Guest MormonGator Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Thanks in advance. My wife and I are moving and this is the first time we are leaving a ward and joining a new one. Do we just start going to the new one, introduce ourselves and join? Do we contact our old bishop and ask him to tell the new bishop that we are moving? Totally clueless about this, only been a member for three years in August. Quote
Guest MormonGator Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Good luck! Thanks. Would you call the bishop and tell him or just start showing up every Sunday? Quote
Vort Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 I personally would just show up, maybe go shake the bishop's hand and introduce myself before or after the sacrament meeting. But I know many people who proactively contact their new bishop. (I live in a fairly high-turnover ward.) This is especially useful if you want to talk to the EQ pres for moving-in help. Quote
omegaseamaster75 Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 I would just show up, the ward clerk "should" approach you and ask for your information so that your records can be moved, or you can contact your current ward clerk and give him your new address and he will push your records to the new ward. If you do it that way they will know you are coming. Daybreak79 1 Quote
Guest MormonGator Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Thanks guys. I literally had no idea what to do. Quote
pkstpaul Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 No need to call ahead. Just show up. Prepare a slip of paper with some background on yourself, including callings held. You'll want to provide them your birthdates for them to use when pulling your records. Give it to any member of the bishopric. Good luck. They'll be lucky to have you. sxfritz 1 Quote
beefche Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Yeah, check with either your old ward clerk now or check with your new ward clerk to get your address changed and records moved. And just check on that status after a month or two. You'd be surprised how long it takes for your records to get moved. Sometimes it's a clerk's fault for not doing the work and sometimes it just takes that long for the system to get it switched. And I would recommend not paying tithing/offerings until your new ward has your records. It's difficult for them to know where to mark your money if they don't have your records. Quote
Guest Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 And I would recommend not paying tithing/offerings until your new ward has your records. It's difficult for them to know where to mark your money if they don't have your records. Just clarifying this.... I'm sure beefche didn't mean for you to not pay tithing/offerings. She simply meant to hold on to it until your new records arrive. Quote
Guest MormonGator Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Just clarifying this.... I'm sure beefche didn't mean for you to not pay tithing/offerings. She simply meant to hold on to it until your new records arrive. Anatess, that is a perfect clarification and one I totally missed. Thank you! Quote
estradling75 Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Since it it totally new to you let expand abit on what has been said. When you move your records need to move with you. Without the records it become harder for the Bishop to work with you on just about any level. You have two options on moving your records. Give your current Ward Clerk your "new address" and ask him to move you out. The potential gotchas here are the Clerk Failing to do so or the system for what ever reason thinking your "New address" is in a different Ward. The last can be reduced if you know what Ward you should be in and can tell your current Clerk that info as well. The final gotchas is your records show up and you are a name on a piece of paper. The new ward is going to need help matching names to faces The second option is to have your new ward "request" your records. To do this they need your "Full Name", Birth date and new address. Most Wards will have some kind of custom "New Member sheet" that will ask for that data and any other data they might find useful (Like prior calling, Jobs etc.) The advantage here is because you have to interact with the Leadership to get your records moved in, they get to know you faster then they might otherwise. The downside is if for some reason any of your data gets messed up (typos-misreads etc) then your records will be delayed and you are supplying much more data then in option 1. As what you should do... well that depends a lot on you. Recordwise I prefer to exercise both options, but nowadays if you have an LDS.org account login you can tell where your records are quite easily, so you can tell if option 1 worked or if option 2 is necessary. The rest depend on how quickly you want to integrate into the ward and the Ward itself Quote
beefche Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 Just clarifying this.... I'm sure beefche didn't mean for you to not pay tithing/offerings. She simply meant to hold on to it until your new records arrive. Yeah, that's what I meant. Sorry I didn't make that clearer. If you try to pay tithing before your records are moved, then you are required to pay 15%. And Guido will show up to collect the payment.... Quote
Vort Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 If you try to pay tithing before your records are moved, then you are required to pay 15%. And Guido will show up to collect the payment.... I expect this to show up on fmh by this evening and for John Dehlin to pick it up on his next podcast. beefche 1 Quote
Average Joe Posted June 10, 2015 Report Posted June 10, 2015 or there is another option. become a church discipline problem and your bishop will contact your new bishop for/about you Quote
theSQUIDSTER Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 Yeah, that's what I meant. Sorry I didn't make that clearer. If you try to pay tithing before your records are moved, then you are required to pay 15%. And Guido will show up to collect the payment.... Actually nobody hardly ever mentions the simple fact that, hey, if you don't want to pay 1 / 10th of your income you can actually opt to pay 1 / 5th instead. Most bishops are ok with this and would still consider you a full tithe payer. Vort 1 Quote
beefche Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 Actually nobody hardly ever mentions the simple fact that, hey, if you don't want to pay 1 / 10th of your income you can actually opt to pay 1 / 5th instead. Most bishops are ok with this and would still consider you a full tithe payer. And that's because bishops leave it up to you to decide if you are full tithe payer or not. They don't require tax returns to determine if the money showing up on the records of the church is 1% or 10%. Quote
theSQUIDSTER Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 (edited) And that's because bishops leave it up to you to decide if you are full tithe payer or not. They don't require tax returns to determine if the money showing up on the records of the church is 1% or 10%. .... I think you're missing the point on this one... If I went in and tearfully confessed to my bishop that I had opted to only pay 1/ 5th of my income as tithing instead of the more-typical 1/ 10th of my income, my bishop, who is an accountant by trade, would probably say something like, "That's ok, Brother Squidster. Your offering is acceptable to the Lord. ... But you might want to consider taking a remedial math course ..." Edited June 11, 2015 by theSQUIDSTER Quote
theSQUIDSTER Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 Good luck, MGator! Hope you feel welcomed in your new ward. Quote
Palerider Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 Yeah, that's what I meant. Sorry I didn't make that clearer. If you try to pay tithing before your records are moved, then you are required to pay 15%. And Guido will show up to collect the payment....I have a direct line to Guido if he is ever needed. mordorbund 1 Quote
Leah Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 I have only changed wards/stakes once since joining the church. I gave my new address to my current ward before I moved. On moving day I received a call from the membership clerk at the new saying he heard I was moving into the ward that day and did I need any help? I did. Shortly after the U-Haul pulled into the driveway, guys from the new ward started showing up to help. Someone from the Relief Society dropped by later to welcome me and see if there was anything I needed. It was awesome. Quote
Guest Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 We moved to a different Stake but only 25 miles away from our old ward... We didn't do anything. Just showed up to the new ward. The bishop approached us and asked questions, my husband got called to teach GD the next Sunday and I got called to the Primary Presidency after that. Dunno what went on with our records - who asked who for it... We only stayed in the ward 7 months and it felt like we've been there for decades when we left. Quote
Guest LiterateParakeet Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 Hope your move goes smoothly and you feel welcome in your new ward. I assume you will. I've moved countless times though out my life and I only remember one ward (out of dozens) that was an awkward experience. The leaders of that ward were aware of the issues, and working hard to try and fix it. :) Quote
mordorbund Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 I have a direct line to Guido if he is ever needed. I told you I already mailed the check!!! Palerider 1 Quote
beefche Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 I told you I already mailed the check!!! MB, please get into the 21st century. You should either direct deposit the money or provide a Walmart gift card for it. Backroads and mordorbund 2 Quote
mordorbund Posted June 11, 2015 Report Posted June 11, 2015 (edited) MB, please get into the 21st century. You should either direct deposit the money or provide a Walmart gift card for it. Then why does Guido use 19th century intimidation techniques? Edited June 11, 2015 by mordorbund Quote
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