Why LDS Women Stress
Compiled by Sister Barbara Moon, American Fork, UT
As Latter-Day Saint women, we are practically obsessed with anxiously engaging ourselves in good causes. Maybe it is subliminal.
Glancing through the hymnal it is noted that as sisters in Zion, we who are called to serve are all enlisted to go marching, marching forward because the world has need of willing men to all press on scattering sunshine.
We wonder if we have done any good in the world today because we have been given much and want to do what is right, keep the commandments, press forward with the Saints, choose the right, and put our shoulder to the wheel going where He wants us to go.
However, as the morning breaks high on the mountain top, truth reflects upon our senses, and while we still believe that sweet is the work, we also realize that we have work enough to do ere the sun goes down.
And thus we ask Thee ere we part, where can we turn for peace?
Compiled by Sister Barbara Moon, American Fork, UT
As Latter-Day Saint women, we are practically obsessed with anxiously engaging ourselves in good causes. Maybe it is subliminal.
Glancing through the hymnal it is noted that as sisters in Zion, we who are called to serve are all enlisted to go marching, marching forward because the world has need of willing men to all press on scattering sunshine.
We wonder if we have done any good in the world today because we have been given much and want to do what is right, keep the commandments, press forward with the Saints, choose the right, and put our shoulder to the wheel going where He wants us to go.
However, as the morning breaks high on the mountain top, truth reflects upon our senses, and while we still believe that sweet is the work, we also realize that we have work enough to do ere the sun goes down.
And thus we ask Thee ere we part, where can we turn for peace?
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