Can you change thinking patterns like “I do things this way, because that’s just the way its done,” to “Is there a better way? Is there a simpler way that will give me more time to focus on the things that matter most?” If you can, your life will never be the same.
Members of the LDS Church embrace a theology that includes a daily quest for personal perfection, if not in this life, then in the afterlife. That quest can become toxic if it morphs into self-righteousness and judgment of how well others meet one’s own internal standard. This is the first in a series of stories about the impact such judgments can have on individuals, families and the church as a whole.
This is post 1 of 2 in the series “Tithing Settlement in 2 Days” During the holidays, Bishopric members should be home with their families. These posts explore methods to…
Previously I posted about using the excellent, free, “Getting Things Done” tool, Asana, in your ward or other church-related organization. Today, I interviewed Bishops & MLH-contributors Jeff VanDrimmelen and Kurt Francom…
The popular LDS blog “By Common Consent” featured a church-hack by me! If you haven’t reviewed the excellent “Church-Hacker” series of articles there, check out my submission, and then read through…
So you may have recently joined, or heard about Google+. Google what? Google Plus. Google Plus is the new “social networking” platfrom from Google. It’s much more than just “Google’s…
“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” —Leonardo da Vinci Here’s a template for a sacrament meeting program. I like this one because it’s simple. Just click USE THIS TEMPLATE, replace the…
That is how it can be done if your ward Relief Society has an email group in place. It can be used for Relief Society announcements, baptisms, compassionate service, temple…