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rule of 110 years

GeorgievaTatyanaLyubenova1
GeorgievaTatyanaLyubenova1 ✭
February 16 edited February 16 in Temple


Me - Tatyana


Permission - Elena


1. Me - Tatyana Elena Georgieva, sister; Emil Ivanov, husband; Mois, father - BCIESS



2. Me - Tatyana; Elena, sister; Emil, husband; Yuliya, mother - BCIESS


3.  Me - Tatyana; Elena Lyubenova, sister; Emil, husband; Rebeka, sister - BCIESP


Thanks a lot in advance !

Love,

Sister Georgieva

Tagged:
  • 110 request
0

Answers

  • lookingfortheanswers
    lookingfortheanswers ✭✭✭
    February 16

    There is a process described in the FamilySearch Help Center that shows how to request them yourself. The process is listed below.

    How do I request ordinances for an ancestor who was born in the last 110 years?

    Article Id: 858

    April 20, 2020


    When you reserve ordinances for your ancestors, you can come across a warning message that reads, "Permission Required." The message means that the ancestor was born within the last 110 years. You must receive permission from a close living relative before you can reserve the name for temple work. Verbal permission is acceptable.

    A close living relative can be an undivorced spouse, an adult child, a parent, or a sibling.

    If no close living relatives exist to grant permission, you can still request permission to do the ordinances. Please provide evidence that no living close relatives exist. 

    For more information on this topic, please consult the Church’s General Handbook: Serving in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 28.1.

    Grandchildren can request the ordinances for their deceased grandparents. Grandchildren still need permission from a close living relative. Grandchildren do not fill out the permission form.

    Before you start

    • To request permission, you need an email account and a phone number. 
    • Make sure that the person who gave permission appears in Family Tree as a close living relative of the deceased person.
    • If no close relatives are alive, make sure that Family Tree contains their death information. Attach sources as evidence. 

    Steps (website)

    1. In Family Tree on the FamilySearch.org website, navigate to the person page of the relative whose ordinances you want to request. 
    2. On the person page, a series of tabs appears directly below the relative's name. Click Ordinances.
    3. Click Request (Permission Required).
    4. In the Permission Required box, click I Have Permission.
    5. Answer the question, "Is the spouse alive?"
    6. Fill out the information, and click Submit.
    7. A message lets you know you submitted the request. 

    Steps (mobile app)

    1. In the Family Tree mobile app, navigate to the person page of the relative whose ordinances you want to request. 
    2. Beneath the name banner, tap Ordinances.
    3. Tap Request Permission. 
    4. Beneath the policy statement, enter your email address and phone number. 
    5. Enter your relationship to this person, along with your reason for the request. 
    6. Enter the name of the person who gave you permission. 
    7. Identify the relationship between the person who gave permission and the deceased relative. 
    8. Enter contact information for the person who gave permission. 
    9. In the top-right of the screen, tap Submit. 

    Steps (Family Tree Lite)

    You cannot request permission in Family Tree Lite.

    After you finish

    You receive an email about your request no matter what the decision is. FamilySearch Support works to reply in a timely manner. Be sure to check your junk mail folder when you look for this email.

    • FamilySearch approves your request. The system adds the family name automatically to your family name list. From there, you can print the family name card. If the name does not appear on your family name list, reply to the approval email you received.
    • Your request requires further information. Please respond with the information.
    • FamilySearch declines your request. You cannot repeat the request process. Instead, you can reply to the email you received.

    Related articles

    I cannot find any close living relatives to grant permission for ordinances

    Do I need permission from the closest living relative to do temple ordinances?

    Can I request proxy temple ordinances for a friend?

    Individuals for whom I can request temple ordinances

    Doing temple work for people not related to me

    0
  • PiperTWilson
    PiperTWilson ✭✭✭
    February 16

    Mod Note: One post has been edited to remove personally-identifying information.

    0
  • GeorgievaTatyanaLyubenova1
    GeorgievaTatyanaLyubenova1 ✭
    February 16

    Hi Sister Piper TWilson,

     

    I beg you, most humanly, this time to read carefully what I have written, so that you can really, really help me - for the 4th time I turn for help to my family history advisor in my country and she advised me this time to send you a request only for my first three relatives by showing that I have the permission of my brother-in-law's wife, who is the daughter -in-law of these people, and not just the permission of my nephew, who is their grandson. Now the problem is that when I take the steps that you advise me to take, I do not get a form in which to fill in that my brother -in-law's wife gives permission for the rites, but I get a form in which I ask if I am a relative and as I answer by telling me that I am not, and by answering that I am not, you tell me that you cannot perform the rites for these people - PLEASE, please do not return ready answers to me, but look specifically at my family tree and to see that we are talking about the deceased parents of my deceased brother-in-law and that as I am writing to you for the 4th time I have the permission of both his living wife - my sister Elena and their living only grandson - my nephew Yuliyan! I don't want to offend you, you must be very busy, but I have the feeling that I am writing to a "robot" who mechanically answers the same thing to me once again, without looking as a person that there is a real problem that I cannot to allow for half a year! Please really help me this time - ask yourself if these were your sister and nephew, wouldn't I help them ?! You probably would! PLEASE help me and enter my pedigree and look at these people - they are dead and have no other children or other grandchildren! Only my nephew Yuliyan and my sister Elena have his mother - Emil's wife and their daughter-in-law! Please really help me! Please! Please! Please!

    0
  • Chas Howell
    Chas Howell ✭✭✭
    February 16 edited February 17

    I think the problem is that You @GeorgievaTatyanaLyubenova1 are not "related" (for temple ordinances) to your sister's husband's parents. Your sister cannot give you permission to do her husband's parents' work because you are not sufficiently related to your brother-in-laws parents. That is why the system is not allowing you to reserve the ordinance work. Does anyone else see this differently?

    There may be exceptions to the general rule that you must be related. In those cases there are Two types of permission, one from the close relative and another type of permission from FamilySearch. I think you have the first type of permission but someone at FamilySearch would have to grant the second permission (approval).

    @Mark McLemore can maybe you direct this sister to someone who can help her better. She has make several posts on the forum and is really trying hard to get an answer she can understand.

    https://www.familysearch.org/en/help/helpcenter/article/doing-temple-work-for-people-not-related-to-me

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