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Why are temple ordinances important?


Why are temple ordinances important?

Prepare Yourself Spiritually

Temple ordinances lead to the greatest blessings available to Heavenly Father’s children. These ordinances prepare us to live forever with Heavenly Father and our families after this life. They bless us with spiritual power and direction during mortality. In the temple, we can also receive essential ordinances in behalf of ancestors who died without having the opportunity to receive these ordinances for themselves.

Resources to Help You Prepare

These resources are to help you prepare for the “Learn together” section of the meeting.

Questions to Ponder before You Teach

How have temple ordinances guided and blessed your life? How has participating in these ordinances brought you closer to Heavenly Father?

What experiences have the quorum members had with temple ordinances? How can they help each other learn about and gain a testimony of temple ordinances?

What can the young men do to prepare to learn? For example, they could read a talk, watch a video, or study a scripture related to this doctrine.

Teaching in the Savior’s Way

The Savior was often found teaching in the temple. He has also taught through His modern-day prophets that temple ordinances lead us to the greatest blessings available through the Atonement. As you come to understand the importance of temple ordinances, you can more effectively encourage the young men to prepare to receive temple ordinances for themselves.

Meeting Outline

1. Counsel Together and Share Experiences

Led by a member of the quorum presidency; approximately 5–10 minutes

Lead a discussion about items such as the following:

  • Our quorum: Who is missing today? What visits do we need to make? Who should we invite to an upcoming activity? Who needs our help and prayers?

  • Our duties: What assignments do we need to make? What assignments have we fulfilled? How have we invited others to come unto Christ, and how can we invite others now?

  • Our lives: Remind the quorum of the discussion from the last meeting. What experiences have we had with applying what we learned? What experiences have we had in the past few weeks that strengthened our testimonies of the gospel?

If possible, discuss these items beforehand in a quorum presidency meeting.

2. Learn Together

Led by a leader or teacher or a member of the quorum; approximately 25–35 minutes

After studying the above resources and following the inspiration of the Spirit, you may select one or more of the activities below to help quorum members understand the doctrine.

  • Invite the young men to finish the following sentence and share their answers with the class: “When I go to the temple, .” What other answers do they find in the bulleted list in Elder Kent F. Richards’s talk “The Power of Godliness”? They could also search the talk and look for answers to the question “Why are temple ordinances important?” Ask the young men to share a recent experience they had attending the temple. What blessings have they received from temple work? As part of this activity, you could show “Sam Hepworth Mission Prep Video” or “I Accepted the Challenge” and discuss the blessings that the youth in the videos received because of temple work.

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    Sam Hepworth Mission Prep Video

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    I Accepted the Challenge

  • Invite the young men to look for blessings that come through temple worship in President Thomas S. Monson’s message “Blessings of the Temple.” What blessings have come to them as they have attended the temple and participated in temple ordinances? What does the scriptural metaphor of a river in Elder Dale G. Renlund’s message “Family History and Temple Work: Sealing and Healing” teach them about the blessings of the temple? You could also share experiences from your own life that illustrate how temple ordinances have blessed you.

  • Show a picture of a married couple in front of a temple (see Gospel Art Book [2009], no. 120). Invite the quorum to read together Doctrine and Covenants 131:1–4 and look for the blessings promised to those who enter into the new and everlasting covenant of marriage. What blessings will be withheld from those who do not enter into this covenant? How is the Lord’s view of marriage different from the world’s view? Share your testimony with the young men about the blessings that are available to them and their future families as they participate in the ordinances of the temple.

  • Show the video “Temples Are a Beacon,” and ask the young men why they think the Mou Tham family was willing to make such great sacrifices to go to the temple. What sacrifices have they made or seen others make to attend the temple and receive its blessings?

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    Temples are a Beacon

  • Divide the quorum in half, and ask one half to imagine that they are the deceased ancestors of the other half. Invite them to imagine that they died without being baptized but have accepted the gospel in the spirit world. Ask each of them to write a message to their living descendants and give it to one of the young men in the other half of the quorum. Ask the quorum members to read the messages out loud. Write on the board the title of this lesson, and invite the young men to think about this question as they read the third and fourth paragraphs in the section titled “Family History Technology” in Elder Quentin L. Cook’s talk “Roots and Branches.” Ask them to share their thoughts.

3. Plan to Act

Led by a member of the quorum presidency; approximately 5–10 minutes

  • Ask the young men to discuss any feelings or impressions they had during the meeting. What was meaningful to them? Is there something they can do personally or as a quorum to apply what they have learned?

  • Give the young men a few minutes to record what they will do in the coming weeks to act on their impressions. Invite them to share their ideas.

  • Remind the young men that they will have the opportunity to share their experiences at the beginning of the next meeting.

Related Youth Activities

Plan a Mutual activity that will help the young men apply what they learned in this lesson.