Seminary
Lesson 44—Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8: Listen to Your Redeemer


“Lesson 44—Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8: Listen to Your Redeemer,” Doctrine and Covenants Seminary Teacher Manual (2025)

“Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8,” Doctrine and Covenants Seminary Teacher Manual

Lesson 44: Doctrine and Covenants 29

Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8

Listen to Your Redeemer

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The Savior’s Love for us

Heavenly Father has great love for all His children. He and His Son want us to be happy in this life and to join Them in gathering all people back to Their presence. This lesson can help students better understand the desires Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ have for them.

Possible Learning Activities

Who do you trust?

Consider ways you might help students see that trusting someone greatly depends on understanding their motives or desires. The following is one way you could do this.

Think about who you would be willing to trust the following with and why.

  1. Your house keys

  2. Your password to a personal device or account

  3. Your most personal dream or goal

  • What do you know about that person or people that influences your willingness to trust them?

In your study journal, write one or two sentences describing what you know about the motives and desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. If you know something about Their motives or desires, reflect on how that influences your willingness to trust Them. If you do not know much about Their motives or desires, think about why knowing this is an important step to being willing to trust Them.

Desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ

Prior to a Church conference in September 1830, the Savior spoke in Doctrine and Covenants 29 of the love and desires He and Heavenly Father have for all people.

The following activity is one way to help students study Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8. It may need to be modified to accommodate the size or needs of your class.

Write the numbers one through eight on the board. Then give students the following instructions. Have them follow each instruction before giving them the next.

  1. Read Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8 and mark what you learn about the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ in each verse.

  2. Write your name on the board next to the number of a verse that has special meaning to you.

    Wait for all students to write their names on the board next to a verse number before moving on to the next steps.

  3. If possible, gather with two or three students who wrote their name next to the same verse number.

    If only one student writes their name next to a verse number, consider allowing that student to choose to work individually or to join another group.

  4. Share with your group the words or phrases you marked in your verse and what they teach you about the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.

  5. Within your group, discuss a question that can help deepen your understanding of the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.

Display or provide each group with a list of questions they could select to discuss. Students could select a question from the list of suggested questions, or they could create their own questions. Below are some examples:

  • How can knowing this truth influence the way you see yourself or others?

  • When have you witnessed Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ demonstrate these desires in your life or in the lives of others?

  • What are some additional scriptures that teach a similar truth? (Look at the doctrinal mastery passages, footnotes, or other resources to find some.)

  • What have prophets, apostles, or other Church leaders taught that support this truth? (Search for statements in Gospel Library.)

  • How might this verse increase our ability to see life from an eternal perspective?

  • What questions do you have about this verse? What questions could be asked to better understand this verse? (Work together to find possible answers.)

  • How might believing or living the principles taught in this verse influence someone’s relationship with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ?

  • Why might some people find it difficult to believe or to live the teachings of this verse? What could help them overcome that challenge?

To allow groups to deepen their understanding, you might have another student choose a different question and discuss it as a group. When students stop sharing or become distracted, this may indicate it is time to adjust the learning activity. If desired, students could do the activity again by choosing a new verse, forming new groups, discussing the verse they selected, and following the steps listed above.

When students have finished working in groups, invite a few to share with the class what they have learned about the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.

The good will of God

Among the many truths that students may have discovered, one truth we can learn from these verses is that Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ desire to give us Their kingdom. You might invite students to mark this truth in verse 5. Share the following statement and invite students to respond to the corresponding questions.

Elder Dale G. Renlund of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles shared the following:

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Elder Dale G. Renlund

Our Heavenly Father wants you to become His heir and receive all that He has. He cannot offer you more. He cannot promise you more. He loves you more than you know and wants you to be happy in this life and in the life to come. (Dale G. Renlund, “Your Divine Nature and Eternal Destiny,” Liahona, May 2022, 76)

  • How does understanding the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ affect how you feel about Them?

  • How does understanding Their desires influence the way you feel about the counsel They give us?

Consider concluding by inviting students to look back at their journal entry from the beginning of class. Invite them to ponder truths they have learned about the desires of Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ that they could add to their entry.

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