Difference between revisions of "Family Home Evening"

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== Family Home Evening, Family Night ==
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[[Image:Fhe_image.jpg|frame|Mormon families set aside Monday evenings for "Family Home Evening" • Intellectual Reserve © 2008]]
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The '''“Family Home Evening”''' program was begun in 1915, when Mormon Church President [[Joseph F. Smith]] urged Church members to set aside one evening a week devoted specifically to the [[Family|family]]. Family Home Evenings, or Family Nights, are often held on Mondays.
  
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Members of the Mormon Church use Family Home Evening to strengthen family ties. Parents have the opportunity to teach their children about spiritual and secular matters and prepare them for life. Family Home Evening is held once a week as a time for families to sit down together and study the scriptures, talk about important life lessons, cultivate talents, discuss pressing issues, and plan activities and goals.
  
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As modern life fills with a myriad of distractions, it is important for families to share quality time together, having fun and learning about life and God’s teachings. In modern times the family has been assaulted with elements that cause disunity, infidelity, discontent, and a host of other spiritual illnesses. Members of the Church realize that the home is the most basic bulwark against an onslaught of negative influences. Therefore, Latter-day Saint parents require more of themselves. They try, with the aid of Church programs, to provide their families with experiences that encourage love, respect, harmony, and solidarity. This can all be accomplished through simple, positive experiences and moments of happiness, fun, and acceptance.  The Family Home Evening program is designed to magnify these positive learning and bonding experiences on a planned, weekly basis.
  
The '''“Family Home Evening”''' program began in 1915, when Mormon Church President Joseph F. Smith urged the Church members to set aside one evening a week devoted specifically to the family. Family Home Evenings, or Family Nights, are often held on Mondays. Family Home Evening is not just for Mormon families, but it is a very important concept in the lives of active Mormons.
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In an interview with the ''Boston Globe'', President [[Gordon B. Hinckley]] said, “I don’t hesitate to say if every family in the world practiced [the Family Home Evening program,] you’d see a very great difference in the solidarity of the families of the world” (interview, Boston Globe, 14 Aug. 2000).
  
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Isaiah said, ‘And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord. And great shall be the peace of thy children’ (Isaiah 54:13).
  
Members of the Mormon Church use Family Home Evening as a chance to strengthen family ties and to give parents a weekly opportunity to teach their children about spiritual and temporal matters and prepare them for life. Family Home Evening is held once a week, most often on Monday nights. Family Home Evening, or Family Night, is a time for parents to sit down with their children to study the scriptures with them, talk about important life lessons, cultivating talents, talk about family matters, and plan family activities and things of that nature.
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Although it may be difficult to find time for such weekly family gatherings, it is possible. President Gordon B. Hinckley offered, “You have to establish in your life some sense of prioritizing things, of giving emphasis to the important things and of laying aside the unimportant things that will lead to nothing. Establish a sense of what is good and what is not good, what is important and is not important; and that can become a marvelous blessing in your lives. . . . There is nothing more important than your families. You know that” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Ensign, Mar. 2003, 3).
  
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The practice of holding Family Home Evening is a powerful tool for improving the lives of families and individuals. It is a very important concept for all active Mormons, regardless of marital or familial status. Thus, besides families, childless newlyweds, single students and neighbors may gather Family Home Evening groups as a means of increasing mutual support and nurturing spiritual conviction.
  
From the beginning of this world, God’s prophets have tried to teach us that the most important organization is the family. Since the time of Adam, our loving God has organized his church on the earth for the purpose of teaching families how to be eternally happy. In the rush of our frantic lives, it is important for families to find quality time to spend together having fun and learning about life and God’s teachings.
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See also [[Family Home Evening 2]] and ''[[Proclamation to the World|The Family: A Proclamation to the World]]''
In our day, Satan strives to create unhappiness in our homes by provoking disunity, discontent, disharmony, and a host of other spiritual illnesses.
 
  
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[http://lds.org/family/home-evening?lang=eng Click here for help with Family Home Evening -- the link to LDS.org's new website devoted to Family Home Evening]
  
The greatest power Satan has in blocking the work of the Lord is in the home. ‘Sadly, it is here where he finds his greatest success, first by destroying family relationships and then by destroying the family unit’ (Peterson).
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Sources:
 
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:H. Burke Peterson, “Harmony in the Home,” Ensign, Jan. 1973, 114
 
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:Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Liahona, Mar. 2003, 3
To counteract this blatant attack on the family, parents must require more of themselves. They must provide their children with experiences that are love-producing and family-solidifying. This can be accomplished in daily teaching moments and activities done together as a family. Simple, positive experiences with a child can change the mood of your home and foster unifying moments and feelings of happiness and acceptance. The Family Home Evening program is designed to create these positive learning and bonding experiences on a weekly basis. (Peterson)
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[[Category:Marriage and Families]][[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]]
 
 
 
 
In an interview with the ''Boston Globe'', President Gordon B. Hinkley, current prophet of the Mormon Church said, “I don’t hesitate to say if every family in the world practiced [the Family Home Evening program,] you’d see a very great difference in the solidarity of the families of the world” (interview, Boston Globe, 14 Aug. 2000).
 
 
 
 
 
Isaiah said, ‘And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord. And great,’ he said, ‘shall be the peace of thy children’ [Isa. 54:13]
 
 
 
 
 
It is often hard to find time for such weekly family gatherings. In regard to creating this important time, President Gordon Hinkley states, “You have to establish in your life some sense of prioritizing things, of giving emphasis to the important things and of laying aside the unimportant things that will lead to nothing. Establish a sense of what is good and what is not good, what is important and is not important; and that can become a marvelous blessing in your lives.” “There is nothing more important than your families. You know that” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Ensign, Mar. 2003, 3).
 
 
 
  
 
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[[de:Familienabend]]
Sources:
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[[es:Noche de Hogar]]
H. Burke Peterson, “Harmony in the Home,” Ensign, Jan. 1973, 114
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[[it:Serata Famigliare]]
Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Liahona, Mar. 2003, 3
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[[fr:Soirée familiale]]
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[[ru:Домашний семейный вечер]]
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[[pt:Noite Familiar]]

Latest revision as of 12:09, 27 December 2010

Mormon families set aside Monday evenings for "Family Home Evening" • Intellectual Reserve © 2008

The “Family Home Evening” program was begun in 1915, when Mormon Church President Joseph F. Smith urged Church members to set aside one evening a week devoted specifically to the family. Family Home Evenings, or Family Nights, are often held on Mondays.

Members of the Mormon Church use Family Home Evening to strengthen family ties. Parents have the opportunity to teach their children about spiritual and secular matters and prepare them for life. Family Home Evening is held once a week as a time for families to sit down together and study the scriptures, talk about important life lessons, cultivate talents, discuss pressing issues, and plan activities and goals.

As modern life fills with a myriad of distractions, it is important for families to share quality time together, having fun and learning about life and God’s teachings. In modern times the family has been assaulted with elements that cause disunity, infidelity, discontent, and a host of other spiritual illnesses. Members of the Church realize that the home is the most basic bulwark against an onslaught of negative influences. Therefore, Latter-day Saint parents require more of themselves. They try, with the aid of Church programs, to provide their families with experiences that encourage love, respect, harmony, and solidarity. This can all be accomplished through simple, positive experiences and moments of happiness, fun, and acceptance. The Family Home Evening program is designed to magnify these positive learning and bonding experiences on a planned, weekly basis.

In an interview with the Boston Globe, President Gordon B. Hinckley said, “I don’t hesitate to say if every family in the world practiced [the Family Home Evening program,] you’d see a very great difference in the solidarity of the families of the world” (interview, Boston Globe, 14 Aug. 2000).

Isaiah said, ‘And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord. And great shall be the peace of thy children’ (Isaiah 54:13).

Although it may be difficult to find time for such weekly family gatherings, it is possible. President Gordon B. Hinckley offered, “You have to establish in your life some sense of prioritizing things, of giving emphasis to the important things and of laying aside the unimportant things that will lead to nothing. Establish a sense of what is good and what is not good, what is important and is not important; and that can become a marvelous blessing in your lives. . . . There is nothing more important than your families. You know that” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Ensign, Mar. 2003, 3).

The practice of holding Family Home Evening is a powerful tool for improving the lives of families and individuals. It is a very important concept for all active Mormons, regardless of marital or familial status. Thus, besides families, childless newlyweds, single students and neighbors may gather Family Home Evening groups as a means of increasing mutual support and nurturing spiritual conviction.

See also Family Home Evening 2 and The Family: A Proclamation to the World

Click here for help with Family Home Evening -- the link to LDS.org's new website devoted to Family Home Evening

Sources:

H. Burke Peterson, “Harmony in the Home,” Ensign, Jan. 1973, 114
Gordon B. Hinckley, “Family Home Evening,” Liahona, Mar. 2003, 3