Musings, Technology and The Gospel
15 Mar
I often will find an awesome YouTube video that I want to share in a class I am teaching…. but how do I get it downloaded? Unless you are one of the lucky few, you don’t have an internet connection at church. I hope this post will give you some ideas of things that have worked for me.
NOTE: YouTube has said that they are working toward putting download options on all Video’s, but for now they are only on certain popular ones. So hopefully one day, this won’t be important.
The easiest way to download a YouTube video is the following:
You can play the video it downloads with Quicktime, which if it doesn’t play on your computer, you can download for free here.
Sometime you run across video’s from other sites you want to download. There is a nice Firefox Extension you can install that will look for the media on each page and allow you to download it. It is called SoThink Web Video Downloader for Firefox.
For those that might not be familiar with Firefox, it is a web browser like Internet Explorer or Safari and can be downloaded for free here.
After it is installed, you will see a little icon in the top right next to the google bar. Browse to the video you want to download and then click on the icon. It will have a URL in there of the video download. Right click on that and select Download.
The download will be in .flv flash format. You can watch that using Quicktime or VLC Media Player.
This is just two of dozens of ways to get videos offline. You should keep in mind that this is an area that is constantly changing. Google may change the way Video’s are online tomorrow and it might stop working. Sometimes it just will download the sound, and no video. It isn’t an exact science, and unless there is a Download option right next to the Video, there will probably always be the possiblity of problems. That being said, it does work mostly!
Feel free to share other ideas and tools you have used in the comments. Once you have it local, you can then put it on a DVD if you have software for that, or just bring a laptop to class to show the video. Good luck and happy teaching!!
This morning I was studying the story of Joshua and falling of the walls of Jericho in Joshua 6 and I came across this quote by Elder James E. Talmage in the Old Testament Student Manual that I thought was great!
“Some of the latest and highest achievements of man in the utilization of natural forces approach the conditions of spiritual operations. To count the ticking of a watch thousands of miles away; to speak in but an ordinary tone and be heard across the continent; to signal from one hemisphere and be understood on the other though oceans roll and roar between; to bring the lightning into our homes and make it serve as fire and torch; to navigate the air and to travel beneath the ocean surface; to make chemical and atomic energies obey our will—are not these miracles? The possibility of such would not have been received with credence before their actual accomplishment. Nevertheless, these and all other miracles are accomplished through the operation of the laws of nature, which are the laws of God.” (Talmage, Articles of Faith, pp. 222–23.)”
It is not a far stretch from this quote to say that the things that we do every day with technology is a miracle. Building applications, publishing to a worldwide audience instantly… pretty amazing!
Finding Answers from Conference – April 2008 Ensign
Several stories about how Conference has helped people receive inspiration and guidance in their lives. – Receiving Answers – Implementing their Counsel – Serving Again – Learning His Will – Filing the Hungry – Helps for Home Evening
- “Pray that one of the messages at conference will give you the personal revelation you need.” I knew that prayers could be answered through conference, but it never occurred to me to pray for the speakers in advance. Deciding to follow that advice, my wife and I specifically asked the Lord to direct our path through the conference speakers. We prayed for weeks as we eagerly awaited conference.
- To my amazement, the very first conference talk, Elder Richard G. Scott’s “Using the Supernal Gift of Prayer,”1 gave me the answer I so desperately sought. During his talk I recalled several impressions I had
- That experience really solidified my testimony of conference and prayer. The talks we hear during conference truly are the words of the Lord, and if we put our trust in Him and earnestly seek Him in fervent prayer, He will guide us in our decisions.
- After watching the Saturday sessions of April 2007 general conference, I began preparing for Sunday by implementing what the Brethren encouraged us to do
- During this time, the missionaries invited me to attend October general conference. What stood out most from the messages was not the content but my feelings
- I felt in both my mind and heart that I was listening to a prophet of God. I felt inspired and strengthened in my convictions; I also felt peace.
- Helps for Home Evening
- We got a great idea from a friend of ours. We have small children and it is constantly a struggle to get them to listen at conference. We have tried coloring and reading, but we end up spending most of our time telling the kids to be quiet. Well, this past Monday night at FHE we taught our kids the story of King Benjamin and focused on the tents all the families brought and how they faced their doors to the temple. We then decided that we would set up our tent in our house and let everyone come inside and watch General Conference out the door. We talked about making our tent a temple and what it meant when we entered the temple. To help us out, our 6 year old made steeples for our tent with an angel Moroni on the top. They will take off their shoes before entering our sacred temple. I am very hopeful that this will help them understand the sacredness and importance of Conference.
comment by Jeff VanDrimmelen
I just read a GREAT commencement talk by Hugh Nibley given in 1983 at BYU. This is his opening to the talk:
He goes on to talk about the difference between a leader and a manager. The conclusion is awesome (remember this is to a class of graduating students from BYU!):
“Most of you are here today only because you believe that this charade will help you get ahead in the world. But in the last few years things have got out of hand; “the economy,” once the most important thing in our materialistic lives, has become the only thing. We have been swept up in a total dedication to “the economy,” which like the massive mud slides of our Wasatch Front, is rapidly engulfing and suffocating everything. If President Kimball is “frightened and appalled” by what he sees, I can do no better than to conclude with his words: “We must leave off the worship of modern-day idols and a reliance on the `arm of flesh,’ for the Lord has said to all the world in our day, `I will not spare any that remain in Babylon’” (“The False Gods We Worship,” Ensign, June 1976, p. 6). And Babylon is where we are.In a forgotten time, before the Spirit was exchanged for the office and inspired leadership for ambitious management, these robes were designed to represent withdrawal from the things of this world–as the temple robes still do. That we may become more fully aware of the real significance of both is my prayer in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.”
Anyone else read this talk? If not, I recommend it. Great stuff!
So, I’m sure that many of those who read this blog already heard that Pres. Hinckley passed away last night. For me this is the third prophet I can remember passing away. I was six when President Benson was called to be the prophet. He led the church for most of my young years (almost 10 years), Then President Hunter led for a the first couple of my high school years.
It was, however, President Hinckley who was prophet for most of high school. It was he who issued me a call to serve the wonderful people of Germany for two years. It was he who led this church when I got home from my mission. It was he who my wife and I listened to in our early years of marriage for guidance and inspiration from the Lord. And it was he who we listened tas we began having children and all these past years.
How grateful I am for a man that was willing to literally give his life in service to the Lord. He is such an amazing example of optimism in a deteriorating world. And to me, a man who kept his covenants, no matter what. Giving his all to God and the building of his kingdom on the earth.
It just bring a smile to my face to think about him reunited with his beloved wife again. He lived a great life with her and it was clear to everyone in the church how much he loved her and missed her after she was gone. In my mind, he will always be remember for famously saying he can’t ever remember having a disagreement with his wife.
In the MTC they have pictures of all the prophets in the context of what service they provided
to the world and the church during their earthly ministries. I have no doubt that one of the things the President Hinckley will be remembered for his focus on the family and focus on temple work. Soon after he became prophet we received the Proclamation On The Family. Then in ’99 was the push to have 100 temples by 2000 and the introduction of the mini temple. Our temple here in Raleigh is one of those mini temples. Were it not for his outside the box thinking, we would still be driving 4 1/2 hours to the Washington D.C. Temple.
From the tech side, we lose a great proponent of technology. I believe it was he who led the charge to create video temple sessions. I believe it was also he who started all these video campaigns we see on TV now a days. Under his direction I’m sure the church tech guys have grown many many fold. The church website alone has come a long way.
I just looked and it was while he was prophet that we first got a church website…
Thank you President for all you taught me and will continue to teach me. You have left a legacy that has affected millions. God be with you till we meet again President Hinckley.
We learn in the scriptures that “remembrance” plays an important role in the gospel plan. We constantly need to be reminded about who we are, where we come from, and what we are doing here. For that reason I subscribe to e-mail listserv’s that send out good quotes every day. I usually get them on my blackberry at different times throughout the day and make it a point to read them where ever and what ever I am doing.
So that it doesn’t get to be an annoyance, but it just keeps reminding me about what is important I only subscribe to two (although there are lots out there!).
The quote from today on WOOL is just AWESOME!
“Nephi-like, might we ask ourselves what our children know? From us? Personally? Do our children know that we love the scriptures? Do they see us reading them and marking them and clinging to them in daily life? Have our children ever unexpectedly opened a closed door and found us on our knees in prayer? Have they heard us not only pray with them but also pray for them out of nothing more than sheer parental love? Do our children know we believe in fasting as something more than an obligatory first-Sunday-of-the-month hardship? Do they know that we have fasted for them and for their future on days about which they knew nothing? Do they know we love being in the temple, not least because it provides a bond to them that neither death nor the legions of hell can break? Do they know we love and sustain local and general leaders, imperfect as they are, for their willingness to accept callings they did not seek in order to preserve a standard of righteousness they did not create? Do those children know that we love God with all our heart and that we long to see the face—and fall at the feet—of His Only Begotten Son? I pray that they know this.” – Jeffrey R. Holland, “A Prayer for the Children,” Ensign (CR), May 2003, p.85
So what listserv’s do you subscribe to? How do you “remember” all the great things the Lord has done for you?
5 Jan
I have always been very involved in music. I sang in choir in high school and played in bands through college. It comes as no surprise that many parts of my testimony first started by feeling the power of good spiritual music in my life.
This morning my 7-month old son was up during my study time again, and it is my duty to take care of him till 6:00 so my wife can sleep. That means I can’t really study, so I turned to trusty ol’ BYU TV for a little spiritual uplifting.
BYU TV online deserves a post by itself. It has some great features that allow you to watch online, anywhere, and pretty much anything they have. So I browsed around till I found this awesome program: “America’s Choir: The Story of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.“ I highly recommend it. It really shows how the choir has evolved and the wonderful work they have done.
On a sidenote, they have ALWAYS been on the front of adoption of technology and now stand as the longest running radio program in the nation.
If you don’t have time to watch the whole thing, watch start watching at around 49 minutes and watch through 54 minutes.1 Here is some of the words from that part of the show…
It is a tremendously beautiful performing organization and is recognized as such and valued as such.” (President Hinckley)This band of teachers, engineers, doctors, accountants, mothers and dads, have sung from coast to coast, country to country, at music festivals, in great halls, stadiums, and parades, and in outdoor settings reminiscent of their desert beginnings.
In these days of political, personal and economic disintegration. Music is not a luxury, it is a necessity. It is the persistent focus of our intelligence, aspiration, and good will. (Robert Shawl)
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir has touched and lifted audiences and individuals. 360 voices strong, they sing as one, of sacred yearnings, of their deepest convictions, when they offer “here’s my heart Lord, take and seal it” they mean it.
The choir then ends by singing the most beautiful rendition of “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing” I have ever heard.
Footnotes:This morning I came across an article in the CNN news “Believer bitter over prosperity preachings.” The article basically lays out the history of other church’s prosperity gospel… or in simpler terms… the principle that if you pay money, God will bless you with riches. A couple of thoughts:
1. This is just another example of how Satan takes a pure doctrine and twists it. Yes, God will pour out the blessings of heaven when we pay our tithing.1 So Satan twists that and has people paying money (notice, NOT tithing) to PEOPLE… not the church.
2. There is this misconception… even within the church… that if we are doing what is right we won’t have any trials. Yes… we will be blessed, but blessings sometimes come in the form of trials.
3. Paying money to get the blessings of heaven… hmmm… isn’t that the basic premise of Martin Luther’s Reformation in the 16th Century?2 When are we going to learn? We can not buy our way into heaven.3 We have to do our best, and then Christ will make up the rest.4
Footnotes:This morning I was studying out of Preach my Gospel and there was a scripture study question asking how the Lord wants us to approach gospel study. It gave several scriptures as references. One was from 2 Nephi 32:3.
Angels speak by the power of the Holy Ghost; wherefore, they speak the words of Christ. Wherefore, I said unto you, feast upon the words of Christ; for behold, the words of Christ will tell you all things what ye should do.
It is really interesting to me that Nephi chose to compare studying the scriptures to a feast. My first thought, and frankly the thought I have had my whole life, is to compare studying the scriptures to a TEENAGER thanksgiving feast. Let me explain.
A TEENAGER thanksgiving feast is one where there is tons of food and you eat until you are SICK. I realized this morning for the first time that this may not be exactly what the Lord had in mind. Now that I am approaching middle age, I can’t eat like I used to… and if I do there are consequences for my body, both short and long term.
I belive the Lord was alluding to an adult version of feasting… a moderated one1 in which we realize with an eye of vision that there is TONS of spiritual food in the scriptures, and we don’t have to eat till we are sick. This spiritual feast we have before us is not going to go bad, and is not going to be cleared before we get back to it. It will be there tomorrow, just as perfect and ready for us to eat as it is now. So…
Take your time. Delve into the scriptures. Really savor the food so you don’t get too full. Eat until you are full, realizing that there is PLENTY of food for me and that there will be tomorrow. But don’t eat to excess… remember, slow and steady wins the course.
Footnotes:So yesterday my sweet companion and I watched a little BYU TV for our companionship study. We decided that since it was Christmas we would watch some Motab and their wonderful singing… well… it was well worth it.
We had the awesome privilege of hearing the story “A Christmas Bell for Anya” accompanied by music and song. It was fantastic. Now I don’t cry much, but I cried yesterday. Not just misty eyed either… tears rolling down the cheeks cried.
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