Serving February 2013-2015

Thursday, December 5, 2013

The Holy Temple - A Beacon to the World

I pray that I may be guided by the Spirit as I write to you on the very sacred subject of temples.

 
The most holy places on this earth are the temples. In the temple, worthy members of the Church receive the greatest blessings anyone can desire to as we make sacred covenants with God. We also help make those same blessings available to our ancestors who died without receiving the essential ordinances of salvation.


You may ask… Why do members of the Church so willingly and happily build and go to the temple?
The Lord has always asked His people to build temples. The Lord commanded Moses: “Let them make me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among them.” The portable tabernacle they built served as the central place of Israel’s worship during their journey to the Promised Land. Its design and assembly were revealed by the Lord to Moses. It was to be the Lord’s holy house.

Later, King Solomon built the temple in Jerusalem using the best building materials obtainable.
During the Savior’s earthly ministry, He considered the temple as a sacred place and taught reverence for it.

The Nephites also built temples to the Lord in the Americas. They were gathered around the temple when Christ appeared to them after His Resurrection.
After the Church was restored in this dispensation, the Lord commanded the Saints to build a temple: “Organize yourselves; prepare every needful thing; and establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God.”  Doctrine and Covenants 88:119 (One of my favorite scriptures of all time)
In response, the Saints built the Kirtland Temple; a great sacrifice. In this holy temple, important priesthood keys were restored and the Savior Himself appeared.
At the moment, there are 141 temples in operation throughout the world, and many more are being built.
We have been commanded to build temples so that holy ordinances may be performed for both the living and the dead. These ordinances include initiatory ordinances, endowments, marriages, sealings, baptisms for the dead, and ordinations.
President Brigham Young defined the endowment the following way:

“Your endowment is, to receive all those ordinances in the house of the Lord, which are necessary for you, after you have departed this life, to enable you to walk back to the presence of the Father … and gain your eternal exaltation.”

The covenants we make with the mentioned ordinances we receive in the temple become our qualifications for admission into God’s presence. These covenants raise us beyond the limits of our own power and perspective. We make covenants to show our devotion to build up the kingdom. We become covenant people as we are placed under covenant to God. All the promised blessings are ours through our faithfulness to these covenants.

The temple is a house of learning. Much of the instruction imparted in the temple is symbolic and learned by the Spirit. This means we are taught from on high. Temple covenants and ordinances are a powerful symbol of Christ and His Atonement. We all receive the same instruction, but our understanding of the meaning of the ordinances and covenants will increase as we return to the temple often with the attitude of learning and contemplating the eternal truths taught.

Temple worship provides opportunities to serve the dead by performing vicarious ordinances for them. Family history research may be done by anyone outside the temple walls, but the sacred ordinances our dead ancestors need for their exaltation can be administered only in the temple. The temple is the house of the Lord. He directs the conditions under which it may be used, the ordinances that should be administered, and the standards that qualify us to enter and participate in temple worship. The Lord told Moses, “Put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground.” In Psalms we read: “Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? or who shall stand in his holy place?
“He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully.”  His house is holy, and no unclean thing may enter it.
I’ve had the wonderful privilege, to go inside 7 different temples! I’ve been truly blessed.
I was very blessed to live 15 minutes away from one in Logan, Utah. And less than 3 hours from others!
I love the temple!! I can’t tell you enough.

The beautiful Temples I’ve been to...
Logan, Utah
 
Brigham City, Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
 
 
Rexburg, Idaho


Idaho Falls, Idaho


Provo, Utah


Washington D.C.






I’ve gone to the temple 18 x’s since receiving my endowment! I can’t believe it’s been a year since I went inside for the first time! One of my ambitions in life is to be a temple worker. :) Well in a sense, I already am one! Again, temples are awesome! Always strive to be working towards being able to enter!
I testify to you that the temples are sacred, holy places. They are a source of spiritual power and strength. They are a place of revelation. They are the house of the Lord.

In the sacred name of our Savior and Redeemer, Jesus Christ, amen.

Elder Falslev
 

 

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Give Thanks


I am forever grateful for a loving Father in Heaven who has blessed me so plentifully, who crafted my spirit with all of its features and traits. I am thankful for His ever-provident hand in all that I do; without His direction, I would be stuck, lost, fallen.

I am thankful for a loving Savior and Eldest Brother that came into this world so willingly knowing that He would Atone for the sins of all - I am especially thankful for the fact that He voluntarily stepped up to ransom me with His divine love.

I am thankful for the Holy Ghost, my constant companion and guide along the paths of life. I am thankful the gift of the Holy Ghost. That still, small voice has provided me with much comfort and guidance.

I am thankful for the blessing and gift of the Atonement of Jesus Christ. Without it, my life has no significance, nor is it of any value. Through the enabling power of the Atonement, I can be made into so much more than I ever could become on my own. I love and appreciate that through the Savior, my faults and weaknesses can become strengths! I am thankful for repentance, being able to use my agency to change for the better.


I am thankful for the blessing of The Old and New Testaments, The Book of Mormon - Another Testament of Jesus Christ, The Doctrine and Covenants and The Pearl of Great Price, Scripture, both ancient and modern. I am thankful for the blessing of being a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and having had the blessing of being able to partake of the blessings of the Holy House of The Lord, the temple.



 

I am thankful for the blessing of knowing that there is a living Prophet, President Thomas S. Monson upon the face of the earth, a man called of The Lord and ordained to guide us, as Prophets have always done since the beginning of time. I am grateful that we are led and guided from on high, that we have twelve living Apostles who are called to be Special Witnesses of Jesus Christ. I am thankful for ecclesiastical leaders - members of the Quorums of the Seventy, Stake Presidents, Bishops, and so forth.


I am thankful for the Restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Words cannot fully define the gratitude I have for the humble young boy Joseph Smith who knelt and offered his first uttered prayer. I am thankful for the simple question he had for Father, and that it was answered in the most miraculous way possible.


I am thankful for the Holy Priesthood of God - both Melchizedek and Aaronic.  I am eternally grateful that Father has blessed us - ordinary men – with an remarkable power; that if we are worthy, we are able to call down the very best that Heaven has to offer; without the Priesthood, I am nothing. I am grateful for the opportunities with which I have been blessed to exercise that Priesthood in service to others - strangers, dear friends, companions, and fellow missionaries. I am thankful for the many blessings that I have received from other bearers of the Priesthood.

I am thankful for a loving Mission President. I'm thankful that he has a loving wife who treats us as her own.

I am grateful for the blessing of good friends - they make life so much sweeter, especially as a missionary. I am grateful for my family - a loving mother and father, sisters, and brother. I am so thankful for the many families who have made me feel so welcome here in Northern Virginia, even to treating me as their own.

Brothers and Sisters, I testify that Jesus is the Christ; our Father in Heaven lives. The Holy Ghost can be our best friend, a guide through these tumultuous times. I testify of the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon! I am a witness to the tender mercies of the Lord, which are all around us, and because of our faith, we will be made mighty even unto the power of deliverance.

Friends, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is The Lord's Kingdom here upon the earth. Rejoice in that fact!

 
As President Dieter F. Uchtdorf has said so beautifully, “If you have yet to come to the fold, please, come and join us. If you have strayed away, you are always welcome. Thy friends do stand by thee, and they shall hail thee again with warm hearts and friendly hands."

I leave this with you in the sacred name of our Redeemer, Jesus the Christ. Amen.

Elder Falslev

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Cursed Is The Ground For Thy Sake...

A couple of weeks ago, along with the sister missionaries, we were invited to  help some members in the Catoctin Ward cut wood, stack wood, and collect wood. It was a fun, tiring, fulfilling morning.

While out there, collecting the wood, I became agitated with the obnoxious thorns and briars that infested the forest ground. Verses from Genesis continued to come to my mind; cursed is the ground for thy sake, thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee.

Being in my missionary minded self, I began to notice gospel relevance to the following... 


Branches (sin) can be cut off from us and we can begin a new growth, a new self.
 
We can try to cover our sins from others, but sooner or later...
Others (sent by God) will step into our lives and begin to help rake up those infirmities to help us begin new growth
 
 
God has blessed us with the gift of Agency. We can ultimately decide what we do with our lives here on earth, but consequences will always follow. 
Once we grasp something that seems appealing or interesting, we will soon find out that that grasp was more painful then it was enjoyable.


There is safety in this world, and also danger. We must carefully analyze every step that is taken. 




It seems that no matter how carefully we walk through life's trials, we pick up some thorns, briars, and slivers. As we develop and ripen and keep close to Him who was crowned with thorns, our souls seem to get stronger in withstanding the challenges, our determination hardens, and wills become firmer, and our self-mastery increases to protect us from the evils of the world.


These evils are so universal, however, that we must always walk in the paths which are the most free of the thistles of earthly temptation.


There is a way to discern between good and evil. It is conscience. It is our spirit's natural response to the pain of sin, just like pain in our flesh is our body's natural response to a wound. Conscience strengthens through use. A sensitive conscience is a sign of a healthy spirit.


 You may ask how the thorns and slivers of life removed. The power to remove thorns in our lives and in others begins with us. Moroni writes that when we deny ourselves of ungodliness, then the grace of Christ is sufficient for us.


Moroni 10:32

We often seek bandages to cover the guilt rather than to remove the thorn causing the pain. How much we resist the pain of removing a sliver even though it will relieve the longer lasting pain of a sore. We all know that if thorns and slivers and not removed, they will cause sores that will not heal.


 As a carpenter, Jesus would have known about thorny woods and slivers. He would have learned that one would almost never get a sliver if working with the direction of the grain in the wood.  


 Our Savior Jesus Christ knows every aspect of our suffering. There is no weakness He is not familiar with. In His suffering He became acquainted with all of the thorns, thistles, slivers that might affect us:


“And he shall go forth, suffering pains and afflictions and temptations of every kind; and this that the word might be fulfilled which saith he will take upon him the pains and the sicknesses of his people.”


“And he will take upon him death, that he may loose the bands of death which bind his people; and he will take upon him their infirmities, that his bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people according to their infirmities.”


Alma 7:11-12


All pains of the flesh and the soul should be removed before they irritate. However, though they torment us, they can still be removed and the healing course will take place. When the infection is healed, the soreness will leave. That process is repentance. Repentance and forgiveness are among the greatest fruits of the Atonement. It is not comfortable to remove the briars of desire, the thistles of selfishness, the thorns of vanity, and the slivers of ego.


The call of Jesus Christ to us is,


“If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.”


Matthew 16:24


This is the time to begin denying ourselves, as the Savior counseled, who submits and govern ourselves rather than treat ourselves in a “does my own thing” greedy world.  


The question is not so much what we can do, but what God can do within us.


Paul said, “If man therefore purge himself…, he shall be a vessel unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the master’s use, and prepared unto every good work.”



2 Timothy 2:21
I close with the words of Ezekiel,


“And thou, son of man … though briers and thorns be with thee, and thou dost dwell among scorpions: be not afraid.”


Ezekiel 2:6


In our continually changing world, may we constantly grip to those things that do not change: saving ordinances, love of families, faith, and prayer. By removing the slivers of sin and the thorns of worldly enticement in our lives, and by denying ourselves and taking up our individual cross and follow Jesus Christ, we can change a down trodden individual to a Son/Daughter of divine destiny.


I know that Jesus Christ lives. I know that we are engaged in His holy work, that if we are faithful, we can be crowned with honor, glory, and eternal life.

I love you all,


In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
Elder Falslev

Monday, July 22, 2013

7.22.13

Hello My Dear Friends and Family!
Thank you for your prayers and support!
I hope your family and individual lives are going great!
Today I would just like to bear quick testimony!
I know with all my soul that we have a Father in Heaven who cares for us deeply. If we will pray for his hand to pick us up and carry us it will be given. We are not sent to this earth to defend for ourselves. We have the Godhead to help us with every single step we make! I promise you that as you follow the commandments and are strickly obedient you will be blessed without measure! It will not be easy but it will be so worth it!
Continue on the straight and narrow. Follow the counsel and direction of your leaders.
I so testify, in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

My Farewell Address

Farewell Address – February 17, 2013
It seems like just yesterday I was in Primary singing I Hope They Call Me on a Mission. Time has flown by. It’s hard to believe that it’s already here and I’ll be leaving in three days.
Brothers and sisters, friends, and family, it’s great to be here with you to speak before I leave.
             I just want to begin with letting you know that our Father in Heaven knows each of us and loves us very deeply. I have always loved and longed to go to the Washington D.C. temple, and now I get that chance. Heavenly Father knows our desires and is ready to give us to them if we do as he commands.
I’ll be focusing my talk on having faith and relying on the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
These two subjects are some of the most important things a missionary should have and understand.
In the book True to the Faith, it reads, “Having faith in Jesus Christ means relying completely on Him – trusting in His infinite power, intelligence, and love. It includes believing his teachings.
Would we study and learn if we did not believe we could obtain wisdom and knowledge? Would we work each day if we did not hope that by doing so we could accomplish something? Would a farmer plant if he did not expect to harvest? Each day we act upon things we hope for when we cannot see the end result. This is faith.
Paul taught that “faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God”. Hearing, reading, and learning about the promises of God are important steps in increasing our faith because it naturally creates hope. A reason for this is because the scriptures and words of the prophets are full of promises for the faithful. Jacob wrote, “We search the prophets… and having all these witnesses we obtain a hope, and our faith becometh unshaken”. As you and I search the scriptures I know we will find promises that God has made to us – promises that create hope.
Joseph Smith understood how the scriptures can create hope. During his time of confusion regarding which church was true, he came across James and read this now-famous verse: “If any of you lack wisdom , let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him”. Reading the promise in that verse created hope for Joseph – hope that his question would be answered. This was a critical step for him, and for all of us, toward increasing our faith.
There is a story of a famous tightrope walker who walked on a tightrope across the Niagara Falls. The story goes that crowds gathered around to watch the man, who not only made it across the rope, he also did it blindfolded! Then he walked back along the tightrope, across the Falls, but this time, wheeling a wheelbarrow. He said that for his next stunt, he would cross the rope with the wheelbarrow again, but this time he would safely carry a person in the wheelbarrow. “Do you think I can do it?” he asked the crowd. The crowd cheered and shouted, “We believe you can do it!” “Okay,” the man said. “Who will be willing to get in the wheelbarrow?”
The moral of this story is obvious – we can say that we believe, but true faith requires action. Do we believe enough to “get in the wheelbarrow” and experiment on God’s word?
A friend of mine let me lend a book of hers called The Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball. What a fantastic book! President Kimball said some really great things on Faith and I had to share them with you.
He begins with…
            It takes faith to observe the Sabbath when “time and a half” can be had working, when sales can be made, when merchandise can be sold. It takes a great faith to pay tithes when funds are scarce and demands are great. It takes faith to fast and have family prayers and to observe the Word of Wisdom. It takes faith to do home teaching, stake missionary work, and other service.
But know this – that all these are of the planting, while faithful families, spiritual security, peace, and eternal life are the harvests.
            Remember that Abraham, Moses, Elijah, and others could not see clearly the end from the beginning. They also walked by faith and without sight.
Remember again that no gates were open; Laban was not drunk; and no earthly hope was justified at the moment Nephi exercised his faith and set out finally to get the plates.
Remember that there were no clouds in the sky, no evidence of rain, for the deluge when Noah built the ark according to commandment. There was no ram in the thicket when Isaac and his father left for the sacrifice. Remember there were no towns and cities, no farms and gardens, no homes and storehouses, no blossoming desert in Utah when the persecuted pioneers crossed the plains.
And remember that there were no heavenly beings in Palmyra, when the soul-hungry Joseph slipped quietly into the grove, knelt in prayer on the river bank, and climbed the slopes of that sacred hill.
But know this, that just as undaunted faith has stopped the mouths of lions, made ineffective fiery flames, opened dry corridors through rivers and seas, and brought heavenly manifestations at the instance of prophets, so in each of our lives faith can heal the sick, bring comfort to those who mourn, strengthen resolve against temptation, relieve from the bondage of harmful habits, lend the strength to repent and change our lives, and lead to a sure knowledge of the divinity of Jesus Christ. Indomitable faith can help us live the commandments with a willing heart and thereby bring blessings unnumbered, with peace, perfection, and exaltation in the kingdom of God.
            End of quote. Just reading that gives me greater faith!
To close on faith I would just like to say;
It’s important to center our faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
To have faith in Jesus Christ means to have such trust in Him that we obey whatever He commands. As you and I place our faith in Jesus Christ, becoming His obedient disciples, Heavenly Father will forgive our sins and prepare us to return to Him. We cannot have faith in Jesus Christ without also having faith in our Heavenly Father. If we have faith in Them, we will also have faith that the Holy Ghost, whom They send, will teach us all truth and will comfort us.
           

Please sincerely answer the following question in your mind: When was the last time you remember really feeling the Spirit or having been inclined by the Holy Ghost?
            So when was it? How long ago was the event that you immediately thought of? What was the occurrence? Some common answers might be; “When I received my patriarchal blessing” or “I really felt the spirit on the trek”. However, it’s less common for us to answer this question by saying, “I really felt the spirit this morning when I prayed” or “About ten minutes ago when we sang the opening hymn.”
            Each week when we partake of the sacrament we are promised to “always have {God’s} Spirit with {us}.” Did you notice the word always? The promise is not that we will have the Holy Ghost with us sometimes, or just in Church buildings, or during key life events. No, we are promised that the Spirit will be with us always – in our homes, at practice, at school, with our friends, at work, and at play. Always. So why then do we sometimes have to search back months or years into the deep of our memories to recall the last time we think the Spirit influenced us?
            Elder David A. Bednar said, “Sometimes as Latter-day Saints we talk and act as though recognizing the influence of the Holy Ghost in our lives is the rare or exceptional event” when the reality is that “the Holy Ghost can tarry with us much, if not most, of the time – and certainly the Spirit can be with us more than it is not.”
            Perhaps the problem is not that we aren’t being influenced by the Holy Ghost in our day to day lives, but simply that we don’t recognize it or are overlooking it.
            Maybe we are even like the Lamanites who “were baptized with fire and with the Holy Ghost, and they knew it not.” If we are missing the delicate, daily guidance of the Spirit because we are looking for something more remarkable, we might even mistakenly think that we aren’t feeling the Holy Ghost at all! So how can we identify and understand when the Holy Ghost is speaking to us? In Doctrine and Covenants, section 8, verse 3, it says. “Yea, behold, I will tell you in your mind and in your heart, by the Holy Ghost.” The Holy Ghost will speak to our minds though our thoughts, and to our hearts through or feelings.
            Let me explain a little better…
            Have you ever had an idea burst into your mind to do something? Maybe you saw your mom clear off the dinner table and thought, “I should help her,” or perhaps driving home from work and thought, “I should go visit Sister Smith.” Maybe you’ve had a clear warning voice of coaching in your mind, such as, “This movie isn’t good… turn it off” or “I should get out of this situation now.”
            The Lord taught us, “As often as thou hast inquired thou hast received instruction of my Spirit”. These instructions in our mind often come in the form of “Do this…” “Don’t do that…” “Go here…” Don’t go there…” “Look into this…”
            Elder Richard G. Scott testified that “sometimes the direction comes so clearly and so unmistakably that it can be written down like spiritual dictation.”
            The spiritual instructions that come to our minds will direct us to follow Christ, obey his gospel, and draw nearer to him. If we obtain an instruction in our mind to do something we know is damaging, we can know it is not of God.
            Have you ever been going through a hard time or having an awful day and then as you studied the scriptures, or prayed, or heard a gospel talk or lesson the thought came to you, “I’m going to be okay,” or “Everything will work out,” or “Stay confident,” or “God is aware of you and your situation. He loves us and will help us.” Comforting thoughts similar to those are another way the Lord speaks to our mind through the Holy Ghost.
             When we are filled with the power of the Holy Ghost, we simply cannot sin. That’s why the Nephite nation, in 3rd Nephi 19:9, prayed “for that which they most desired; and they desired that the Holy Ghost should be given unto them.”
            Why would the Nephites desire the Holy Ghost so fervently? Elder Parley P. Pratt answered this question when he described the extraordinary characteristics of this remarkable power”
            And I quote; “The gift of the Holy Spirit . . . quickens all the intellectual faculties, increases, enlarges, expands, and purifies all the natural passions and affections; and adapts them, by the gift of wisdom, to their lawful use . . .  It inspires virtue, kindness, goodness, tenderness, gentleness, and charity. It develops beauty of person, form and features. It tends to health, vigor, animation, and social feelings. It develops and invigorates all the faculties of the physical and intellectual man. It strengthens, invigorates, and gives tone to the nerves. In short, it is, as it were, marrow to the bone, joy to the heart, light to the eyes, music to the ears, and life to the whole being.”
End quote. Brothers and sisters that is why we cannot deny the Holy Ghost and still live with our Heavenly Father. The Holy Ghost is a major part in our lives and it’s impossible not to see that.
To close; We have been promised that the Holy Ghost can be with us always – each day of our lives, not just each huge event in our lives. I testify that this is true, and that we all can be spiritually influenced and led each day – multiple times each day. The next time somebody asks, “When was the last time you felt the Spirit?” you want to be able to respond saying, “Well, what time is it?”

Brothers and Sisters, I end with my testimony to you.
Without a shadow of any doubt I know that having faith and relying on the guidance of the Holy Spirit is super important in the mission field and in our personal lives. We must have faith in Jesus Christ and rely on the Holy Ghost to guide us to eternal life and to live with God forever. I can’t help but think of President Uchtdorf words in the February Ensign, “The Lord can magnify the words you speak and make them mighty. God doesn’t ask you to convert but rather to open your mouths. The task of converting is not yours—that belongs to the person hearing and to the Holy Spirit.” I know that to be true and cannot wait to share the amazing Gospel of Jesus Christ to God’s children in the Northern Virginia area.
I know that Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ speak to us through the Holy Ghost and they will never let us down or leave us behind. We must just listen to the still, small promptings that are just a listen away.

I know God lives

I know with all my heart and soul that Jesus is the Christ.

I have come to know a greater and deeper understanding of the amazing work and person Joseph Smith was. He truly is a prophet of God.

I know the Book of Mormon is the word of God. It is meant especially for this day and age. All it takes is some faith and the Holy Ghost to speak to you to know of its truth and its amazing wonders.

I love going to the House of the Lord. What amazing places of spiritual insight we have. I had the chance to attend 5 different temples, and went 11x’s before departing. I testify that if we go there regularly we will find a greater happiness we have never experienced.

I know President Monson is a prophet today and does and will always lead this church in the correct path.

I am so very thankful for my family and all they have blessed me with, especially my mother.  I will miss them so much; I love them, and know God will protect them.

I know with all my soul that this is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is the Kingdom of God on Earth.

I say these things, in the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ, Amen.