To those who struggle....

Parenting and Family Life

I long to accomplish a great and noble task, but it is my chief duty to accomplish small tasks as if they were great and noble.
~~ Helen Keller ~~

PRAYER FOR PARENTS
by Gordon B. Hinckley

"You cannot expect to do it alone. You need heaven’s help in rearing heaven’s child—your child, who is also the child of his or her Heavenly Father....

"O God, our Eternal Father, bless the parents to teach with love and patience and encouragement those who are most precious, the children who have come from Thee, that together they might be safeguarded and directed for good and, in the process of growth, bring blessings to the world of which they will be a part."
~~ Gordon B. Hinckley ~~


 

The Measure of a Successful Parent

by Boyd K. Packer
(Ensign, May 1992, 66)
 

"It is a great challenge to raise a family in the darkening mists of our moral environment.  We emphasize that the greatest work you will do will be within the walls of your home (see Harold B. Lee, Ensign, July 1973, p. 98), and that “no other success can compensate for failure in the home” (David O. McKay, Improvement Era, June 1964, p. 445).
 

"The measure of our success as parents, however, will not rest solely on how our children turn out. That judgment would be just only if we could raise our families in a perfectly moral environment, and that now is not possible.

"It is not uncommon for responsible parents to lose one of their children, for a time, to influences over which they have no control. They agonize over rebellious sons or daughters. They are puzzled over why they are so helpless when they have tried so hard to do what they should.

"It is my conviction that those wicked influences one day will be overruled.  'The Prophet Joseph Smith declared—and he never taught a more comforting doctrine—that the eternal sealings of faithful parents and the divine promises made to them for valiant service in the Cause of Truth, would save not only themselves, but likewise their posterity. Though some of the sheep may wander, the eye of the Shepherd is upon them, and sooner or later they will feel the tentacles of Divine Providence reaching out after them and drawing them back to the fold. Either in this life or the life to come, they will have to pay their debt to justice; they will suffer for their sins; and may tread a thorny path; but if it leads them at last, like the penitent Prodigal, to a loving and forgiving father’s heart and home, the painful experience will not have been in vain. Pray for your careless and disobedient children; hold on to them with your faith. Hope on, trust on, till you see the salvation of God.' (Orson F. Whitney, in Conference Report, Apr. 1929, p. 110).

"We cannot overemphasize the value of temple marriage, the binding ties of the sealing ordinance, and the standards of worthiness required of them. When parents keep the covenants they have made at the altar of the temple, their children will be forever bound to them. President Brigham Young said:  'Let the father and mother, who are members of this Church and Kingdom, take a righteous course, and strive with all their might never to do a wrong, but to do good all their lives; if they have one child or one hundred children, if they conduct themselves towards them as they should, binding them to the Lord by their faith and prayers, I care not where those children go, they are bound up to their parents by an everlasting tie, and no power of earth or hell can separate them from their parents in eternity; they will return again to the fountain from whence they sprang.'" (Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, comp. Bruce R. McConkie, 3 vols., 2:90-91.)
 

 

"The affection and thoughtfulness required in the home are no abstract exercises in love, no mere rhetoric concerning some distant human cause.  Family life is an encounter with raw selfishness, with the need for civility, of taking turns, of being hurt, and yet forgiving, and of being at the mercy of others' moods."
~~Neal A. Maxwell~~

  Dads:  The Ultimate Homeschoolers:
School of Abraham survey results

Research and Articles

How Will Our Children Remember Us?  by Robert D. Hales

Take Time for Your Children by Ben Banks

Back to Gospel Basics by L. Tom Perry

Rearing Children in a Polluted Environment by Joe J. Christensen

Bring Up a Child in the Way He Should Go by Gordon B. Hinckley

Be of Good Cheer by Jeanne Inouye

Teaching Children to Work by Orson Scott Card

Family Work by Kathleen S. Bahr

My Home as a Temple by Kristine Manwaring

How to Teach Children about Temple Marriage

When Our Children Go Astray by John Carmack

Our Moral Environment by Boyd K. Packer

Helpful Parenting Sites

A Student's Guide to Nosy Questions
Your School Should Not Ask You

Suggested Family Activities

LDS Family Guidebook Online

LDS Youth Materials Online

 Selected Topics for Life's Experiences and Challenges

The Old Timer's Page

Regretfully Request by Mary L. Bradford

Please, send back my children.
I gave them away before I realized
They were not myself
Or any part of myself.

Excuse me for thinking
If I sent them out on their own
I would rid myself
Of certain of my soul's sores.

Forgive me for asking
Them to take the bitter root
Of their parent seed
And sprinkle it over the land.

They were not mine.
They never were.
They came like exploded gems,
New ore, rocks, from caves.

In speaking to the youth of the Church, President Gordon B. Hinckley offered wise counsel for us all:
"Look to the Church and its leaders for counsel and direction. We have only one desire, and that is that you be happy, that your lives be challenging and satisfying, that you be saved from pitfalls of evil which could destroy you, that you will be the kind of people who will carry high the torch of eternal truth and hand it on to the generation which will succeed you.

"The truths of this gospel are everlasting and eternal. Philosophies change. Customs change. Culture changes. But with all of these changes, there are gospel fundamentals that have never changed and never will change" ("Stand True and Faithful," Ensign, May 1996, 93).

President Howard W. Hunter taught at General Conference in October 1984. This is what he said:

Jesus was not spared grief and pain and anguish and buffeting. No tongue can speak the unutterable burden he carried, nor have we the wisdom to understand the prophet Isaiah's description of him as a "man of sorrows." (Isa.53:3.) His ship was tossed most of his life, and, at least to mortal eyes, it crashed fatally on the rocky coast of Calvary. We are asked not to look on life with mortal eyes; with spiritual vision we know something quite different was happening upon the cross.

Peace was on the lips and in the heart of the Savior no matter how fiercely the tempest was raging. May it so be with us- in our own hearts, in our own homes, in our nations of the world, and even in the buffetings faced from time to time by the Church. We should not expect to get through life individually or collectively without some opposition.

Jesus taught us, through his very own experience, that deliverance does come; that the power of God is stronger than any temptation tossed our way.

Elder Marvin J. Ashton's words may bring us some real comfort when the opposition is getting to us: "In times of hurt and discouragement, it may be consoling for all of us to recall that no one can do anything permanently to us that will last for eternity. Only we ourselves can affect our eternal progression." (Ensign, May 1984, p.10.)