Monday, February 28, 2011

March Staff Meeting

Staff Meeting will be Thursday March 17, at 7:00 p.m. The subject will be  "How to Create a Timeline to Break Down Brick Walls" by Elaine Justesen.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Let the Lower Lights Be Burning

The following thought was given by Margie Tripp at the beginning of February staff meeting.


From http://lincolntribune.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=12557

Stories Behind the Hymns : Let the Lower Lights be Burning
By Warren Shiver

Those who live by the sea or on a large body of water, understand better than the folks that have never seen or been on the ocean, and seen the powerful waves crashing on the shore, the Biblical accounts of stories that involve the Sea of Galilee. Those who have had first hand experiences on a ship or boat sing with more understanding the hymns that speak of the Christian experience in nautical terms.

Rev. Dwight L. Moody, one of the greatest evangelists of the nineteenth century told a story in one of his sermons of a ship nearing the Lake Erie harbor at Cleveland, Ohio. It was a stormy night and the waves were high. Seeing only the lights from the lighthouse, the Captain asked the Pilot, "Are you sure this is Cleveland?" "Quite sure", replied the Pilot. "But", said the Captain, "where are the lower lights, the lights along the shore?" The Pilot replied calmly, "They’ve gone out sir." He assured the Captain that they could make the harbor, and turned the wheel, but in the darkness, they missed the channel and crashed upon the rocks. Many passengers drowned and with this illustration, Rev. Moody concluded his sermon with this comment, "Beloved the Master will take care of the great Lighthouse. Let us keep the Lower Lights burning."

Phillip P. Bliss, a well-known music teacher, hymn writer, and Christian leader that night listened to Rev. Moody’s sermon intently and the Holy Spirit spoke to him and shortly after the sermon ended, he picked up his pen and began writing both words and music to "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning". The hymn was first published in 1871 in a Sunday school hymnal. Bliss’s hymn became exceedingly popular, even inland where the people could not relate to the meaning of the Lighthouse, or the "Lower lights along the shore". Churches throughout the land began singing this hymn and it blessed millions of people. Unfortunately it has been dropped from many hymnals in our churches today, and only the older folks in the congregation still remember this powerful message. I could only hope that it would have a revival in our churches today, so that our young people could enjoy this great message and hymn.

The following song was sang by Roger Kennard, a former member of the Tabernacle Choir.

Let The Lower Lights Be Burning

(Brightly Beams Our Father's Mercy, Hymn 335 by Phillip Paul Bliss)

Verse 1
Brightly beams our Father’s mercy,
From His lighthouse evermore,
But to us he gives the keeping,
Of the lights along the shore.

Chorus:
Let the lower lights be burning,
Send a gleam across the way,
Some poor fainting, struggling seaman,
You may rescue, you may save.

Verse 2
Dark the night of sin has settled,
Loud the angry billows roar,
Eager eyes are watching, longing,
For the lights along the shore.

Chorus:

Verse 3
Trim your feeble lamp, my brother,
Some poor sailor, tempest tossed,
Trying now to make the harbor,
In the darkness, may be lost.

Chorus:

Friday, February 18, 2011

Where to Start With New FamilySearch When Your Family History is "All Done"

                 Presented by Janet Hovorka
      janet@generationmaps.com   www.thechartchick.com
 
  ●    "Grandma did all the scripture reading for our family."
  ●    "My great Uncle paid all our tithing."
  ●    "My Mom is going to church for us right now, we just help her out financially."
  ●    "It's not my time and season to obey the word of wisdom."
 
  Have you ever heard any of these excuses? Probably not. Have you heard similar excuses about family
  history? Probably so. Why is it that out of all the teachings of the gospel, it is so easy to justify and
  make excuses about family history? Just as with other teachings of the gospel, the Lord has given us family history to bless us. We can choose to either partake of those blessings or ignore them and make excuses.
 
  Much the same as family history, the Lord has also given us the scriptures. Why did He give us the scriptures? Was it to strengthen our reading skills, or was it to give us something more to do in the morning?  No. He gave us the scriptures because He knows the amazing spiritual power that can come into our lives from reading everyday—not to mention the life lessons that are contained therein. Family history is very similar. He gave it to us for the spiritual power that it brings into our lives — and the lessons that we can pick up along the way.
 
  For Latter-day Saints, when we talk about family history, we often raise the level of GUILT in the room.  This is the GUILT that comes when you perceive that your ancestors are sitting and waiting in a dark and dirty spirit prison and if you would just sacrifice a little of your time, you could give them the key to get out. But I think this is mistaken and misleading. I don't think God needs our help in saving His children. Think about it. He is God. He can do anything He wants to. For us to think that He needs our help to save His children is presumptuous. He could have come up with another way to save His children without ordinances. He could have. He's God. And He certainly could find other people besides you to perform those ordinances. But that isn't the way He designed it.  He made it so that you can help in His great work. He asks for your help because He knows the joy and blessings it will bring into your life.
 
  What are the blessings?
  What blessings are you missing if you aren't doing family history?  First, in the ordinances that are performed in the temple, there are certain blessings given to the descendants of the recipient.  When you go to the temple for your own ordinances, your descendants receive promises similar to the blessings that Abraham received for his descendants. Likewise, when you perform those ordinances for your own ancestors, they are blessed with those same blessings for their descendants. And who are those descendants who will be blessed? You and your children.
 
  The blessings go even further.
  In Malachi 4: 5-6 we read that Elijah will return before the second coming and "turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to the fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a curse.” The curses are already here—and family history heals those curses:
  ●    Sins of the Fathers—Understanding and Emotional Healing. If you haven't found someone in your family history who is a scoundrel, you haven't done enough family history. Understanding persistent traits and consequences, and how they play through the generations can help us heal and deal with family members in a more compassionate and understanding way.
  ●    Fear and Overwhelming Responsibility—Realizing Potential. Likewise, if you haven't found anyone in your family who accomplished amazing things, you haven't done enough family history.   When you know you have great examples in your family, you can look at your challenges and say "I can do this. It's in my DNA."
  ●    Loneliness and Depression—Grounded and Enveloped in Love. It gives perspecitve to know about the sacrifices that have been made in your behalf by youir ancestors so that you could have the good life that you have now. Family history is often a solace for people whose earthly family ties aren't what they want them to be.
  ●    Muddling Through—Spiritual Power. There is a wisdom, perspective. and spirit gained from being involved in family history. President Boyd K. Packer said "There is no work that I know of that is so immersed in the spirit as this sacred work of preparing names for the temple and in the subsequent ordinances that are performed there." Packer, Boyd K "Using the FamilySearch Web Site.' Satellite Training Broadcast 18 November 1999. Distributed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
 
  So how?
  #1 Get over the GUILT. Your ancestors don't need you nearly as much as you need them. Just get
  over yourself.
  #2 Cast out OVERWHELMINGNESS. Doctrine and Covenants section 128:24 says that we will present the Lord "a book containing the records of our dead, which shall be worthy of all acceptation.* 'Worthy of all acceptation" is achievable when we apply our best efforts and the Lord in his infinite atonement makes up for the rest.
 
  But Really how? (Pick one. NOT all of them)
 
  1. Keep a copy of your research offline with NFS Certified Software
  ●    All the abilities and features of the website
  ●    Keep Personal Information Personal
       ●    Privacy, living people, research in progress
  ●    Detailed notes, sources, pictures, video
  ●    Interface with other programs
  ●    Usability—Better Screens
  ●    Automates syncing
  ●    Gives you updates of what your cousins are doing but your information remains as you put it.
  ●    Makes adding information easy
  ●    Helps you manage large amounts of information
 
  Features other than New FamilySearch functionality may be most important in choosing which software to use, such as charting, reports, sources, useability, etc.  Interacting with cousins is easier if you try to use what the rest of the family is using.  Ultimately, genealogy software is like a pair of shoes, different styles fit different people and different softwares can be good for different tasks.
 
  2. Focus, Focus, Focus
  Find an aspect that interests you. Pick one small goal and take one family at a time. You don't have to have a huge genealogy computer file, and you don't have to have everything connected to New FamilySearch.  Make a list.  Even if you only accomplish one task in recording your family's history, your descendants will be better off for it. DON'T GET OVERWHELMED.
 
  3. Complete non-computerized work
  Become the family funnel
  ●    Start with close relatives
      O    Work with them to obtain copies first.
  ●    Ask close relatives about distant relatives.
           O   Who is interested in genealogy? Who inherited journals and pictures? Will you help me contact them?
 
  Take an hour each Sunday. You'll be surprised how fast things get done. Having to computerize inherited genealogy is actually a blessing.  By the time it is in the computer, it will be yours, and you will understand it.
 
  4. Verify and add sources to what has been done
  Ultimately the reliability of any historical fact lies in the sources that have been used to establish that fact. Thus, ultimately the reliability of the New FamilySearch database lies in the sources that have been used to establish that database. This database is OUR RESPONSIBILITY. It is crucial to OUR success that you go back to the original sources. Citations should allow another researcher to re-trace your steps so that future conclusions and analysis can be made. Only then can we work together to compare sources and come to the truth. And only then will this database be useful to generations in the future.
 
  Notes and sources are what tell you what the quality of research is that you are dealing with. ff there are good source citations you can spot check the research. If there are poor source citations just use the research as a pointer to where to do future research. The current standards for source citations are Mills, Elizabeth Shown. Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace.  Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 2010. And Mills, Elizabeth Shown. Evidence! Citation & Analysis for the Family Historian.  Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1997.
 
  5. Look for areas to expand
  You can actually build on previous research. Try these ideas:
            ●    Go to the family genealogist and ask for a line to work on.
            ●    Generally you start with the people closest to you—but not necessarily when lots of research has already been done. There are new resources available, but the line might really be stuck. Just be sure you don't get stuck—move on to another line.
            ●    Get it out where you can see it on paper. I did that and ended up with plenty of lines to work on and a company that can make it easy for you to print it out too.  generationmaps.com.
            ●    Try side lines
            ●    Start with an ancestor and work down from them. Try:  http://www.familvsearch.ord/enq/library/Educationfirameset education.asp >Research Series Classes Online>Research Principles and Tools>Descendancy Research or http://wiki.familysearch.ord Search "Descendancy Research"
 
  6. Involve your family
  No one will turn down a chance to look at their Great-Grandfather's picture or hear what trouble their Dad got into as a kid. Try pictures and stories, but to interest the next generation, go where they live. Blogging, Facebook, and Email newsletters can be used in a genealogical way. And family history for Christmas gifts gives you a deadline and disseminates the information.
 
  Don't forget to record your own history and especially your experiences in family history research. You become a great link between generations when you leave a love for your ancestors to your descendants. Even a short history will be a great blessing to the generations to come.
 
  Don't Get Overwhelmed.
 
  I can't promise you it will be easy but I can promise you it will bless your life.
 
            "One arises from the study of genealogy with a clearer and more charitable conception of the whole brotherhood of man." -Joseph Hatten Carpenter
 
  Where to Start With New FamilySearch When Your Family History is "All Done"
  janet@generationmaps.com    Page 3

Monday, February 14, 2011

February Staff Meeting

Where to Start With New Family Search
When Your Family History is All Done
Janet Hovorka
Staff Meeting Presenter
Thursday, February 17
7 p.m.
Relief Society Room
Please invite your high priest group leader, high councilor and other consultants in your ward and stake.
We will also have a special musical number by an ex member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.