Religious Educator Vol. 2 No. 1 · 2001
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To concern oneself with eating foods the Lord has prescribed and to consider eating prescribed foods as an act of holiness are both attitudes that could be understood as logical results of living in divine harmony with the earth God has created.
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No matter what else we do in life, what we choose, what we enjoy, or what we become, it will have been in vain if we don't fully choose the "good part," even this "best part"—Christ Himself—and take a heaping portion of it into our lives.
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"True it is [the words of the scriptures] were first proclaimed by others, but they are now mine, for the Holy Spirit of God has borne witness to me that they are true; and it is now as though the Lord had revealed them to me in the first instance." —Elder Bruce R. McConkie
Featured Articles
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To concern oneself with eating foods the Lord has prescribed and to consider eating prescribed foods as an act of holiness are both attitudes that could be understood as logical results of living in divine harmony with the earth God has created.
-
No matter what else we do in life, what we choose, what we enjoy, or what we become, it will have been in vain if we don't fully choose the "good part," even this "best part"—Christ Himself—and take a heaping portion of it into our lives.
-
"True it is [the words of the scriptures] were first proclaimed by others, but they are now mine, for the Holy Spirit of God has borne witness to me that they are true; and it is now as though the Lord had revealed them to me in the first instance." —Elder Bruce R. McConkie