©iStockphoto.com/Leslie J. Morris
First Sunday of September,
and we had one of the most totally uplifting services I can ever
remember. I can even say that the sun shone, and that has not happened
very much this summer.
Relief Society was as near perfect
as I think we can get in this life. There was much of pure Gospel
value in it for absolutely everyone, and we all left feeling as
if we walked on air. There were smiles, a lift in the step and almost
a crackle of excitement in the air.
It would be difficult to define the
subject. It was the choice of the Relief Society presidency. The
sister teaching felt prompted to speak on the great value and worth
of every individual person. She reminded us that we each have a
mission in this life for which we were chosen — and ordained
— before we were born. And that applies to women as much as
to men.
Already we felt special — and
loved and valued! We had a greater sense of having “the DNA
of Godhood” in us, as she put it. Isn’t that a breathtaking
thought? We are innately programmed to become like God — if
we want to.
And this mission is possible for us
to achieve. Of course, it will take work, faith, prayer, time, and
possibly help. But the help is there. We do not lack anything that
is necessary for success. We may feel we lack a few things for happiness
on a temporary basis, in this life — or, of course, we may
have it. But that distinction is one that time will alter —
and heal. (And of course we also need to remember that without gratitude,
gentleness and faith it can also be possessed here, but lost for
eternity — a very sobering thought).
To quote her exactly (and I asked for
her notes, so I have it word for word), “Each of us, regardless
of our beliefs or our personal circumstances, has a role to play
in the Latter Day Kingdom of God.” Is that not a knowledge
to dispel the occasional feelings of unworthiness that most of us
have?
We do not need to conform to someone
else’s idea, another person’s mould of what a “perfect”
woman is like. We need to believe in ourselves, in each other, and
strive to be kind, brave, honest, and so on. All the things of loving
one another that we already know. She reminded us that the foundation
of it all is love one another.
True Conversion
How can we tell is someone is converted
to Christ?
Easy — by how they treat others.
A simple yardstick, and a true one — but I think sometimes
we lose sight of it.
I have a good friend who uses the expression,
“It isn’t always about you!” Sometimes we become
too absorbed in our own worlds to realize that an event, a plan,
a happening of any sort, may actually be largely about someone else.
Our part in it may not be a solo, just part of the orchestra —
this time. “When thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.”
In an eternal prospective, that is of immeasurable value.
The teacher mentioned a talk given
by Sheri Dew in which she spoke about the need to be valiant, and
that we must learn the obligation we are under to God. Every man
and every woman has a mission here. Apparently one member of the
congregation found this hard and discouraging. She did not wish
to be valiant. She felt Sheri Dew’s remarks robbed life of
all its joy and fun. She wishes to be more casual about things.
She felt overwhelmed by all that the Church requires, and being
told that the Lord requires valiant women didn’t help her.
She said she did not wish to be incredible, only to be herself.
My immediate reaction to that was that
we are incredible — if we wish to be. That is our
“self.” How can we hope to receive “All that the
Father hath” if we put in only a casual effort?
Be ye therefore perfect. Perfect doesn’t
mean without flaws or weaknesses — it means doing your best
at any given moment. There is no end to our growth, our learning,
to the glory and the happiness we may receive, no end to the things
we may see and experience.
There isn’t a point at which
we ever say, “Now I have arrived. There is nothing more to
see, nothing to learn, nothing to create, no one else to love.”
There will ALWAYS be something else beautiful, wonderful and exciting
to discern. That is what eternity is about. That is the precious
thing we know that it seems so few others do. That is the Plan of
Salvation — eternal offspring of God — His children.
He made our bodies out of clay, but our souls are immortal and our
spirit bodies will be also.
Getting What We Want
The teacher also said that ultimately
we will become what we give our hearts to. We will get what we must
want.
That sounds a bit sweeping, but I remember
a stake patriarch once saying, “We are what we are because
we want to be!” I thought that was absurd, until I thought
harder about it. He meant spiritually, not in other ways. And it
is true. It is a matter of priorities. What we want most is
what we will strive to become.
There may be other things we want as
well, and it might not be possible to have them all in this life.
I find I forget far too easily that this life is only a breath compared
with forever.
Do I want to be brave sufficiently
to risk being hurt? It doesn’t come free!
Do I want to be kind enough to control
my selfish thoughts, my own pain or loss, and think of others? That
doesn’t come free either.
Do I want to be honest enough to face
truths that hurt, or may be very hard indeed to live with, or to
own up to? Again, not without price.
In the end, do I want to serve God
more than I want my own comfort, safety, personal happiness now?
She is right. What I want most is what I will get — eventually.
Can I say with a whole heart, “Not my will be done, but Thine”?
I’m working on it.
She said a lot more, all of it good,
including many scriptures, but she ended with this:
Be proud of who you are
Be better every day
Strive to honour the world wide sisterhood.
A Matter of Traveling
Sunday School was good also, although
we are now finished the Gospels, and I feel the loss because nothing
else moves me as they do. We are almost to the end of Acts, and
into some of the Epistles.
There is much to learn and remind oneself
of regarding the faith and strength of the Apostles, as well as
their struggles, and occasionally their shortcomings. It is encouraging,
because we then know that our own failings are not cause to despair.
It is a matter of traveling, not of arriving. They did not find
it easy, nor did they always succeed. Why should we expect to?
In fast meeting I found myself thinking
back on the Relief Society lesson and some of the things said that
I have not mentioned, especially the differences in every woman,
which our teacher spoke of very movingly. She made the point that
we are all here for a divine purpose, and no one is dispensable,
and no one’s mission can be served by anyone else. No one
is excluded: young or old, of any race or previous faith, well educated
or not, married or single, we are all necessary and valuable.
I bore testimony and found myself saying
that we all have a mission that we can fulfill. God never asks
anyone to do something without making it possible for him to succeed,
if he will trust Him, and try. We may not be given every opportunity
we would like, but we will have every opportunity we need. Possibly
some things were learned in the pre-existence, and that calling
is not needed now? The absence of one opportunity may really be
the presence of another. We need to see what is there, not what
is apparently missing. It may simply be somewhere else, out of our
direct line of sight.
How terrible to reach the end of the
road with the complaint that we could not do one thing because we
had not the chance — to have God say, “But you didn’t
need that! I gave you the opportunity to learn something else which
you did need, but you didn’t trust me, and you didn’t
take it.”
Trust is very hard when we believe
we have abilities that are not being used, chances that are given
to others who are seemingly less worthy.
It all comes down to the question,
do you trust God to give you what you need now, so that in eternity
you may have everything? If the answer is yes, then carry on the
road, however hard it gets. It leads to celestial glory. If the
answer is no, then you have some deep thought and prayers ahead.
The God of the Gospel of Jesus Christ
is our Father who loves us and will give us every good thing we
make ourselves able to receive — in the time that is best
for us. And that can be very hard to wait for, when all around seem
to be rewarded sooner. But there “seem” is the key word.
I know I judge too easily, and sometimes
I have no idea of what the whole story really is. How on earth do
I have the stupidity to think I can second-guess God? And yet too
often I do!
Back to trust again. Look at the opportunities
I have, and make the most of them, with gratitude and faith that
I can learn from them what I need, and accept that in some cases
it is not “all about me!” Perhaps that particular work
was for someone else. My time will come — and so will yours.
Please let us say, “Yes, I know
it would. I believed” — not, “I wish I had! I
know now, and it is too late for faith.” No one needs lamps
in the daylight. Then we shall see everything, and it will all make
sense.
One step at a time. And I say that
more to myself than to anyone else. Let us love what we have, who
we know, treasure what is beautiful, forgive mistakes, and be gentle.
And keep the faith.
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