3 Nephi 3-4
Satan is always going to try and flex and intimidate you, but if you are prepared, he’ll have no power! Not today, Satan! 😇
Satan is always going to try and flex and intimidate you, but if you are prepared, he’ll have no power! Not today, Satan! 😇
Rebecca Woolf was raised in Provo, Utah, the daughter of John and Shawna Edwards, with four brothers. She met her husband Landon at Brigham Young University. After graduation they lived in four different states as Landon studied and trained to become a pediatric anesthesiologist, and Becca studied and trained to become a mother of four incredible boys. They have now settled in Spokane, Washington. Becca has served in the Church as a counselor in Primary, Young Women, and Relief Society, as a Sunday School teacher, and as a Relief Society and Young Women president.
Dr. Huntsman continues to explore the Savior’s visit to the Americas and examines the power of His one-by-one ministry to save His children.
How can we apply Jesus’s visit to the people of Nephi to His Second Coming? Join Dr. Eric Huntsman as he focuses on one of the most critical events in human history and how it informs our moments of darkness and disaster.
Antonio Sacre tells "My Cool Teddy" a story from his childhood about bedtime, the stubbornness that gets passed to for generations, and the patience it takes to find a missing teddy bear.
Today we're studying 3 Nephi 1:21-22 in just one minute! Grab your scriptures and let's dive into them together!
Bright hope for cystic fibrosis and progeria patients. Francis Collins gives a wide-ranging interview: the sequencing of the human genome; life-changing treatments for genetic diseases; how he astonished himself when he began to question his atheism; wrestling with the way his team at the NIH handled the Covid pandemic. All part of his journey on the "Road to Wisdom."
How does someone reason away “a day, a night, and a day” without any darkness? Sounds like we need to be more careful with protecting and preserving our “Spiritually Defining Memories”.
When's the last time you felt completely overwhelmed as a parent? Or looked at the child in front of you having a meltdown and felt your own meltdown coming on? And to be clear, we're not just talking about toddler tantrums. At any age and every stage, kids' big emotions can be difficult to deal with, especially when you're trying to regulate both for them and for yourself. How do you deal with the anger, frustration, overwhelm, fatigue, overstimulation and overall sensory overload?
Have you ever watched the Disney movie, “The Incredibles”? I want to talk about something that the villain says as we study 3 Nephi 2:1 together.