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When Joseph Smith penned the words, “Let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power,” he was cold, hungry, and imprisoned. In this week’s study, Rebecca and Gunnar explore how that counsel — born in suffering — still calls us to faith today. From the siege of Far West to Emma’s letters of love, from the cry “O God, where art thou?” to the Lord’s answer, “My son, peace be unto thy soul,” this episode offers a message of courage, charity, and enduring trust in the Lord’s timing.
By Rebecca Burnham and Gunnar Michael AndersenWhen Joseph Smith penned the words, “Let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power,” he was cold, hungry, and imprisoned. In this week’s study, Rebecca and Gunnar explore how that counsel — born in suffering — still calls us to faith today. From the siege of Far West to Emma’s letters of love, from the cry “O God, where art thou?” to the Lord’s answer, “My son, peace be unto thy soul,” this episode offers a message of courage, charity, and enduring trust in the Lord’s timing.