Nancy wrote: My husband who is not a member and I were talking this AM about the Millennium and all the records being available. He wondered why we couldn't just wait until then and have all the needed records to complete the project. It's not just non-members who think that way! I've had members say to me that they're just going to wait until the Millennium when it will be easier. That philosophy is faulty, so I've developed some doctrinal responses. The one that usually hits home is the fact that only mortals can perform the ordinances in the temple. Unless we are present at the time of the Second Coming and have some time before we are "twinkled," we would deny ourselves the blessing of standing proxy in those ordinances. I'm not willing to take that risk. I assume that I will die and be resurrected for the Millennium, and therefore I want to participate in as many ordinances as I can now. During the Millennium, I'll do whatever the assignment is for resurrected beings--teaching, communicating information to temple workers, etc., but I want to share in actually performing those ordinances for my family. That work must be done now, and the research to support that work must be done before the ordinances can be performed. Doctrines of Salvation, Vol. 2, p. 178 "Will resurrected beings during the millennium actually take part in the endowment work of the temple along with mortal beings? "The answer to this question is no! That is, they will not assist in performing the ordinances. Resurrected beings will assist in furnishing information which is not otherwise available, but mortals will have to do the ordinance work in the temples." . . . "If it were permissible for resurrected persons to come and do work in the temples, then there would be no reason for us in this mortal life to act vicariously for them, for they would do it for themselves." It's also interesting to note that Elder McConkie said that resurrected beings would furnish information "which is not otherwise available." That doesn't sound to me like the research will be easier. If it is available, we have to work for it--whether it's now or in the Millennium. This is a matter of not procrastinating and getting the job done. Waiting only causes guilt now, and the effort later isn't going to change. Today is the day to perform our labors. Jill Crandell