The obedience of Christ in spite of every hardship showed that “it is in the power of man to keep the law and remain also without sin.” (Lectures on Faith, Lecture 5)
Love it. Can't believe how many times I've read Lectures on Faith and didn't realize it taught the idea of sinlessness in clear plainness. I'm snagging this for my upcoming Elders Quorum lesson, btw. Appreciated, as always.
@@teshuvahareturn Same here. It's tucked right in there--should have probably been the very first sentence of the series and it's own lecture on it's own. It's funny how hard it can be to see through our scales.
Coming from you, not sure if this is a compliment or not. ;) Too bad this type of content is not being preached from the pulpit, and instead the focus is on temple attendance without the work of repentance. It's a shame because General Conference talks in that past (although still correlated) at least placed more emphasis on actually changing and becoming like Christ. Heck, even the primary hymn ("I'm trying to be like Jesus") has more truth packed into than a typical General Conference talk -- but I digress.
The obedience of Christ in spite of every hardship showed that “it is in the power of man to keep the law and remain also without sin.” (Lectures on Faith, Lecture 5)
Love it. Can't believe how many times I've read Lectures on Faith and didn't realize it taught the idea of sinlessness in clear plainness.
I'm snagging this for my upcoming Elders Quorum lesson, btw. Appreciated, as always.
@@teshuvahareturn Same here. It's tucked right in there--should have probably been the very first sentence of the series and it's own lecture on it's own. It's funny how hard it can be to see through our scales.
This is a wonderful and phenomenal sermon. You should be a General Authority!
Coming from you, not sure if this is a compliment or not. ;) Too bad this type of content is not being preached from the pulpit, and instead the focus is on temple attendance without the work of repentance. It's a shame because General Conference talks in that past (although still correlated) at least placed more emphasis on actually changing and becoming like Christ. Heck, even the primary hymn ("I'm trying to be like Jesus") has more truth packed into than a typical General Conference talk -- but I digress.
@@teshuvahareturn This was definitely a compliment! The LDS people desperately need to hear and internalize what you are teaching.
@@jaredeastley9640 Thanks. As long as I have a voice and God gives me the words, I'll continue to do so.