Chelsea and Matt came to visit us at the beginning of June to see some of the beautiful sites here in London. We picked them up at Heathrow, drove to the London Temple where they freshened up and then went into London for a show.
Les Miserables
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A panoramic shot of Piccadilly Circus at dawn which shows both the Memorial and the "Times Square-like" signs. Piccadilly Circus is the center of commercial activity in London. |
Chelsea and Matt with the Queens Theatre in the background and the Les Miserables sign. Before the show, we stopped for dinner at the Mexican restaurant Tortillas. |
The obligatory selfie in the Queens Theatre before the show. The theatre was relatively small but they used a large "turn-table" on the stage for Les Miserables and the singing was outstanding. We heard each other humming songs from the show for days thereafter. ;-) |
Elder and Sister Burkinshaw with the Les Miserables icon on the curtain before the show. |
Hever Castle
After a good nights sleep, Chelsea and Matt went for an endowment session while we worked the early shift at the Temple. After our shift, we went to visit Hever Castle.
The gatehouse to the Hever Castle estate. |
Chelsea and Matt in front of Hever Castle. Notice the weather was the traditional English drizzle. |
The royals crests of Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII and Anne of Cleves (another of Henry VIII wives). |
Hever Castle with a mother swan and her seven baby swans (cygnets) swimming behind. |
A mother swan with her seven cygnets (baby swans) in tow.
Chelsea and Matt at the lake created on the River Eden at the Hever Castle estate. |
Chelsea with the Italian gardens of Hever Castle in the background. |
The Red Barn
Following our visit to Hever Castle, we had a traditional English pub dinner at the Red Barn restaurant.
Matt and Chelsea in front of the Red Barn restaurant. |
Matt had the traditional fish and chips with mushy peas, Chelsea had the Red Barn burger with chips, Sister Burkinshaw had a chicken salad and Elder Burkinshaw had chicken Kiev. |
Chelsea and Matt with one of the sheep at the Red Barn |
Chelsea and Matt with a Holstein cow at the Red Barn |
Patti and Rayde - Eastbourne
Patti and Rayde at the "Seven Sisters" chalk cliff formation near the coastal English Channel city of Eastbourne. |
Patti and Rayde with the Beachy Head lighthouse near Eastbourne. |
Patti and Rayde and the Belle Tout lighthouse near Birling Gap. |
Red poppies growing on the hill near the Belle Tout lighthouse. |
Patti and Rayde at Hever Castle with the traditional English drizzle. |
Patti and Rayde in front of Hever Castle. |
London Weekend
On Saturday we worked the early shift at the London Temple while Patti and Rayde went into London to see the Tower of London. Chelsea and Matt returned from Paris on the EuroStar train via the chunnel (tunnel under the English Channel) and we all met up for dinner and stayed at the Marriott Kensington hotel. Sunday morning we attended church at the Hyde Park chapel.
Patti and Rayde in front of the Hyde Park Chapel. |
Close-up of Patti and Rayde at the Hyde Park chapel. The chapel was dedicated in 1961 by President David O McKay while Elder Holland and Elder Cook served in the British mission. |
Matt and Chelsea at the Hyde Park Chapel. |
Matt and Chelsea in front the the Hyde Park meetinghouse which is also home of the England London Mission and other offices of the church as well as the Hyde Park stake. |
Chelsea cooling her feet in the Princess Diana Memorial Fountain in Hyde Park. |
Sister Burkinshaw and Patti in front of the Princess Diana Memorial. |
Sister Burkinshaw, Matt and Chelsea in front of the Victoria and Albert Museum which is next to the Hyde Park Chapel. |
Patti and Rayde in front of the Victoria and Albert Museum. The museum was founded in 1852 and is the world's largest museum of applied and decorative arts and design with over 2.27 million objects. |
Chelsea in front the Joseph Mallord William Turner's 1831 painting "Life-Boat and Manby Apparatus Going off to a Stranded Vessel Making Signal (Blue Lights) of Distress" The Manby apparatus was a lifesaving device of a rope fired fom a motar. It was invented by Captain George Manby after a shipwreck in 1807 at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. President Thomas S. Monson called this painting "To the Rescue" in his General Conference talk of the same title which may well have heralded the change from "Home/Visiting Teaching" to "Ministering" in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. |
Dover Cliffs, Dover Castle and Canterbury Cathedral
On our P-Day, we rented a van and drove to Dover to see the cliffs and the castle and then to Canterbury to see the Cathedral which is equivalent to the Vatican for the Church of England.
Matt and Chelsea with the Dover chalk cliffs. The chalk cliffs here are not as white as the cliffs near Eastbourne but that is because the cliffs in Eastbourne are continually sloughing off. |
Patti and Sister Burkinshaw at the Dover cliffs with Dover Castle in the background. |
Matt and Chelsea at the white cliffs of Dover with the Dover Castle in the background. |
Matt and Chelsea at the entrance to Dover Castle. |
Patti and Rayde at the Dover Castle Entrance. |
Interesting background information about the history of Dover Castle. |
Patti and Rayde at the Dover Castle entrance. |
Queen Chelsea and King Matt on their thrones in Dover Castle. |
Chelsea and Matt and Patti and Rayde at the back entrance to Dover Castle. |
Chelsea and Matt at the backside of Dover Castle. Dover is the largest of the castles in England and was strategic as France is less than 20 miles across the Channel. |
Matt and Chelsea at Canterbury Cathedral, the home cathedral of the Archbishop of Canterbury who is the head of the Church of England and the Worldwide Anglican Communion |
Matt, Chelsea Sister and Elder Burkinshaw at Canterbury Cathedral. |
Chelsea and Matt on the stunningly beautiful grounds of the London Temple. |
Chelsea and Matt at the reflection pond in front of the London Temple. It is an idyllic setting for the House of the Lord. |
We recently provided instruction for the temple ordinance workers here in the London Temple and we share our presentation here.
The Principle of
Non-Distraction in Temple Service
London Temple, Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Jeff:
British author Samuel Johnson (1709-1794) once said “We need to be reminded
more than we need to be instructed.” He probably
meant that we already have plenty of knowledge. We just need to put it into
practice and that is our objective today.
Stacey: When
we are called to serve in the Temple, it is a humbling experience and we may
wonder how we can rise to the daunting responsibility to administer the most
important laws, rites and ordinances given to man.
Jeff: An
experience shared by President Dallin H Oaks is painfully instructive:
“Shortly
after my calling as an Apostle, I had a … landmark lesson about the deficiency of service that is conscious of
self. I spoke to Elder Boyd K.
Packer about how inadequate I felt for the calling I had received. He responded
with this mild reproof and challenging insight:
“I
suppose your feelings are understandable.
But you should work for a condition where you will not be preoccupied
with yourself and your own feelings of inadequacy and can give your entire
concern to others and to the work of the Lord …” (Dallin H Oaks, Life’s
Lessons Learned, Deseret Book, 2011)
The
meta-message? It’s not about you!
Today
we will remind you of a principle taught repeatedly by President Oaks that can
help all of us be effective temple ordinance workers.
Stacey: President
Oaks said:
“I
will not suggest detailed rules, since the circumstances in … our
worldwide Church are so different that a specific rule … required in one setting
may be inappropriate in another. Rather,
I will suggest a principle based on the doctrines. If all understand
this principle and act in harmony with it, there should be little need for
rules.
“The
principle I suggest ... is that they should not do anything that would
distract any [patron]… from his or her worship and [making] … of covenants.” (Dallin H Oaks, “The Aaronic
Priesthood and the Sacrament,” GC Oct 1998)
This
is the Principle of Non-Distraction.
Our calling as trainers centers around
this principle.
·
Each ordinance worker is responsible to
memorize the ordinances so they can be presented in a way that will not
distract patrons from the covenants they make.
·
As trainers, we teach uniformity using the
Administrative Guidelines: Who is
responsible for what, where things are to be stored, etc. so those things do
not distract the patrons from the ordinances.
Jeff: President
Oaks went on to say, “This principle of non-distraction suggests some companion principles.”
Companion Principle 1: “…always be clean in appearance and reverent
in the manner in which [you] perform [your] solemn and sacred
responsibilities.” (Ibid.)
1. How might we be neat and clean
in our appearance so as not to distract patrons?
a. Shirt is tucked in, Tie is
straight
b. Clothing is not stained (Special
soap is available in the laundry)
c. Fresh breath (carry mints
and rinse out your mouth after eating and eat a mint)
2. Reverence is a challenge
because we are a social people and enjoy being together. That is good!
Millennium bubble. What locations require special reverence?
a. Behind the Veil: Once the 5-minute bell goes off, limit
conversation to that needed for our assignments.
b. Initiatory: Only assignment-related conversation in the
booths and very limited conversation outside the booths.
Is harsh correction necessary? No! For
those who might forget just a kind
smile and perhaps a wink
for repeat offenders.
Stacey: Companion Principle 2: “To avoid distracting from
the sacred occasion … speak … clearly
and distinctly. … All present should be helped to understand …
ordinance[s] and covenants so important that the Lord prescribed the exact words to be uttered. All should be helped to focus on those sacred
words…” (Ibid.)
1. Speak the words of the
ordinances without haste and with the reverence and love they are intended to
communicate.
2. Speak the words with
exactness, truly and faithfully. These are the Lord’s words and they are
sacred. Ensure the sacred cards are
available and reviewed regularly.
3. Also, quiet voices are
important so patrons can focus on the ordinances especially when two or more are
in an initiatory booth.
Jeff: Companion Principle 3: “…a reverent and orderly manner, with no needless motions
or expressions that call attention to themselves.”
Particularly when we begin
to officiate or follow in an endowment session, we may feel self-conscious and
awkward at times.
1. Stay focused on what you are
doing. 85 and 70 sec. for 1st
and 2nd MPH tokens.
2. If you make a mistake, don’t
make it more obvious by grimacing or
other self-flagellation. Example of
graceful officiator.
A few months ago, I
officiated in a session with 28 patrons; 16 men and 12 women. As I wrote the numbers on the report at the
beginning of the session, it caught my attention because Sister Burkinshaw and
I have 28 grandchildren; 16 boys and 12 girls.
I was reminded that the Prophet Joseph Smith taught: “…The Great Parent
of the universe looks upon the whole of the human family with a fatherly care
and paternal regard,” for “His love [is] unfathomable.”
We pray for each of our
grandchildren by name at least twice each day and we love each one dearly. This helped me better understand the
unfathomable love Heavenly Father has for each of those patrons, His dear children.
I tried to smile and perform my duties
so the patrons would feel the love and approbation of the Father of us all. This has become a pattern that I try to
follow.
Stacey: President Oaks concludes by
summarizing the elements of the Principle of Non-Distraction:
“All who officiate … should be well groomed and modestly dressed, with
nothing about their personal appearance that calls special attention to
themselves. In appearance as well as
actions, they should avoid
distracting anyone present from full attention to their worship and covenant
making…” (Ibid.)
We
can best follow that counsel by remembering in whose place we stand as we serve
in the temple and the love and joy Heavenly Father has for His children, our
temple patrons.
Stacey: In
performing our assignments, we should convey the same joy Adam and Eve
expressed in Moses chapter 5, which has recently
become more familiar to us all.
Jeff: Said Father Adam, “Blessed be the name of God, for because of my
transgression my eyes are opened, and in this life I
shall have joy, and again in the flesh I shall see God.”
(Moses 5:10)
Stacey: And Mother Eve taught “Were
it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and never should
have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption, and the
eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient.” (Moses 5:11)
We apply the principle of
non-distraction best when we serve with joy for the message and love
for the patrons.
In
the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.Elder and Sister Burkinshaw