Friday, January 13, 2017

The Miracle of Sight



LIGHTtheWORLD The miracle of sight:

I have received the miracle of sight in my life. I had to get glasses when I was in first grade. (This cute picture is of me in 2nd grade) My eyes progressively got worse and I was categorized as legally blind. I got contacts at age 16 and had to deal with glasses or contacts for years. When I was young, I used to pray for a miracle-that my eyes would get better. As a young mother, I had this immense fear that if some calamity would happen in the middle of the night, I wouldn't be able to see to protect and save my children. I continued to pray for a miracle. 

Although Jesus Christ did not come down and anoint my eyes and give me sight; I believe that a miracle was granted when, several years ago, I received my vision with the help of the miracle of science, lasik eye surgery! I believe in miracles! I hope that we will each stop and reflect on the miracles that are around us each day. God is good. Let him work a miracle in your life. Remember him this Christmas season and always.

Spiritual Experience Study



Recently a report was issued that showed how people's brains light up when they have a spiritual experience. One person who participated in the study remarked, "When I say that I'm feeling the Spirit, it's not just me saying that. There is a physical expression happening that one can measure on a scan, on a monitor, that my brain is responding to something very special."

 I invite you today to experience the LIGHT of CHRIST. Attend a Christian church service, visit a temple visitor's center, listen to Christmas music about Christ and ignite your brain, warm your heart, feel HIS Peace, let Christ lift your burdens and #LIGHTtheWORLD.

Light of the World



I'd like to share my favorite scripture with you. I memorized it in 9th grade as I studied the New Testament in Seminary with Bro. Gary Sampson. It was probably the first time I let a scripture speak to my heart and today I bear testimony that Jesus is the Christ, the LIGHT of the WORLD. We can share HIS LIGHT with others this Christmas season and throughout the year as we #LIGHTtheWORLD
14 Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid.
15 Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house.
16 Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

Perfect Night, Perfect Actors







We were privileged to be able to attend the Special Needs Mutual Live Nativity at Staheli Family Farm last night. A beautiful, glowing Mary, played by Amber, from our ward, a cowboy hat wearing wise man, portrayed perfectly by Jason, from our ward, a stalwart shepherd by family friend, Samo Saarelainen and why not add a peaceful dove played by adopted daughter and friend, Brandy Iverson. A large cast of angels, soldiers, and other animals beaming with joy rounded out the large cast of 'perfect' actors' portraying that 'perfect' night.' #LIGHTtheWORLD



Master Teacher





Teaching is a noble profession. I have been blessed with the opportunity to teach and learn from students for 20 years. I work with some of the world's best!

Jesus Christ is the Master Teacher. He taught through the use of parables and stories and more importantly, through example. All of us have the chance to teach; often through informal ways such as coaching a team, driving car pool, or sharing a story. We can influence all of those around us. Take the time today to teach a skill to someone, to be a good example, to #LIGHTtheWORLD.

Note from former student

Can't tell you how much this little note you left in a book of mine actually means right now. Thank you for being who you are. I haven't seen you in years but your still helping me see things in a better perspective.
--Nate Liebroder


helly Flake Thanks Nate Liebroder! That means so much to me. You have accomplished so much. You have a beautiful family and own your home! I know you've worked so hard to continue your education, get certified, help others and be a good dad, brother and son! You've sacrificed to make your dreams come true! Thank-you and tell you dad and Kayla hello!

Stephanie Wilkey Nicely stated young man. You will succeed if you express gratitude in all things.

True Love and Service

A long time Mother's Day tradition in our home, has been to allow the children to wash their mother's feet. I'm sure this started under the tutelage of their wise father. I have had to learn to humble myself to allow my children to work on my callused and worn feet. Their tender care and spa-like quality work touches my heart so sweetly as I recall the tender, merciful Master of the World, as he lowered himself to wash the feet of his apostles then rose to take up the cross and lay his life down for each of us.

 Let HIS name be called "Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace"; yet the one who meekly showed us how to have true humility and serve others.


Christmas Traditions


These little peeps have had so much fun doing the 12 days of Christmas this year. #doorbellditching #LIGHTtheWORLD

Secretly doing the Twelve Days of Christmas is my favorite Christmas Tradition. We have been doing it ever since the kids were young. Even though our kids are grown, Dan and I continue the tradition and now our grandchildren have joined in on the fun. We started this tradition to teach our kids about the fun of service. I'm glad the FUN and TRADITION continue.

Michael McLean Opens Up About His 9-Year Faith Crisis and How He Found His Testimony Again

It all started about 10 years ago when McLean’s youngest son told his family that he was gay.
“He was hoping that if he was good enough, prayed hard enough, served faithfully as a missionary, and kept the commandments that he’d somehow experience a miracle and become straight,” says McLean. “It’s tough enough to be a gay kid in a straight world, but being the son of the songwriting icon of the Mormon Church was impossible for him. The pain was so deep that he’d considered suicide.”
To make matters more difficult, McLean and his wife, Lynne, were living in Malibu, California, when Church members in the state were campaigning to pass Proposition 8—which would only legally recognize marriages between a man and a woman.
“I would hear from the pulpit that faithful Christians needed to save the family and the future of our country and campaign for votes for this proposition,” he recalls. Meanwhile, his son was planning to marry his partner at McLean’s home if the proposition failed.
“This would have been tough for any parent, but for the songwriting apologist filmmaker for the Church, this was simply an impossible spot to be in,” he says. “I needed answers to save my family. I prayed like I had never prayed before.”
Nothing.
“It was like somebody decided to bolt heaven shut,” McLean explains. “I started to wonder, What if I’ve gotten it all wrong? What if I got the church thing wrong? What if I got Heavenly Father wrong? I kept thinking this would end—that there would be some peace that would come or some answers that would start trickling down. But they didn’t. I couldn’t believe I was saying it out loud, but I was thinking about an exit strategy. It was so painful.”
In the midst of his faith crisis, McLean came across a book called Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light: The Private Writings of the Saint of Calcutta, which was published years after her death. As he read about her secret 49-year faith crisis, which she confessed through a series of letters to her spiritual advisors and closest confidants, he related to her struggle.
“She asked, ‘Why has Heavenly Father abandoned me? Why can’t I hear Him or feel His spirit? And I can’t tell anybody this is happening.’ I understood. What was I going to say? ‘Hey, all of you who bought my records, just kidding! You are alone. Quit holding on—the light’s not coming.’”

Will He Really Answer Me?

Image title
Soon after reading her book, McLean had a dream about Mother Teresa that changed how he approached his crisis.
In the dream, the Catholic nun sang about her life while McLean accompanied her on the piano. He recalls, “It was her song about why she hadn’t just thrown in the towel, given up on faith, and confessed that believing and following a faith tradition was all too much, too difficult, too foolish. In my dream she sang:
I choose to pray to one who doesn’t hear me
I choose to wait for love that He conceals
And though God’s chosen now not to be near me
I’m keeping promises my heart no longer feels
“So here’s a Mormon songwriter having a dream about a dead Catholic nun who sings a song that begs the questions: Am I willing to keep the promises I’ve made to God even when I feel nothing in response to my deepest yearnings? In the most difficult trial of my faith journey, would I hold on to faith or give in to despair?”
Like Mother Teresa, McLean would ultimately choose to hold on—no matter what.
“I decided to recommit,” he says. “I’d wait on the Lord and look for answers that satisfied both my heart and mind. I’d attend church and not escape to the parking lot when I’d hear things that broke my heart or just made me feel like I was not where I truly belonged. I’d show up and shut up and listen and wait.”
He would listen and wait for nine years. Then something suddenly changed.

Hold On, the Light Will Come

“A couple years ago, I was in my little studio office where I write songs when, for a 10-day period, it was like I received a download of songs from heaven,” he recalls. “They were coming so fast—songs from the perspectives of people who had different encounters with Jesus, such as the money changer, the guard whose ear got cut off, and the leper.”
But it was the perspective of John the Baptist that especially impacted McLean. “John the Baptist had a faith crisis that goes beyond anything I’ve experienced,” he says. “While he’s locked in prison, about to be executed, he tells some of his disciples to find Jesus and ask Him, ‘Are you the one who was to come? Or should we look for another?’ He’s wondering if, after all he had done, he had gotten it all wrong.”
McLean continues, “John’s disciples find Jesus, and He says, ‘Watch me.’ He doesn’t race to the dungeon to comfort John the Baptist. He starts performing miracles. Then He tells the disciples to go back and tell John the miracles they saw, in the order they saw them. John realizes that his question is being answered perfectly because 700 years earlier, Isaiah had prophesied that the Messiah would perform these miracles, and they would happen in the order that the disciples saw them. John is getting the perfect answer that is designed perfectly just for him.”
Image title
McLean realized that God had sent the answers to the questions that had plagued him for nine years in the lyrics to the songs he had just written. “The answers were perfect,” he says. “But even more incredible to me than their perfection was that they came to me in a language only I would understand. It was so personal. He sent songs to the songwriter.”
He affirms, “You’ll know when God answers you because it will be perfect and personal in every way.”

It’s Real

McLean’s experience with a faith crisis has given him deep compassion and a unique perspective that couldn’t have been developed any other way. But one of the greatest epiphanies he had, which still impacts him today, came from a memory of his deceased father:
“My father suffered from Alzheimer’s, so when he was asked to give a 17-minute talk at an Easter sacrament meeting, I was nervous he would go a little bit off track. In fact, I stood close by so I could come up and rescue him,” McLean recalls. “Every scripture, every reference, was about God the Father’s greatness, wisdom, and intelligence. And I was getting embarrassed because it was Easter Sunday, and he wasn’t talking about Jesus.”
But then, with two minutes left, McLean’s father surprised him by posing a series of profound questions. “My father said, ‘Isn’t it interesting that the Greatest Intelligence in the Universe abandoned His Son at the most pivotal moment in His plan? Could it be that it was at this moment that the Greatest Intelligence of All bore witness to the universe that He had put His faith in Jesus? That He knew Jesus would choose Him no matter what? And could it be that when you think He has abandoned you that He is actually saying, ‘I have faith you will choose me even when I’m not there’?”
And that is exactly how McLean overcame his faith crisis—by choosing God even when he felt abandoned by Him.

You’re Not Alone

Today, rather than being ashamed of his experience, McLean is using it to share a message of hope with others who might be struggling.
“John the Baptist, Joseph Smith, and even Christ himself have felt abandoned by God,” he says. “If any of us have ever felt abandoned and wondered where He is, then we’re in good company.”
McLean says songwriters really only write one song, and his is “You’re Not Alone.” Though the lyrics and melodies are always different, the message remains the same.
“Name one of my songs that, at its core, wasn’t trying to tell somebody, ‘This is what I went through. You’re not the only one who’s felt this way. You’re not the only one who’s scared. You’re not the only one who’s wondering if there’s a God in heaven who loves you. You’re not alone.’”
He adds, “I know what the darkness is like. He’s always there— even when we can’t see it.”

First Mormon Flakes Led the Way

James Madison (1815-1850) and Agnes Haley Love Flake(1819--1855)

Each lived only to be 35 years old
What if James and Agnes Flake would not have opened their Mississippi door to the missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Saints?
What if James and Agnes would have decided to not be baptized yielding to pressure of family and friends to not do so?
What if James and Agnes would have not sold their home and land at a sacrificed price and freed their slaves to move more than 670 miles to join the Saints in Nauvoo?
What if James and Agnes, after two years in Nauvoo, would not have left a new home to move again over 300 miles to Winter Quarters, Iowa?
What if James and Agnes would have said in Winter Quarters after losing three of their six children, “We won’t move again, more than 900 miles to the Salt Lake Valley.
What if James and Agnes would have said to Brigham Young after two years in the Salt Lake Valley, “We are just getting started and James can’t accept your call to look for where Church members can settle in California”?
What if Agnes, when informed of the death of James would have said, “That exempts me and my children from the prophet’s call to relocate in San Bernardino; another move of more than 600 miles?”
What if Agnes would have accepted the offer of her brother to return, with her children, to the family home in North Carolina agreeing to, “All you have to do is give up your Mormonism.” She assured him that would never happen. Her dying counsel to her children was to always live true to the faith.
Now, nearly 175 years later, more than 15,000 descendants honor James Madison and Agnes Haley Love Flake for being steadfast and immovable, for keeping their covenants, and becoming the foundation of our eternal Flake Family.
Will we, their posterity, carry the torch they so brightly carried? Will our testimony of the gospel continue to sustain us as it did them?
Written by Garry Flake