Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Articles of Faith by James E. Talmage

8/10

I have already mentioned this book a few times in other Missionary Reference Library book posts. So it has been well documented that I like this book. I did in fact read it on the mission like a good little boy.

It's just more Talmage being Talmage. Meaning it's awesome. Not Jesus the Christ awesome, but very good nonetheless. It is just sweet getting his extremely intelligent viewpoints on the Articles of Faith which encompass the beliefs of the Church.

Quotes:

"God has never refused to accept an offering made by one who is authorized on behalf of those who are in any way incapable of doing the required service themselves."

"Faith is the secret of ambition, the soul of heroism, the motive power of effort."

"The spoken prayer is but empty sound if it be anything less than an index to the volume of the soul's righteous desire. Communications addressed to the Throne of Grace must bear the stamp of sincerity if they are to reach their high destination."

Friday, July 11, 2014

The Taming of the Shrew by Shakespeare

5/10

"But you just posted about Shakespeare's Complete Works" you say. "Hold on, let me explain" I say. I had read 8 or 9 of his plays prior to attacking his Complete Works. I had posted about a few of them throughout this blogs history. This book with this identical hilarious book cover is sitting on my shelf. Who am I to deny this book its right and privilege to be posted on the blog? I have a few more individual plays to post as well. Also, yes, when I read the Complete Works I did re-read all the plays I had previously read.

So I read this back in 2005 I believe when I took a Shakespeare class at University. It is, according to my official rankings,  the 30th best out of his 37 plays. It's true, it's not my favorite. But I don't dislike it either. It's just kind of a weird storyline. Guy tames girl and girl submits, big time. I think I would have liked it more if he helped her go from crazy spaz to normal wife. But instead she goes from crazy spaz to ultra obedient borderline slave servant with no hint whatsoever of her former personality. Not that I was offended by it, but just found her to be a little annoying both pre-taming and post-taming.

I am less of a fan of his comedies than any of the other genres. I think I liked it slightly more the first time I read it. Also, in my Complete Works post this was one of the few plays where I couldn't locate a quote to use. But as I thumbed through this book I did find one thing I highlighted and I will now share the quote:

"No profit grows where is no pleasure ta'en;
In brief, sir, study what you most affect."

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Strengthen Your Brethren

7/10

I read this in February, 2004. I know because I wrote the date of completion inside the front cover.

This is an old (1991) Priesthood manual. I acquired three out of the four of these manuals from this series that were used back then. I got it on the mission, I don't really remember from where. They seem to have been pretty good manuals, providing concise lessons consisting of quotes and scripture references. The name of this book comes from D&C 108:7 by the way. It's true, look it up.

And now, a quote from the book and two quotes from people quoted in the book:

"The first and most important way that a priesthood bearer can share priesthood blessings with his wife is to marry her in the temple. The temple is the place where the most holy and sacred priesthood ordinances are bestowed."

From Marion G. Romney: "Desiring, searching, and pondering over 'the words of Eternal Life,' all three of them together, as important as they are, would be inadequate without prayer."

From David O. McKay: "I know of no virtue that helps to contribute to the happiness and peace of a home more than the great quality of self-control in speech."

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

The History of Joseph Smith by His Mother, Lucy Mack Smith

9/10

My Dad sent me this book while I was on my mission over ten years ago, but I never got around to reading it. I just finished this book two days ago. I really liked it.

The book is not accurately titled. It is the history of the Smith family more than anything. Joseph is discussed often, but surprisingly not really more than anybody else. I liked that even though he was the Prophet, his mom didn't seem to play favorites between him and his siblings. And to confirm my stance that the book is not properly titled, the Introduction to the book informs us that it was originally titled "The History of Lucy Mack Smith, by Herself." I suppose they re-titled it to get more readers?

This book just has so much to offer. As Joseph F. Smith says in the Introduction, this book "contains much interesting and valuable information, found in no other publication, relating to the life of the Prophet Joseph Smith" There are lots of cool details and stories that don't get the publicity that they perhaps more rightly deserve.

I want to mention just a few of some of the things I found of interest:

- Lucy had three sons in a row born on March 13th. It's true. She doesn't point this out directly, but had merely provided an Old Testament-style genealogy of her family as well as Joseph Smith Sr.'s family listing names and birth dates. Samuel born March 13 1808, Ephraim born March 13 1810, and William born March 13 1811. Crazy. Got to be some kind of record.

- Also listed in the genealogy chapter is the fact that Joseph Smith had a son born like 5 months after he was killed. I didn't realize Emma was pregnant when he was killed.

- Joseph Smith Sr. was quite the spiritual giant, even before Joseph being called as a Prophet. I guess that's why he was chosen to be the church's first patriarch of this dispensation. He would have these spiritual dreams and even had a very 1 Nephi 8 Tree of Life-esque dream. I bet he was pretty pumped when he read that chapter in the Book of Mormon.

- Hyrum is amazing. Here's this about when Joseph was a boy and had his way bad leg infection: "Hyrum sat beside him, almost day and night, for some considerable length of time, holding the affected part of his leg in his hands, and pressing it between them, so that his afflicted brother might be enabled to endure the pain"

- Another detail I didn't know about was how much Joseph was going through during the time when Martin Harris lost the 116 translated pages. Martin Harris took the pages home for 3 weeks. During those three weeks, Joseph had his first child born. This child also died before this three week period expired. I've always heard how the ordeal with losing those pages was one of the most trying experiences of his life. I just never knew that, on top of that, he was also dealing with the death of his firstborn baby. Unreal.

- The whole Smith family was just so amazing. As Joseph Smith Sr. said to Lucy right before he died: "Mother, do you not know, that you are the mother of as great a family as ever lived upon the earth?" I enjoyed learning about the other family members. Like Samuel. He was sent on missions non-stop. The story about the Book of Mormon he first gave away which led to the conversion of several people, including Brigham Young, is great.

- There is this epic 22-page chapter that is entirely Hyrum Smith's testimony before a Municipal Court in 1843 detailing the trials and sufferings suffered at the hands of the Missouri mobs. The abuse and persecution is pretty mind-boggling.

- I also didn't know that Samuel Smith died a month after his brother's Hyrum and Joseph were killed.  He died from over-exertion after fleeing for several hours from the mob who killed his brothers. He got this pain in his side that night and was confined to his bed for a month and then died. As Lucy says, "I had reared six sons to manhood, and of them all, one only remained." For those keeping score, that's Alvin who died before Joseph received the plates after receiving treatment from a "quack doctor", Don Carlos who died of consumption after working in a damp room for long periods to produce the Times and Seasons, Hyrum and Joseph killed by a mob, and Samuel died a month later. William was the one who remained. Interestingly enough, when Joseph Sr. was giving his final blessings to his children, he told William that he would "live as long as thou desirest life."

- Eliza R. Snow wrote really cool poems upon the deaths of Joseph Smith Sr., Don Carlos Smith, and Hyrum and Joseph. I share a snippet from the poem upon the deaths of Hyrum and Joseph:
"Great men have fallen, and mighty men have died;
Nations have mourned their favorites and their pride;
But two, so wise, so virtuous, great, and good,
Before on earth, at once, have never stood
Since the creation. Men whom God ordained
To publish truth where error long had reigned,
Of whom the world itself unworthy proved.
It knew them not, but men with hatred moved,
And with infernal spirits have combined
Against the best, the noblest, of mankind."

- One final quote: "Joseph continued to receive instructions from the Lord, and we continued to get the children together every evening, for the purpose of listening while he gave us a relation of the same. I presume our family presented an aspect as singular as any that ever lived upon the face of the earth - all seated in a circle, father, mother, sons and daughters, and giving the most profound attention to a boy, eighteen years of age, who had never read the Bible through in his life: he seemed much less inclined to the perusal of books than any of the rest of our children, but far more given to meditation and deep study."