Integrity


Till I die I will not remove mine integrity from me (Job 27:5).
I will have the moral courage to make my actions consistent with my knowledge of right and wrong.
Required Value Experiences
Complete the following three required value experiences. Have your parent or leader sign and date each experience after you finish.1
Integrity is the willingness and desire to live by our beliefs and standards. Read Moroni 10:30–33 and think about what it means to “deny yourselves of all ungodliness.” Read the pamphlet For the Strength of Youth.
Reflect on how the Lord’s standards differ from the
world’s standards. Record in your journal appropriate standards
for behavior, dress, and conversation, as well as literature, movies,
television,
Internet, music, cell phones, and other media. Also write your
plan to stay morally clean and worthy to attend the temple. After
keeping your
standards for at least one month, record your feelings in your
journal and continue to keep your commitment.
2
Conduct a self-assessment of your
personal integrity. Ask yourself the following questions: Do I avoid
gossip, inappropriate jokes,
swearing and profanity, and being light-minded about sacred
subjects? Am I completely truthful, morally clean, honest, dependable,
and trustworthy
in my schoolwork and other activities? Pray daily for strength and
for the guidance of the Holy Ghost to help you live with integrity.
Write in
your journal the things you can do to improve your personal
integrity and at least one new habit you want to develop.
3
The Savior is the perfect example of integrity; He did what He promised the Father He would do. Read 3 Nephi 11:10–11. Study the lives of other individuals in the scriptures who lived with integrity.
Read Genesis 39; the book of Esther; Job
2:3; 27:3–6; Daniel
3 and 6; Acts 26; Doctrine and Covenants 124:15; and Joseph Smith—History
1:21–25. In your journal identify the ways these people
demonstrated integrity. Think of a time when you had the courage to
show integrity, especially when it was not easy or popular. Share
your experience and your feelings about it in a testimony meeting or
lesson or
with a parent or leader.
Additional Value Experiences
Complete three additional value experiences. You may select from the following options or write up to two of your own. Your parent or leader must approve those you write yourself before you begin. Have your parent or leader sign and date each experience after you finish.4
Look up the word integrity
in a dictionary. Interview your mother, grandmother, or another woman
you respect about
her understanding and application of the word. Make a list of ways
you can make your actions consistent with your knowledge of right and
wrong,
and record in your journal what it means to you to have integrity.
5
Learn about standing as a witness. Read Mosiah 18:9.
Then record in
your journal how you can personally “stand as [a witness] of God
at all times and in all things, and in all places.” Choose a personal
behavior
that you need to improve so you can be a better example. Develop
integrity in your life as you practice your new behavior for three
weeks. Record
your progress in your journal.
6
Living the law of the fast is an
opportunity to practice integrity. On a designated fast Sunday, abstain
from food and drink for two
consecutive meals and contribute to your family’s fast offering.
Have a specific purpose in mind as you fast. You might fast for a sick
friend, to
overcome a bad habit, to obtain a special blessing for yourself or
someone else, or to give thanks. Begin and close your fast with a
prayer.
7
List the issues, trends, and problems that weaken the family. Read the First Presidency
message, “The Family: A Proclamation to the World”, and the section on family in For the Strength of Youth.
Then research in the Church magazines the counsel
of those whom we sustain as prophets, seers, and revelators. Write
in your journal your plan to strengthen your present family and the
values and
traditions you want to establish with your future family.
Personalized Value Experiences
8
Value Project
P
After you have completed six integrity value experiences,
create a project that will help you practice what you have learned. This
should be a
significant effort that will take at least ten hours to complete.
Prayerfully seek the guidance of the Holy Ghost to select a meaningful
project.
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