Independence and most of Kansas City are in Jackson County. Directly north of us, on the other side of the Missouri River, is Clay County. The temple and Liberty are both in Clay County, so we travel that direction frequently. On Tuesday, during our lunch break, I (Russell) got a call from two elders saying their car had been towed. They had already figured out where the impound lot was, and I believe they would have paid the fee and never told me about the incident had it not been for one unfortunate issue. They were not the legal owners of the vehicle and impound lots will only release vehicles to their documented owners. As I am the one with power-of-attorney for the Church owned vehicles, they had to call me.
After gathering the necessary papers, Eileen and I set out for the lot which was in Clay County.The plan was for me to pick up the car and drive it back to the office, where the elders could come pick it up when they could find someone to give them a ride to the office. Being pressed for time and not being in a very good mood because of this interruption of my training time with Elder Perry, I was not going to deliver the car to them.
As we were crossing the six-lane divided freeway bridge, a car quickly passed us, dodging in and out of traffic. When it was about 50 yards in front of us, the driver lost control and we watched the car hit the cement wall on the right side of the road. The car then bounced across all three lanes to hit the left side cement wall, then back across to the right side hitting that cement wall for a second time, then finally coming to a stop when it hit the left side wall again. How the car did not hit one of the several other cars or two tractor-trailers that were right there was amazing. We could easily have been in a multi-vehicle pileup with many injured or killed. The news that night said the driver was going over 100 miles per hour. The police were there immediately, which told me we were seeing the end of an extended chase.
Upon reflection of the event, Eileen and I had different impressions. Eileen felt gratitude for Divine protection, mentioning that she had prayed that morning that we could drive safely that day, without any knowledge that we would be going anywhere other than to the office. While I too was grateful, I also recognized the irony of my being blessed even though I was irritated at the elders for getting their car towed and my having to go get it. I can’t imagine God grumbling about my lack of patience as he protects and blesses me. I recognize I need to cut the young elders more slack when they innocently do unwise things.
On both Friday and Saturday evenings this week, we attended the annual Book of Mormon Symposium which is held here. At least nineteen different churches in Independence trace their roots to Joseph Smith, with several presenting at the conference on various aspects of the Book of Mormon. Following the death of Joseph Smith the Church broke into a half-dozen factions, another faction broke off from our church following the Manifesto, and then a dozen or so have broken off from the Community of Christ (RLDS) over the last 40 years. While the fundamentalist/polygamist faction(s) are not welcomed here at the symposium in Missouri, all of the other groups seem to get along quite well. In a way it resembled an extended family reunion of a common distant ancestor. Just like in our Church, each group refers to those in their same congregation/church as brothers and sisters, and those in the other restoration churches as cousins.
Casey Griffiths and two other BYU professors represented our Church and spoke during the two-day/evening event. Casey was our tour guide last summer for our family Church History tour. Some of the topics of talks and displays at the symposium were: Framing the Gold Bible; The Book of Mormon Our Liahona; Our Genetic Pool and the Restoration of the Restoration; Only Two Churches, Those of the Lamb and Those of the Devil; The Temple Lot; and How the Nephites sailed to the Promised Land (by rounding the Cape of Good Hope and across the Atlantic, landing in North America). And just like at a family reunion, you may not agree with everything that is said, but they are family, so you smile and accept them for who they are and what you have in common.
I felt so blessed that we weren't injured during our travels. We saw the car involved in the accident bounce from side to side just 3 cars ahead of us. Every air bag went off in the car. We couldn't even see the driver through the windows. This is what the news report said: "The driver was traveling at 100 mph and was observed weaving in and out of traffic, passing vehicles on the shoulder, and cutting off other drivers. The driver lost control on the bridge, bouncing off both the inner lane and outer lane barriers of the northbound lanes. At the fifth impact, with the inner jersey barrier, the Honda came to final rest."
The young missionaries from our church sang at the Book of Mormon rally. It was held in another congregation's meetinghouse. Eileen, Russell and Casey Griffith at the Book of Mormon Rally.
In June 1833, the Prophet Joseph and his counselors in the First Presidency prepared a plat for the city of Zion—a plan for the layout of the city. President Frederick G. Williams drew the plat, which called for bishops’ storehouses and 24 temples in the center of the city, surrounded by blocks divided into property for residences. (This area is shown in the current photo below).
This man spoke at the symposium also. He visited 52 churches in 52 weeks. After those visits he went through 11 sets of LDS missionaries. He joined our church just the week prior to talking with our group.
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