Temple & Family History
McArthur Ranch Ward Temple & Family History Plan
Families and Individuals
· Ensure your temple recommend is current.
· Make and keep regular appointments at the temple; invite others to join you when appropriate.
· Have a FamilySearch account (8 and older).
· Learn about your ancestors and record personal and family history.
· Use FamilySearch and FamilyTree and other genealogical research tools to prepare family names for temple ordinances.
Ward
· Study the topic of Covenants and learn how temple and family history helps ourselves and others complete covenants.
· Invite all adults to participate in ward temple night and baptistry opportunities.
· Invite all youth to participate in baptistry opportunities; invite all adults to support youth baptistry attendance.
· Create gospel discussions focused on preparing to attend the temple and the blessings of temple attendance.
· Encourage ward members to share temple and family history experiences.
Why do we focus on temple work? Because in the temple we complete ordinances and make covenants for ourselves and others. These ordinances and covenants help us remember we are children of God, and they remind us of our duty to God. The Lord has provided them to help us come unto Him and receive eternal life.
Why do we do family history work? Because doing family history work we learn about our ancestors and increase our love for them. When we gather the necessary information about our ancestors who have died without receiving the gospel, we can perform temple work for them so that they too have the ordinances and covenants to come unto the Lord and receive eternal life.
Temple Sessions
TEMPLE OPPORTUNITIES
2025 Youth Temple Opportunities
Secure Sign Up Link - See for most current dates and times.
2025 Ward Temple Night
January 9 6:00pm Endowment Session
February 13 6:00pm Endowment Session
March 7 6:00-9:00 Family Baptistry Night
March 13 6:00pm Endowment Session
Temple Closed April 7-21
May 8 6:00pm Endowment Session
June 12 6:00pm Endowment Session
July 10 6:00pm Endowment Session
August 14 6:00pm Endowment Session
Temple Closed September 8-22
October 9 6:00pm Endowment Session
Temple Day of Consecration - November 4th
November 13 6:00pm Endowment Session
December 11 6:00pm Endowment Session
Temple Cleaning Assignments
6 Volunteers Needed, 9-11pm
July 10
Relief Society Temple Sessions
Being Scheduled - check back soon
Family History Consultants
Connect to your Family by meeting with one of our Family History Consultants. Contact Mark Carley.
Help our Youth Temple and Family History Representatives fulfill their calling!
How the youth representatives on the Ward Temple and Family History Committee fulfill their calling:
1 - Attend Ward Temple and Family History Committee meetings when scheduled.
2 - Hold a current temple recommend.
3 - Go to the temple baptistry on a regular basis and participate in baptisms for the dead.
4 - Encourage and invite other youth to attend the temple with me.
5 - Share my testimony and experiences from going to the temple baptistry, especially with my class or quorum.
6 - Learn how to search for family history names and prepare them for temple ordinances.
Family History Tip: "I'm A Family History Detective!"
Looking for a fun way to involve your kids in family history work? Help them be a Family History Detective!!
Use the attached form and encourage your kids to identify a family member or friend to interview! Then, upload the information to your familysearch.org account!
I’m a Family History Detective
Use the form below to learn about your family and friends. Write down or draw a picture of what they tell you.
Instructions for Adults:
The upcoming holidays and time with family and friends gives you an opportunity to help your child participate in collecting valuable stories about the lives of your family and friends.
Using the “I’m a Family History Detective” form, encourage your child to pick a few family and friends to interview using the 6 questions. You may want to encourage the child to ask their own questions too!
For younger children, encourage them to draw a picture of what they heard. For older children, encourage them to capture the stories in writing.
To save this form to a FamilySearch record, follow these instructions:
- Using your phone camera, take a picture of the front side of this page
- Open the Family Tree app on your phone or log onto www.familysearch.org; sign in with your Church Account credentials
- Go to Your Family Tree
- Select yourself or your ancestor who was interviewed
- Select Memories
o On the App, this is found by scrolling the ribbon to the left
o On the website, this is found at the top on the main ribbon, then select Overview
- Push Green + button
- Select Add Photo, then navigate to your Camera Roll to select an image of the “I’m a Family History Detective” form
- Select ADD then SAVE
- Once picture is saved, tap on picture, then tap again
- Select “…” on the top right of the screen
- Select Details
- Add Title, Description, Date, Place
- Push Save
- Click back on Name
Family History Tip: Using FamilySearch.org
FamilySearch.org is the Church’s main tool for finding and preparing names for temple ordinances and preserving family information and memories. The following tools will be especially helpful to you:
Helper Resources: Helper Resources is a tool found under Help on FamilySearch.org. It gathers into one location key resources frequently accessed for family history, such as the latest updates, media resources, and instructional material.
Planner: Planner is a tool located inside Helper Resources and is used for preparing temple and family history experiences for others. With Planner, you can view another person’s family tree and identify opportunities for them to learn about their ancestors and contribute to their family history.
Indexing Help: FamilySearch Indexing Help provides knowledge articles and various resources to help answer many frequently asked questions related to indexing.
RootsTech “Help for Leaders and Callings”: In these training sessions, you’ll receive ideas and training that will be beneficial in understanding how to do family history.
Family History Tip: Registration for Rootstech 2025 is now open!!
RootsTech, the world's largest genealogy conference, will be held March 6 - 8, 2025, both in person in Salt Lake City, Utah, and online worldwide. The theme for the conference this year is "REMEMBER." attend RootsTe2024 in the incomparable Salt Lake City downtown Salt Palace Convention Center and start your Leap Year off right!
Choose from over 256 classes on Advanced to Beginner-level Genealogy
Network with over 120 companies showing off the latest and most innovative Genealogical tools
Connect with Relatives at RootsTech and discover new family connections
“There is a tangible energy that you feel when you come to RootsTech that’s like no other place and no other conference in the world.” - Thom Reed, RootsTech 2023
Come attend RootsTech 2025 in the incomparable Salt Lake City downtown Salt Palace Convention Center and start your Leap Year off right!
The event will include over 250 classes taught in 27 languages and can be found at www.rootstech.org.
Follow and share RootsTech updates from our social channels on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
PD80020532_000_RTGeneralLDSMeetinghouseFlyer_e5 (familysearch.org)
Family History Tip: Using the Highlands Ranch Stake Family History Center
The HR Stake Family History Center holds open, walk-in hours each Sunday afternoon (except the first Sunday of each month) and Tuesday evening (except the first Tuesday evening of each month). Note the schedule can change week to week so best to check with Brother Carley before attending. The Center is also available by appointment for individuals, families and groups and can be used for activities and classes.
If Organization leaders wish to schedule a group event and instruction, please work with Brother Carley and email requests to co_highlandsranch@familyhistory.org.
Attendees are encouraged to bring their own laptop computer in case the two on-site computers are in use by others.
The Church has secured access to premium, trusted websites that can enhance search results. These are available at the Center. These research tools provide access to websites, databases, and records across states, provinces, countries and continents. Records may include birth records, marriage records, death records, biographies, cemeteries, censuses, church records, histories, immigration records, land records, maps, military records, native races, naturalizations, newspapers, obituaries, and probate records.
In other words...if it is available in some database, somewhere across the world, it can likely be found through the resources gathered and made available by the Church.
We encourage Members who want to begin or continue doing family history to take advantage of the HR Stake Family History Center.
Family History Tip: Interviewing Friends and Family to Capture their Family History and Stories
Thoughtful, open-ended questions can generate great discussions when you interview family members for the purpose of capturing family history. Below is a list of questions you may want to consider. Make sure to tailor the questions to the person you are interviewing and when possible record the interview on audio or video.
These questions* can help get you started:
1. What is your full name and why were you named that? (Include maiden name for women.)
2. Were you named after someone else?
3. Did you have a nickname when you were growing up? If so, what was it and why were called that?
4. Have you had any other nicknames as an adult?
5. What do your family members call you now?
6. When and where were you born?
7. When were you baptized, and what was your religion?
8. What was the religion of your parents and your grandparents?
9. What church, if any, do you attend now?
10. What church do your parents and your grandparents attend?
11. Where was your first home?
12. In what other homes/places have you lived?
13. What were your earliest memories of your home?
14. Could you tell me a story or any memory of your brothers and sisters?
15. What are the full names of your brothers and sisters?
16. What did your family do for fun when you were a child?
17. Was there a chore you really hated doing as a child?
18. What kinds of books did you like to read?
19. Do you remember having a favorite nursery rhyme or bedtime story? What was it?
20. Do you remember not having enough food to eat because times were hard for your family?
21. What were your favorite toys and what were they like?
22. What were your favorite childhood games?
23. Were there any fads during your youth that you remember vividly?
24. Where did you attend grade school?
25. Where did you attend high school?
26. What were your schools like?
27. How did you like school?
28. What was your favorite subject in school and why?
29. What subject in school was the easiest for you?
30. What was your least favorite subject in school and why?
31. Who was your favorite teacher and why was he/she special?
32. How do your fellow classmates from school remember you best?
33. Did you get good grades?
34. What did you wear to school? Describe it.
35. What school activities and sports did you participate in?
36. Did you and your friends have a special hangout where you liked to spend time?
37. Where was it and what did you do there?
38. Were you ever given any special awards for your studies or school activities?
39. How many years of education have you completed?
40. Describe yourself as a young adult.
41. Did you attend any school or training after high school? If so, what was your field of study?
42. Do you have a college degree(s)?
43. As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
44. What was your first job?
45. How did you decide on a career?
46. What jobs have you had?
47. Did you make enough money to live comfortably?
48. How long did you have to work each day at your job?
49. How old were you when you retired? Or when do you want to retire or will be able to retire?
50. If you served in the military, when and where did you serve and what were your duties? Rank?
51. Were you ever injured in the line of duty?
52. How old were you when you started dating?
53. Do you remember your first date? Could you tell me something about it?
54. When, where and how did you first meet your present spouse?
55. Do you remember where you went on the first date with your spouse?
56. How long did you know him/her before you got married?
57. Describe your wedding proposal.
58. Where and when did you get married? (Include date, place, church, etc.)
59. Describe your wedding ceremony.
60. Who was there? Were there a best man, a bridesmaid, other wedding party members and who were they?
61. Did you have a honeymoon? Where did you go?
62. Were you married more than once? If so, answer the previous questions about each spouse.
63. How would you describe your spouse(s)?
64. What do (did) you admire most about them?
65. How long have you been or were you married?
66. When and where did your spouse die?
67. What advice would you give/did you give to your child or grandchild on his/her wedding day?
68. How did you find out you were going to be a parent for the first time?
69. How many children did you have all together?
70. What were their names, birth dates and birthplaces?
71. Why did you give them the names that you did?
72. Do you remember anything your children did when they were small that really amazed you?
73. What is one of the most unusual things one of your children did regularly when they were small?
74. What was the funniest thing you can remember that one of your children said or did?
75. If you had to do it all over again, would you change the way you raised your family?
76. What did you find most difficult about raising children?
77. What did you find most rewarding about being a parent?
78. Did you spoil any of your children?
79. Were you strict or lenient as a parent?
80. Did you find you had to treat each of your children differently? If so, why?
81. How did you feel when the first of your children went to school for the first time?
82. How did you first hear that you were a grandparent and how did you feel about it?
83. What advice do you have for your children and grandchildren about being a parent?
84. Where did your spouse's parents live?
85. When and where did your parents die? What do you remember about it?
86. How did they die? Where were they hospitalized and buried?
87. What do you remember about the death of your spouse's parents?
88. Do you remember hearing your grandparents describe their lives? What did they say?
89. Do you remember your great-grandparents?
90. Who was the oldest person you remember as a child?
91. Did you have any of the childhood diseases?
92. Do you have any health problems that are considered hereditary?
93. What do you do regularly for exercise?
94. Do you have any bad habits now or in the past?
95. Have you ever been the victim of a crime?
96. Have you ever been in a serious accident?
97. Has anyone ever saved your life?
98. Have you ever been hospitalized? If so, what for?
99. Have you ever had surgery?
100. What would you consider the most important inventions during your lifetime?
101. Do you remember the first time you saw a television; a car; a refrigerator?
102. How is the world different from what it was like when you were a child?
103. Do you remember your family discussing world events and politics?
104. How would you describe yourself politically? Are you conservative or liberal, and why?
105. Do you remember what you or your parents thought about income tax when it began in 1913?
106. Do you remember anything about the days of Prohibition?
107. How did the Depression affect you?
108. What U.S. president have you admired the most and why?
109. What did you think of President Franklin D. Roosevelt? How did you react to his death?
110. How did you react to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy?
111. What wars have been fought during your lifetime?
112. What were you doing when you heard the news of the Pearl Harbor bombing?
113. How did World War II affect you?
114. How did the Korean War affect you?
115. How did the Vietnam War affect you?
116. Name a good friend you have known the longest. How many years have you been friends?
117. Has there ever been anyone in your life you would consider a kindred spirit or soul mate? Who was he/she and why did you feel a special bond with him/her?
118. What were the hardest choices you ever had to make?
119. What person really changed the course of your life by something he/she did?
120. Do you remember any advice or comments that had a big impact on how you lived your life?
121. If you could change something about yourself, what would it be?
122. What is the most stressful experience you ever lived through?
123. What is the scariest thing that ever happened to you?
124. What kinds of musical instruments have you learned to play?
125. Would you consider yourself creative?
126. What things have you made that others have enjoyed?
127. How would you describe your sense of humor?
128. What is the funniest practical joke you ever played on someone?
129. What activities have you especially enjoyed as an adult?
130. What are your hobbies?
131. What did you like to do when you were not working?
132. What is the most amazing thing that has ever happened to you?
133. Have you ever met any famous people?
134. Who were your parents? Please give full names.
135. Who were your grandparents? Please give full names.
136. Where were they from?
137. How do you feel about the choices you made in school, career, spouse?
138. What organizations or groups have you belonged to?
139. Have you ever won any special awards or prizes as an adult? What were they for?
140. Describe a time and a place you remember feeling truly at peace and happy to be alive. Where were you and what were you doing?
141. What is the most beautiful place you have ever visited and what was it like
142. What is the longest trip that you have ever gone on? Where did you go
143. What has been your favorite vacation? Where did you go and why was it special?
144. What was the favorite place you ever visited and what was it like?
145. What pets have you had? Do you have a favorite story about a pet?
146. Is there anything you have always wanted to do but haven't?
147. Have you ever been to a world's fair?
148. What is the single most memorable moment of your life?
149. What or who is your favorite: Animal? Artist? Athlete? Author? Board game? Book? Candy? Card game? Color? Cookie? Drink? Flavor of ice cream? Flower? Fruit? Holiday? Meal? Movie star? Movie? Musical group? Musical instrument? Painting? Poem? Poet? Restaurant? Season? Singer? Song? Sport? Style of music? Tree? TV program? Vegetable?
150. If you had to pick a label for your family members (spouse, children, mother, father, brothers, sister...), who fits each of the following descriptions?: Animal lover, Best cook, Best gardener, Best housekeeper, Best looking, Best memory, Best story teller, Biggest tease, Calmest, Funniest, Hardest worker, Most athletic, Most colorful, Most creative, Most frugal, Most generous, Most mischievous, Most politically active, Most reclusive, Most relaxed, Most sociable, Quietest, Shortest, Tallest
*These questions were compiled and are attributed to the Lucier Family webpage with additional attribution to Barry J. Ewell, author or “Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips and Tricks for Discovering your Family History” on Facebook at www.facebook.com/barry.ewell and founder of MyGenShare.com.
Family History Tip: Saving memories to a FamilySearch record
"It's about making connections to our past, and about leaving OUR story behind in OUR words, pictures and voice for those we love!"
WILL YOU SHARE YOUR MEMORY / PICTURE WITH US?
Steps to Adding a Memory/Photo(s):
Open Family Tree App
Go to Your Family Tree (Tree on Bottom of Screen)
Select Yourself (If Adding Memory to You) or your Ancestor (If Adding Memory to Them)
Select Memories
Push Green + Button
Select Add Photo (Navigate to Camera Roll to Select Picture)
Select Picture
Select: Add THEN Select: Save
Once Picture is Saved, Tap on Picture, Tap Again
Select “…” on Top Right of the Screen
Select Details
Title, Description, Date, Place
SAVE
Click Back on Name and You Have a New Memory Added