Park, we entered from the east, and traveled through the mile-long Zion-Mt. Carmel tunnel. It is an engineering marvel, completed in the 1920s. Before we passed through the tunnel, though, we spotted a group of bighorn sheep, including some babies...