Sanctorian wrote:There are clear guidelines laid out by the LDS Church regarding bearing testimony at church and what’s considered appropriate. In a letter written by the first presidency, it says “parents and teachers should help children learn what a testimony is and when it is appropriate for them to express it.”
This was in the fox13 newscast last night. Does anyone have reference?
From the FP letter you linked:
to the right of the FP letter, the first link, entitled "Find resources for learning and teaching about testimony," contains this:
The foundation of a testimony is the knowledge that Heavenly Father lives and loves His children; that Jesus Christ lives, that He is the Son of God, and that He carried out the infinite Atonement; that Joseph Smith is the prophet of God who was called to restore the gospel; that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the Savior's true Church on the earth; and that the Church is led by a living prophet today.
https://www.LDS.org/topics/testimony?lang=eng
Note that this list exactly parallels the 5 part template that Doc previously listed:
Doc, quoting from LDS.org, wrote:My Testimony
1. I know that God is our Heavenly Father and He loves us.
2. I know that His Son, Jesus Christ, is our Savior and Redeemer.
3. I know that Joseph Smith is a prophet of God. He restored the gospel of Jesus Christ to the earth and translated the Book of Mormon by the power of God.
4. I know that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the Lord’s Church on the earth today.
5. I know that this Church is led by a living prophet who receives revelation.
So yes, it looks like the template for exactly what a testimony should be is clearly spelled out on LDS.org, and distributed church-wide.
Water Dog, responding to Doc's 5 point template, wrote:This makes me nauseous. Hard to defend this. What I'll say is that I don't think this is all that mainstream.
Hard to take seriously comments such as "[not] all that mainstream," and "I don't know that we teach this anymore" when it is all over LDS.org.