
Copyright 2004 by Intellectual Reserve.
All rights reserved.
Recently, at a genealogy
conference where I was teaching, I became involved in
a discussion about family names. Names are always fun
to talk about, because they reflect the background,
culture, and traditions of families.
I was inquiring about interesting
family names, and asked one of my professional genealogy
colleagues about her surname, when she responded, “I
really don’t know; this is my husband’s surname, and
I’ve never looked into his genealogy!”
Never looked into her husband’s
genealogy?! The surprising thing is that I wasn’t shocked
by her statement, because I had heard it many times
before, by genealogists, men and women alike. “Oh!
I don’t know about my wife’s ancestors; I’ve never looked
into her family lines!”
When I first met Mary,
who has been my sweetheart and helpmate for 37 years,
I wanted to share my interests with her. I not only
became acquainted with her parents, and brothers and
sisters, I also got to know her grandparents, uncles,
aunts, and cousins.
But the interest didn’t
stop there. I studied about her great-grandparents,
and relatives that shaped Mary’s life and background.
I learned about James Glover Gleason, who was a barber
in Plymouth, Massachusetts; and Waldo Tozier, a Civil War veteran, who was in the
beer industry in St.
Louis.
I learned about Niels Larsen,
whose family joined the Mormon Church in Denmark, and who walked across the prairies of
Nebraska and Wyoming after
his parents and family had died while crossing the ocean.
I traced the Crawfords back to Kirkintillock, Scotland,
where my own family was from, and studied the origins
of the McRae family in colonial Virginia.
By the time we married,
my investment in Mary went way beyond the love I felt
for her. I was invested in her whole family;
I loved them, and I knew they loved me!
They say that “beauty is
only skin deep.” But relationships are often viewed
the same way, when all we look at is a name, or the
face that accompanies it. What I mean by that is, just
as real “beauty” is not merely found in the looks of
a person, but is in his character; relationships are
not just about one person, but rather about many people.
When we enter a relationship
with someone we affect the lives of many. We take on
responsibilities of both followers and leaders whether
we intend to lead or not. When I married Mary, I became
an example for her brothers and sisters to follow, by
the way I respected her, and by the way I treated her.
I became friends with her friends, and reached out to
the people in her life.
I became respectful of
her parents, and submitted to their authority as though
they were my own parents. As we have progressed through
life together, Mary has worked with me, and has reached
out to know and deal with the people in my life as well.
The most important people
that we affect in a marriage relationship are children.
As LDS parents, we not only teach our children how to
have faith, how to live moral lives, how to make right
decisions, and how to repent and forgive; but we also
teach our children to love their ancestors.
How can parents help turn
the hearts of their children to the fathers, if the
parents don’t know who the fathers are? It is vital
that husbands know the genealogy of their wives; and
that wives know the genealogy of their husbands. By
knowing that information, witnesses and testimonies
of the ancestors of the children are conveyed to the
children.
Bear in mind, people are
not a composite of their ancestors; they do not represent
a culmination of the deeds and experience of their forebears.
But the lives and experiences of those people who have
lived and died provide a testimony that can inspire
and strengthen their children and grandchildren.
As a professional genealogist
I am constantly in search of other people’s ancestors.
Whether or not clients know it, their forebears are
the subject of my daily prayers. I believe that those
who have died are living in a spirit dimension, and
that they are able to communicate with us if we are
willing.
It is my experience that
when I pray regarding deceased individuals for whom
I am searching, I open the lines of communication, and
information is conveyed through impressions and inspiration.
I believe that when we communicate with those in the
“Spirit World,” as we call it, we also receive impressions
of love from those whom we seek.
I find that when I pray
for, and seek ancestry on family lines, I begin to care
for, and love the people for whom I seek. I believe
this is something all people should experience by seeking
out their ancestry, and also that of their spouses.
My suggestion is that at
least once a month, families should discuss the stories
of their ancestors and conduct research on family lines.
One month the discussion and research can be on the
father’s ancestry, and the next month, it can be on
the mother’s family.
When family names are submitted
to the temple for ordinance work, fathers and mothers
can perform work for both sides of the family. By doing
this a father can receive and bear testimony to his
children regarding their mother’s family, and a mother
can do the same about the father’s family. These testimonies
will teach the children both to love their ancestors,
and to realize the love their parents have for one another.
Children will learn to
seek out their ancestors, and serve those they love
in the temple. They will follow the examples of their
parents, and will learn to love the families of their
sweethearts, and pass this love on to their children
as well — all because the hearts of the parents were
turned to the fathers.