From Deseret News archives:

Pres. Hinckley dedicated his life to church

Since his mission, he spent just a year not working for church

Published: Monday, Jan. 28, 2008 12:00 a.m. MST
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"In the church, we serve where we are called to serve," President Gordon B. Hinckley said after being called as counselor to LDS Church President Spencer W. Kimball in 1981.

And President Hinckley practiced what he preached. From the time he returned from his mission in 1935, he spent only a year outside of church employment.

"A life of service is a gift to God and the only real way to truly worship Jesus Christ," he said at in an LDS Church Christmas devotional in 1984.

As a teenager, he was influenced by a general conference address in which President Heber J. Grant quoted 1 Nephi 3:7, "I will go and do the things which the Lord hath commanded...."

That commitment to serve became full time in 1933 when President Hinckley accepted a call to be a missionary. Assigned to the British Isles, he was called to be an assistant to Elder Joseph F. Merrill , a member of the Quorum of the Twelve and president of the European Mission.

When he returned from his mission in 1935, Elder Hinckley was invited to report to the First Presidency about his mission.

President Heber J. Grant told him: "Brother Hinckley, we'll give you 15 minutes."

"It was one of the highlights of my life that I met with President Heber J. Grant and his counselors," he recalled. "They spent more than an hour asking me questions."

A committee of the Quorum of the Twelve had been organized for broadcasting, publicity and mission literature. A few days later, the young returned missionary was asked to take full-time employment as executive secretary of this committee.

He wrote and produced "The Fulness of Times" and "New Witness for Christ" series of recordings. Some aired on 400 radio stations nationwide. He also supervised translations of the Book of Mormon and designed the church's 1939 exhibit at the San Francisco World's Fair.

He helped pioneer the use of filmstrips, motion pictures and radio spots in missionary work. He wrote missionary pamphlets and supervised the translation of the scriptures in several languages.

In 1942, he compiled 60 color slides of church history sites and wrote a script. He retraced the pioneer trail and, as a result, located the grave of Rebecca Winters, grandmother of President Grant. It had been previously lost to the church.

In 1951, he was named executive secretary of the General Missionary Committee and a year later introduced uniform missionary lessons. These were garnered from missions nationwide.

In 1954, President David O. McKay asked him to spearhead the production of temple materials in 13 languages. The methods he developed are still being used in a number of the temples.

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