From Deseret News archives:

Work of LDS women lauded

Many thousands gather to hear Relief Society message

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2006 11:16 a.m. MST
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Nurturing families, caring for each other and becoming instruments in the hands of God to bring about his work on Earth are hallmarks of what LDS Church leaders called the largest and most effective organization of its kind in the world.

Speaking live to hundreds of thousands of women gathered in the Conference Center and in chapels across the United States and many parts of the world, two members of the faith's First Presidency and its general Relief Society presidency lauded the work of millions of women worldwide.

Though seated on the dais Saturday, President Gordon B. Hinckley of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints addressed the assembly via a short video, extolling the virtues of the Relief Society. He said the organization was put in place a century and a half ago by God through the faith's founding prophet, Joseph Smith, as a society dedicated to boosting women's "natural instincts to promoting the common good."

Though small in number at its inception, it now numbers more than 5 million women around the world, "the largest and most effective organization of its kind in all the world," he said.

As its influence and reach continue to grow, "may light, understanding, knowledge and eternal truth grace the lives of generations of women yet to come because of this singular and divinely established institution."

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President James E. Faust, second counselor in the First Presidency, opened his remarks by thanking, on behalf of the church, all who have assisted with humanitarian efforts for hurricane victims.

He said women in the Relief Society have always been "instruments in the hands of God. . . . More opportunities have come to women since the Prophet Joseph Smith turned the key in their behalf than from the beginning of humankind on the Earth."

He urged women to try to forgive past hurts, saying sometimes "we spend too much energy dwelling on things that have passed and cannot be changed," and urging them to "tap into the life-giving source of the Atonement (of Christ) and the sweet peace of forgiveness will be ours."

But he acknowledged that some injuries are "so hurtful . . . that healing comes only with help from a higher power and hope for perfect justice and restitution in the next life."

Sister Bonnie D. Parkin, general Relief Society president, said she has had "many sweet moments when I have felt the Lord using me as an instrument." Likewise, LDS women have also been guided and helped in comforting, teaching and encouraging each other.

Yet because they are dedicated to the Lord, many women "are pretty hard on ourselves. Believe me when I say, each of us is much better than we think."

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Sister Bonnie D. Parkin, Relief Society president

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