While there are many more famous LDS women in these and other areas, I stopped here because, well, there has to be a stopping place somewhere. Right? But this is another thing you can do an internet search for. It’s pretty impressive.
In Matthew 5:14-16 it reads, “Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.”
While I think it can be hard to follow people, even our friends sometimes—let alone celebrities!---online without facing the comparison game, I still find this list highly inspiring.
President Heber J. Grant said the following:
“That which we try to do, and persist in doing, becomes easy to do, not because its nature is changed, but because our power to do is developed” (Josiah Gilbert Holland [Timothy Titcomb, pseud.], Gold-Foil: Hammered from Popular Proverbs [New York: Charles Scribner, 1859], 291).
And considering all the things he just decided he was going to learn to do, and then actually learned to do, I feel safe saying that he knows what he’s talking about.
Now we’d love to hear from you? What’s a talent you’ve cultivated that you’re proud of? Hit that reply button and let us know. And be sure to check in next week for our final Divine Nature of Women emails, Women of the Scriptures & What We Can Learn from Them.
If you’re going to our Women’s Conference this Saturday, Fortified in Christ, where some of those above celebrities—and many more!—will be speaking, then we’ll see you there.
Love,
The Cedar Fort Family
P.S. What to learn more about amazing women in the church? We’ve got you covered in our Celebrating Women Collection here, from Bedtime Stories for Girls of Destiny to Women of the Restoration to A Future Only God Can See for You.