President Gordon B. Hinckley's Challenge and Promise

President Gordon B. Hinckley said in a

worldwide leadership training meeting:

“I am convinced there is no other organization anywhere to match the Relief Society of this Church.

If they will be UNITED and speak with ONE VOICE,

Their STRENGTH will be INCALCULABLE!”

10 January 2004, 20

Relief Society - A Restoration of an Ancient Form

RELIEF SOCIETY

“A Restoration of an Ancient Pattern”


Although the name may be modern date,

the institution is of ANCIENT ORIGIN.

We were told by our martyred prophet

that the same organization EXISTED

in the church ANCIENTLY.”

Eliza R. Snow

(Published in: “Daughters in My Kingdom”)

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

President Boyd K. Packer - Half Century - of Service

President Packer is at half-century milestone of service

Special witness, teacher of gospel of Jesus Christ
Published: Saturday, Oct. 1, 2011
Early on Saturday morning, Sept. 30, 1961, Boyd K. Packer, then Supervisor of the Church Seminaries and Institutes and a member of the Brigham Young University Administrative Council, was in a meeting with teachers and leaders who had come to Salt Lake City for training in conjunction with the 131st Semiannual General Conference.

Photo by Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
With the 181st Semiannual General Conference, President Boyd K. Packer of the Quorum of the Twelve has reached his 50th anniversary as a General Authority. He was called as an Assistant to the Twelve on Sept. 30, 1961.
He was summoned from that meeting to take a telephone call from President Hugh B. Brown, a counselor in the First Presidency, who told him he was to go to President David O. McKay's office.
"I was 37 years old. I had no idea what was coming," said the former seminary leader during a recent conversation with the Church News.

Photo from Deseret News archives.
Boyd K. Packer
What was coming was a call as a General Authority, first, as an Assistant to the Quorum of the Twelve and, eight and a half years later, as a member of that Quorum. He served as Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve from June 5, 1994, to Feb. 3, 2008, when President Thomas S. Monson became President of the Church, at which time President Packer became President of the Quorum of the Twelve.

Photos from Deseret News archives.
This general conference marks President Packer's 50th anniversary as a General Authority, making him the longest-tenured among the Brethren serving today. (President Monson was sustained on Oct. 4, 1963, as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve; at that time, Elder Packer was serving as an Assistant to the Twelve.)

Photo from Deseret News archives.
Elder Packer's call as a General Authority came just minutes before the day's conference sessions began. He did not have time to telephone his wife, Donna, who was at home recovering from an injury sustained in a fall, so she heard the news of his call as she and her mother were listening to conference on the radio.

Photo from Deseret News archives.
"I don't know where the years have gone. There I was — and here I am," said President Packer, who is 87. With a smile that hinted of his warm sense of humor and a wave of his hand, he said, "The time's gone like that."

Photo from Deseret News archives.
In 1985, Elder James E. Faust, left, Elder Boyd K. Packer and Elder Dallin H. Oaks - all of the Quorum of the Twelve - served together on the Missionary Executive Council.
He said of his call as an Assistant to the Twelve that he felt he was "flying with a higher flock than I belonged to."
But members of that flock took him under their collective wing. He knew personally only one member of the Quorum of the Twelve at the time of his call, Elder Spencer W. Kimball, who had visited the Intermountain Indian School in Brigham City, Utah, where Brother Packer had been a seminary teacher.

Photo from Deseret News archives.
"I had quite a schooling as I learned from the senior Brethren," President Packer said. "I learned to be taught.
"It's one thing to study the gospel and another to study men who have given their lives to it," he said of the Brethren with whom he served in the early years as a General Authority and who since have passed away. "President McKay had a great influence on me. Elder Marion G. Romney, Elder N. Eldon Tanner and Elder Kimball were my mentors.

Photo from Deseret News archives.
For many years, Elder Boyd K. Packer served on the LDS Servicemen's Committee (now Military Relations Committee). For many years, Elder Boyd K. Packer served on the LDS Servicemen's Committee (now Military Relations Committee).
"Elder LeGrand Richards (born in 1886) was my history book. I learned in those early days to associate with the older Brethren. I would walk back from meetings in the temple with Elder Richards. He walked very slowly because he had a crippled leg. The other Brethren would say, 'Oh, you're so kind.' I thought, 'You don't know how selfish I am.' I would ask Elder Richards questions. He knew everything."
President Packer spoke of his associations with Elder Joseph Fielding Smith, who on Jan. 23, 1970, became the 10th president of the Church. "He was a wonderful man. I liked to be around him and just listen to him and study him." Elder Packer worked closely with Elder Harold B. Lee, who became the 11th Church president on July 7, 1972, and Elder Mark E. Petersen.

Photo from Deseret News archives.
Elder Boyd K. Packer converses with children outside one of the 11 chapels he dedicated in Guatemala in 1979.Elder Boyd K. Packer converses with children outside one of the 11 chapels he dedicated in Guatemala in 1979.
He spoke with admiration of Elder Bruce R. McConkie, who "was regarded as very rigid and staid, but he had more humor than many of the others. He was very pleasant to be around."
President Packer said, "If we look at the past, we can know where we're going. The footprints are there, marching in a line. We need to take a thought for where we've been and where we're heading."
President Packer was preparing his address for this conference at the time of his conversation with the Church News. Asked how he goes about preparing a talk, he commented that making an early start helps, and that his early start "begins as soon as the last conference has ended."

Photo from Deseret News archives.
In 1985, during a visit to Asia, Elder Boyd K. Packer evokes laughter from Chinese workmen in Canton as he hoists buckets with one of their yokes. In 1985, during a visit to Asia, Elder Boyd K. Packer evokes laughter from Chinese workmen in Canton as he hoists buckets with one of their yokes.
Ever a special witness and teacher of the gospel of Jesus Christ — he is the author of the widely used Teach Ye Diligently — he said that the Brethren have different ways of preparing talks, but all rely on the Spirit.

Photo courtesy President Boyd K. Packer
While presiding over the New England Mission, Pres. Boyd K. Packer and Sister Donna Packer share a meal with their children and guests.
"It's just that simple. I also work at it. I would much rather get up and just talk," President Packer said. However, a prepared text is needed for purposes such as translation of talks into more than 93 languages. Typically, President Packer said, he goes through 20-25 drafts of his talks, with the Spirit moving him as he sits with scriptures open on his desk and paper and pen at the ready.

Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News
President Boyd K. Packer on his 85th birthday. He and his wife, Donna pose in their back yard. Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009.
This will mark the 100th time he has given an address in general conference since he was set apart as a General Authority.

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