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Deseret Book ®

Family Home Evening Materials

Theme: Comfort
Packet #120410

5 tips for successful Family Home Evenings


1. Pray. Pray about the needs of your family as you consider topics for home evenings,
and pray as you prepare.
2. Prioritize. Make Family Home Evening a priority; learn to say no to other activities.
3. Involvement. Involve everyone in the family; help little children take part.
4. Commitment. Be committed and be consistent. Set a designated time and stick to it. Holding
Family Home Evening on a weekly basis takes dedication and planning on the part of all
family members.
5. Relax and enjoy it. The most important thing your children will remember is the spirit they feel
in your family home evenings and activities. Be sure the atmosphere is one of love,
understanding, and enjoyment.
Comfort
Conference Talk:
For more information on this topic read "“You Are My Hands”", by Dieter F. Uchtdorf, Ensign,
May 2010, 68–70, 75.
Thought:
Let our hearts and hands be stretched out in compassion toward others, for everyone is walking
his or her own difficult path.
(Dieter F. Uchtdorf, "“You Are My Hands”", Ensign, May 2010, 68–70, 75.)

Song:
“I’ll Walk With You,” Children’s Songbook, p. 140
Scripture:
Yea, and are willing to mourn with those that mourn; yea, and comfort those that stand in need
of comfort, and to stand as witnesses of God at all times and in all things, and in all places
(Mosiah 18:9)

Lesson:
The ancient moralist Aesop used to illustrate the concept by holding up a stick and asking
for a volunteer among his listeners who thought he could break it. Of course the volunteer was
able to break the stick easily. Then Aesop would put two sticks of the same size together and
would ask the same volunteer to break them both at the same time. It was more difficult, but
usually it could be done without too much trouble. The process was repeated, with another stick
being added to the bundle each time, until the volunteer was unable to break the bundle of
sticks. The moral to Aesop’s illustration was simple: individually we are weak, but together we
are strong.
Have someone read Mosiah 18:8 and explain what this object lesson has to do with our
church membership. What are some things you have done to bear another person’s burdens?
Why do you think Heavenly Father wants us to help each other like that?
(Dennis H. Leavitt and Richard O. Christensen, Scripture Study for Latter-day Saint Families: The Book of
Mormon, [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2003], p. 136.)

Story:
(Margaret Mcneil Ballard)
From the first organization of the Relief Society in Cache Valley, until 1880, I labored as a
teacher. On December 11, 1880, I was put in as president of this organization in the Second
Ward, with Sister Barbara Larsen as first counselor and Sister Susan J. Smith as second
counselor, and Sister Emmeline James as secretary. I labored in this capacity for over thirty
years. During these years I tried to do my duty in caring for the sick and comforting the needy.
I have walked for blocks through the deep snow; I have been out in rains and winds, in the
darkest nights, and in the earliest hours of the morning, to comfort and minister to those who
were afflicted and who were sick and suffering and sorrowing and dying. I have sat up all night
time after time with the sick, laid out the dead, made burial clothes, mothered the orphans,
comforted the widows, and given advice to those in need. I have tried to be a peacemaker to those in
trouble and through it all the Lord directed me and I enjoyed His Spirit as my companion in my labors.
Many an afflicted one has gone to her last sleep blessing me and many who yet remain bless me for
services rendered unto them. It comforts me to have done some good to those less fortunate than
myself.
(Leon R. Hartshorn, Remarkable Stories from the Lives of Latter-day Saint Women, vol. 2, [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book,
1975].)

Activity:
Use your imagination. Have the family ponder and share ideas generated from the following
questions (or think of your own).
The leader says, “What if . . .”
—your best friend wanted you to run away with her?
—you didn’t have to go to school anymore?
—you could jump on an airplane and go anywhere you wished?
—you were being teased by your friends about being a Mormon?
—you lost your eyesight?
(Mina S. Coletti and Roberta Kling Giesea, The Family Idea Book Two, [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1982], p. 111.)
Refreshment
Apple Cinnamon Buns

3/4 cup chopped walnuts or almonds


2 medium cooking apples, pared, cored, and thinly sliced
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
12 frozen rolls, thawed
1 (3-ounce) package vanilla pudding mix (not instant)
1/2 cup pancake or maple syrup
1/4 cup butter, melted

Coat a 9 x 13-inch pan with nonstick cooking spray. Sprinkle with nuts then layer apple slices over
bottom of pan. Roll thawed dough balls in cinnamon and arrange over almonds and apples. Or, if using
dough from Lion House Dinner Rolls, divide dough into 3 equal portions and shape 2 of those portions
into 12 dough balls; roll in cinnamon and arrange over almonds and apples. Sprinkle dry pudding mix
over dough balls and drizzle with the syrup and butter. Cover with a clean towel or plastic wrap and let
rise until doubled in size, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 to 30 minutes. Invert pan onto
serving plate. Serves 12.
(Lion House Bakery, [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2009] p. 13.)

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The Warmth in His Heart
A Heart Like His: Making Space for God's Love in Your Life
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