

Time is an equalizer, since all have the same 24 hours in a day, Elder Uchtdorf said, adding that what makes the difference is how an individual uses that time. He reminded of the two great commandments - to love God and to love one’s neighbor - and how it easily and effectively it can be done “in normal and natural ways” with the principles of love, serve and invite.Īnother common theme at the Luke devotional and the Glendale multi-stake leadership instruction was God’s gift of agency and the wise use of time. He repeatedly spoke of how his patriarchal blessing and temple endowment 60 years early had served “as a Liahona, a compass” to guide him early in his life. 10-13 for weekend leadership trainings - returned to special sites, many from 60 years ago, as they celebrated faith, family and flight.įrom opening-night messages to Latter-day Saints gathered at the base where he trained in 1962 to a concluding afternoon visit to an ailing local bishop, Elder and Sister Uchtdorf taught and exemplified ministering - to the many and to the one. The member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and his wife - in Phoenix Nov. Uchtdorf and Sister Harriet Uchtdorf from the flight line of Luke Air Force Base west of Phoenix, Arizona, to the historic Mesa Arizona Temple on the other side of the Valley of the Sun and then back to a meaningful palm-lined residence in the western suburb of Glendale.

PHOENIX, Arizona - A literal walk down memory lane recently took Elder Dieter F.
