Mosiah 4:27-30
It’s been said that our eyes only see and our ears only hear what our brain is looking for. The way we think greatly affects attitudes and behavior, as well as the joy we feel.
It’s been said that our eyes only see and our ears only hear what our brain is looking for. The way we think greatly affects attitudes and behavior, as well as the joy we feel.
Discover how Mormon employs the power of storytelling to teach essential values of deliverance, faith, and the importance of seers. Dr. Stephan Taeger's insightful perspective on the subject is essential for anyone interested in understanding the potency of stories in shaping our beliefs.
Bryan Murray was born and raised in Long Beach, California, served in the Japan Sendai mission, and met his future wife, Kristine Clawson, while attending Brigham Young University when they went skiing together with their home evening group. Bryan attended medical school at the University of Kentucky then completed an internal medicine residency with the UCSF San Joaquin Valley Program. He worked with a small group practice in Payson, Utah, before moving the family to Anacortes, Washington, where he joined a small internal medicine group and helped start a hospitalist program at Island Hospital in Anacortes.
Today we're studying Mosiah 4:27 in just one minute! Grab your scriptures and let's dive into them together!
Have you ever avoided eye contact with someone holding a cardboard sign? Or felt a twinge as you skipped a YouTube ad asking for charitable donations? Help is needed everywhere, and good people want to help. But those good intentions can quickly turn to paralysis, overwhelm, and a lingering sense of shame for not "doing more." Meanwhile, experts in helping (that's a real thing!) know that making the world a better place isn't compatible with shame.
When teaching your children - you can’t control the outcome, but you can teach. And that is where the success comes.
I’m not exaggerating even a little bit when I say that Mosiah 4:9 changed my life. Let’s study it together today!
No one likes to get injured but when the injury is to your brain it can be a lot scarier and have a lot more unknowns. As you will hear coach Bethany Lewis is passionate about helping those who have suffered from a concussion because she is aware that there are a lot of unknowns and people often don’t get the care they need to heal properly. This is an episode packed with useful information about concussions as well as an episode that gives hope that a full recovery can be achieved if someone who has had a concussion gets the treatment they need.
Belief in Christ is a wonderful thing, but acting on it and doing is what leads us to not only a remission of our sins but lifeline “retention”.
In this podcast episode, Julie and the other members of the Top of Mind team reflect on moments from previous episodes that challenged them to stay curious and stick with uncomfortable perspectives instead of dismissing them or putting up defenses. As we put podcast episodes together, we have these “Stick With It” moments all the time – and we hope you do, too, because they’ve led us to new empathy, deeper relationships, and clarity about our own views. One of our producers grapples with the grading system she grew up with. Another reconsiders her thinking on the impact of social media use on teen mental health. We'll also explore a complicated relationship with unions, find empathy in the medication for mental health debate, and reassess the language we use when talking about homelessness.