Tuesday, January 22, 2013

February Apprentice Inspirements


February Theme:  

God is our King. The law of the gospel is our government. Our government was founded on Christian principles. 


Remember to memorize the scripture/quote to pass off today!



Read and mark your favorite parts of the following. Write your favorite quote(s) or idea(s). 


1) TJED for Teens, chapter 6.  

Write the answers to the questions in chapter 6. Make a copy (or write down) the daily questions and place them in a container. Start pulling out one each day, asking it to yourself and a parent, writing down the answers in a journal.  Ask your parent to help you make a daily habit of this until you finish the questions.  A good time for this daily habit might be dinnertime, family devotional, or personal scripture time. Set an alarm so you remember daily!  If you’d like to ask these questions to God in your prayers and listen and write down the answers, that’s even better!

2) The 5000 Year Leap. 

Choose two of these principles to read: 2, 8, 9, 22, 26. (Choose ones you haven’t read before.)  

3) Read “Terror, Triumph, and a Wedding Feast” by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland here.


And choose one or more of the following, being ready to share them in class: 


Teach one or both of the principles you chose from The 5000 Year Leap. You can use a PowerPoint presentation (Gavin did an awesome job last month), simulation, skit, poem, report, or any way you like to teach the class. 
Teach us the main ideas you got out of “Terror, Triumph, and a Wedding Feast,” as if nobody in the class had read it before.  What was inspiring or hopeful to you?  Did the speech change how you feel about living in the last days before Christ’s Second Coming? Use something physical to teach us – like an object lesson, a visual aid, a picture, a PowerPoint, group activity, or something else. 
Write a paper about the principles you learned in either 5000 Year Leap, Elder Holland, or both. Include your thoughts of how these principles apply to you. Choose your own inspirement that helps you ponder and apply what you learned. 

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