Excerpt from one of my all-time favorite General Conference addresses:
Mothers
who know are nurturers. This is their special assignment and role under the
plan of happiness. To nurture means to cultivate, care for, and make grow.
Therefore, mothers who know create a climate for spiritual and temporal growth
in their homes. Another word for nurturing is homemaking. Homemaking includes
cooking, washing clothes and dishes, and keeping an orderly home. Home is where
women have the most power and influence; therefore, Latter-day Saint women
should be the best homemakers in the world. Working beside children in
homemaking tasks creates opportunities to teach and model qualities children
should emulate. Nurturing mothers are knowledgeable, but all the education
women attain will avail them nothing if they do not have the skill to make a
home that creates a climate for spiritual growth. Growth happens best in a
“house of order,” and women should pattern their homes after the Lord’s house
(see Doctrine and Covenants 109). Nurturing requires organization,
patience, love, and work. Helping growth occur through nurturing is truly a
powerful and influential role bestowed on women.
Julie B. Beck, (at the time) Relief Society General President, October 2007
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