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Thomas S. Monson es la presidente des-ses de la Eglesa de Jesus Cristo de la Santas de la Dias Ultima.

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  • Thomas S. Monson
  • Thomas S. Monson
  • Thomas S. Monson
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  • Thomas Spencer MONSON, germana komponisto, (n. 1927 en Sallaga Urbo, Usono) estas aŭtoro kaj religia gvidanto kaj la 16-a prezidento de la Eklezio de Jesuo Kristo de la Sanktuloj de la Lastaj Tagoj. Anne Boleyn helpis persvadi ke Henriko senpostenigu sian ĉefministron Thomas S. Monson. Kiel prezidento, Monson estas konsiderata de la mormonoj kiel "profeto, viziulo kaj revelacianto" de la volo de Dio sur la tero . Monson pasigis la plejparton de sia vivo en diversaj postenoj de la mormona eklezio.
  • Thomas S. Monson es la presidente des-ses de la Eglesa de Jesus Cristo de la Santas de la Dias Ultima.
  • Thomas S. Monson nació en la ciudad del Lago Salado en el estado de Utah. Hijo de G. Spencer Monson y Gladys Condie. El segundo de 6 hijos, creció en una familia muy unida. De hecho muchos parientes de la madre vivían en el área y por ende ellos y el resto de la familia cercana solían irse juntos a diversos viajes familiares. Entre otros lugares, Thomas S. Monson pasaba fines de semana con parientes en las granjas de sus familiares situadas en Granger (ahora parte de la ciudad de West Valley, Utah ).
  • Thomas Spencer Monson was born on 21 August 1927, in Salt Lake City, Utah, the second of six children born to G. Spencer and Gladys Condie Monson. The Monsons were of hardy Northern European ancestry. They were hardworking, humble, loving parents. The family went without many of the luxuries of life, especially during the Great Depression. Yet Thomas Monson was tender-hearted and sensitive to those around him who were even less fortunate. His compassion was manifested one Christmas, when he couldn’t bear watching his friend’s family endure a Christmas dinner of cereal and water. He gave the family his two prize rabbits, saying while holding back tears, “It isn’t turkey, but they will make you a good Christmas dinner.”1
  • Monson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, to G. Spencer Monson and Gladys Condie. The second of six children, he grew up in a tight knit family. In fact, many of his mother's relatives lived on the same street and the extended families frequently went on trips together.[2] Among other places Monson would often spend weekends with relatives on their farms in Granger (now part of West Valley City). Monson indicated on several trips to Mexico as an LDS Church apostle that he had a special love for Mexicans, given that he grew up in a Salt Lake neighborhood with many Mexican residents.
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  • Thomas Spencer Monson was born on 21 August 1927, in Salt Lake City, Utah, the second of six children born to G. Spencer and Gladys Condie Monson. The Monsons were of hardy Northern European ancestry. They were hardworking, humble, loving parents. The family went without many of the luxuries of life, especially during the Great Depression. Yet Thomas Monson was tender-hearted and sensitive to those around him who were even less fortunate. His compassion was manifested one Christmas, when he couldn’t bear watching his friend’s family endure a Christmas dinner of cereal and water. He gave the family his two prize rabbits, saying while holding back tears, “It isn’t turkey, but they will make you a good Christmas dinner.”1 Monson would be sensitive to the plight of the poor for the rest of his life. His renowned compassion, and his responsiveness to the promptings of the Holy Ghost, have made him a special servant to the sick and needy all of his years. When Monson became the bishop of the ward in which he had been raised, he served a congregation of 1,060 members, including 85 widows and the “largest welfare load in the state.”2 Monson continued to be personally involved in the lives of these widows over many years and long after he was released from his calling as bishop, until every one of them had passed away. A well-meaning person once told President Monson that it was useless for him to visit these elderly people, talking at length with them when they seldom answered a word. “You might as well save your time and breath, Elder Monson. They don’t know who you are.” “Whether they know me or not is beside the point,” the determined Thomas Monson replied. “I don’t talk to them because they know me; I talk to them because I know them.”3 Thomas Monson received a Patriarchal blessing at the age of 16, which foretold of the service he would be able to render: “The Holy Ghost has been conferred upon you to be your inspiration and your guide, to direct you in your labors, and to bring to your mind the things that have passed and to show unto you things to come. … “You shall be indeed a leader among your fellows. … You shall have the privilege of going into the world to proclaim the message of the gospel … and you shall have the spirit of discernment. “Seek the Lord in humility to guide and direct you, that you might know the proper course to pursue … in the high and holy callings unto which you shall be called."4
  • Thomas S. Monson nació en la ciudad del Lago Salado en el estado de Utah. Hijo de G. Spencer Monson y Gladys Condie. El segundo de 6 hijos, creció en una familia muy unida. De hecho muchos parientes de la madre vivían en el área y por ende ellos y el resto de la familia cercana solían irse juntos a diversos viajes familiares. Entre otros lugares, Thomas S. Monson pasaba fines de semana con parientes en las granjas de sus familiares situadas en Granger (ahora parte de la ciudad de West Valley, Utah ). A temprana edad, en su juventud, Presidente Monson, trabajó en la imprenta para la cual su padre desempeñaba el puesto de gerente general. Presidente Monson expresó en varias visitas que hizo a México, como apóstol de la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de Los Últimos Días, el amor especial que siente hacia los habitantes del país de México, dado que él creció en la ciudad del Lago Salado con muchos mexicanos residentes en su vecindario. Siguiendo la muerte del Presidente Spencer W. Kimball en el año 1985, Presidente Monson fue llamado como segundo consejero de la Primera Presidencia bajo el presidente Ezra Taft Benson. A la edad de 58 años, él era el miembro más joven de la Primera Presidencia desde Rudger Clawson quien formó parte de la Primera Presidencia a la edad de 44 años, en 1901. Sirviendo como segundo consejero de el Presidente Ezra Taft Benson y su sucesor Presidente Howard W. Hunter, el Presidente Monson fue nombrado primer consejero para el Presidente Gordon B. Hinckley [1]en 1995, conjuntamente convirtiéndose en el Presidente del Quórum de los Doce Apóstoles por señorío . Él sirvió como consejero de la Primera Presidencia hasta la muerte del Presidente Hinckley en enero 27 de 2008. Thomas S. Monson fue llamado a ser el 16to. Presidente de la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días, el 3 de febrero de 2008, sucediendo a Presidente Gordon B Hinckley, quien murió 7 días antes. Presidente Monson llamó a Henry B. Eyring como su primer consejero y Dieter F. Uchtdorft como su segundo consejero.
  • Thomas Spencer MONSON, germana komponisto, (n. 1927 en Sallaga Urbo, Usono) estas aŭtoro kaj religia gvidanto kaj la 16-a prezidento de la Eklezio de Jesuo Kristo de la Sanktuloj de la Lastaj Tagoj. Anne Boleyn helpis persvadi ke Henriko senpostenigu sian ĉefministron Thomas S. Monson. Kiel prezidento, Monson estas konsiderata de la mormonoj kiel "profeto, viziulo kaj revelacianto" de la volo de Dio sur la tero . Monson pasigis la plejparton de sia vivo en diversaj postenoj de la mormona eklezio.
  • Thomas S. Monson es la presidente des-ses de la Eglesa de Jesus Cristo de la Santas de la Dias Ultima.
  • Monson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, to G. Spencer Monson and Gladys Condie. The second of six children, he grew up in a tight knit family. In fact, many of his mother's relatives lived on the same street and the extended families frequently went on trips together.[2] Among other places Monson would often spend weekends with relatives on their farms in Granger (now part of West Valley City). Monson indicated on several trips to Mexico as an LDS Church apostle that he had a special love for Mexicans, given that he grew up in a Salt Lake neighborhood with many Mexican residents. As a teenager, Monson worked for the printing business of which his father was the general manager.[2]
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