Te Karere . p in the With sincerity of heart) j desire t0 Church. be counted among their number. In all In fortitude and nobility of soul, humility, I wish to become a worthy Golden Gleaners utilize with efficacy propounder of the truth. SOME ONE HAS PRAYEDBy Grace Noll Crowell The day zcxts long, the burden I had borne Seemed heavier than I could longer then it lifted—but I did not know Someone had knelt in prayer;Had taken me to God that very hour. And asked the easing of the load, and He,In infinite compassion, had stooped down And taken it from can not tell how often as we p
Te Karere . p in the With sincerity of heart) j desire t0 Church. be counted among their number. In all In fortitude and nobility of soul, humility, I wish to become a worthy Golden Gleaners utilize with efficacy propounder of the truth. SOME ONE HAS PRAYEDBy Grace Noll Crowell The day zcxts long, the burden I had borne Seemed heavier than I could longer then it lifted—but I did not know Someone had knelt in prayer;Had taken me to God that very hour. And asked the easing of the load, and He,In infinite compassion, had stooped down And taken it from can not tell how often as we pray For some bczvildcrcd one, hurt and distressed,The answer comes—but many times those hearts Find sudden peace and one had prayed, and Faith, a reaching hand. Took hold of God, and brought him dozen that day!So many, many hearts have need of prayer— Oh, let us pray. —Marcelene Cox in Ladies Home TE KARERE The SpokenWord fromTemple Square Self-Searching ByELDER RICHARD L. EVANS. THERE is a seventeenth-centuryproverb that reads: Believe notales from an enemys tongue. Butperhaps we can believe our own exam-ination of ourselves. And so, for amoment, lets do a bit of self-searchingon a long list of subjects : If you werechoosing someone you had to trust,could you trust yourself ? Would youlike to meet yourself when you are introuble? Would you like to be at yourown mercy? If other men didnt putlocks on their homes, on their barns,and on their banks, would you everwalk in where you knew you had noright to walk? If there were no ac-counts, no bonding companies, nocourts, no jails, no disgrace—none ofthe usual fears except your own soulinside of you—would you ever takewhat you knew you had no right totake? Would you serve a man withoutinfluence as fairly as you would a manwith influence? Would you pay a per-son as far a price for something hewas forced to sell as for something hedidnt have to sell ? Would you honouran unwritten agreement as honestly
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