“Contents,” Ensign, June 1993, 1 Ensign June 1993 Volume 23 Number 6 Contents Special Features First Presidency Message: Invitation to ExaltationPresident Thomas S. Monson Young John TaylorPaul Thomas Smith The Family—Now and ForeverTerry J. Moyer Reel Life vs. Real LifeJoseph Walker “Seek Ye Diligently”Elder George R. Hill III Crossing the DivideDon L. Brugger “So Much to Live For”Don L. Searle After Julie DiedClaron L. Oakley Life without HimLola B. Walters Seasoned ServiceDerin Head Rodriguez Well-Balanced WidowhoodKellene R. Adams From Footholds to Strongholds: Spreading the Gospel WorldwideRichard O. Cowan Homemaking: The Flexible Meeting “Wonderful! Wonderful! Wonderful!”Donna Shin Regular Features Mormon JournalWe Wanted to Renew Our Vows Diana BerryBeautiful as an Angel Floy Daun MackayTen-Minute Turning Point LeNore Pack MerrittMy Mind Was Flooded with Ideas Alvin R. Nethercott Speaking Today: Infinite Needs and Finite ResourcesElder Glenn L. Pace I Have a QuestionBearing testimony to others Steve F. GillilandBefriending less-active members R. Michael Falck Of Good ReportTemple Week: Spiritual Crescendo for Stake ConferenceThe “Write” Type of Competition The Visiting Teacher: Dealing with Disabilities Random SamplerBasic BudgetingExtending the Blessings News of the Church On the cover: Front: photo by Craig Dimond. Back: photo by Welden Andersen. Inside front cover: “With Joy Wend Your Way,” by Ardith Oddous, oil on canvas, 36″ x 40″, 1988. Courtesy of Don Biery. A painting depicting a group of pioneer children being taught by an older woman in a wagon company. Inside back cover: Nauvoo Temple, by Thomas M. Easterly, daguerreotype, ca. 1846. Courtesy of Missouri Historical Society, Easterly 130. The Nauvoo Temple, built between 1840 and 1846 and dedicated publicly on 1–3 May 1846, stood as a monument to the determination of the Saints to “build a house to my name, for the Most High to dwell therein.” (D&C 124:27.) The temple was burned by an arsonist’s fire in 1848, and the walls were destroyed by a tornado in 1850.