Spiritual Preparedness--the
Whats and Whys
By
Darla Isackson
Preparedness
has been a prime topic of counsel for years--and a good thing
to ponder as we begin a new year. In 1998 President Hinckley
admonished “that the time has come to get our houses in order
. . . There is a portent of stormy weather ahead to which
we had better give heed” (Ensign, November 1998, p.53).
Since then, events such as 9-11, natural disasters, and “wars
and rumors of wars,” and have driven home his message. Even
government agencies have encouraged food storage and issued
a plea for citizens to prepare the equivalent of a “72-hour-kit.”
All Things
Are Spiritual
While my
focus in this series of articles will be spiritual preparedness,
I am mindful that “all things unto [the Lord] are spiritual”
(D&C 29:34). To spend time and money on food storage is
an exercise in faith--a spiritual activity. In a recent Meridian
article on preparedness, Geoffrey Biddulph reminded us of
the necessity of physical preparedness, a need summarized
in a 2002 letter from the First Presidency: “Priesthood and
Relief Society leaders should teach the importance of home
storage and securing a financial reserve . . . Church members
can begin their home storage by storing the basic foods that
would be required to keep them alive if they did not have
anything else to eat. Depending on where members live, those
basics might include water, wheat or other grains, legumes,
salt, honey or sugar, powdered milk, and cooking oil. When
members have stored enough of these essentials to meet the
needs of their family for one year, they may decide to add
other items that they are accustomed to using day to day.”
To follow this counsel in short order is not impossible for
most of us, though it may require significant sacrifice. My
family has found that in our area the cost for such a basic
supply ranges from about $200 -$300 per person.
Any of us
who have not flexed our spiritual muscles to heed the words
of the prophets may want to re-read Spencer W. Kimball’s talk
on preparedness. After talking about the frequent encouragement
the Brethren have given to families to have on hand a year’s
supply, he concluded, “we say it over and over and over and
repeat over and over the scripture of the Lord where He says,
‘Why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I
say?’” (“Family Preparedness,” Ensign, May 1976, p.124)
Preparation
that Feeds the Soul
I love the
story of the young man who was so well prepared he could “sleep
while the wind blows”--a good example of implementation of
the scripture “If Ye are prepared, ye shall not fear” (D&C
38:30). However, I may have a year’s supply of food and other
necessities and still be caught up in fear. Only spiritual
preparation can feed my soul with hope, trust, peace, and
wisdom.
Studying
the scriptures on spiritual preparation, I find things I must
DO and things I must BE. The whole fifth chapter of Alma
gives an excellent checklist. For instance, Alma 5:28, 29
tells me I must be stripped of pride and envy. Colleen Harrison
said, “It is self-sufficiency (Pride) that keeps us from listening
to the counsel to get physically or spiritual prepared. We
may say ‘Who me? I’m not going to need to do that. Nothing
that bad is ever going to happen to me. If it does, I’ll deal
with it when it happens--I’ll cross that bridge when I come
to it.’ Without preparing ahead, there IS no bridge when you
come to cross!” Moroni 10:21 stresses the importance of faith,
hope and charity. Colleen says, “Charity is the greatest preparation
of all--the actual bulls-eye of the truth about preparedness.
Charity is the pure love of Christ that connects us to Him
and gives us revelation of how to love as He loves. There
is no other way. . .”
In D&C
1: 12 I we read, “Prepare ye, prepare ye for that
which is to come, for the Lord is nigh.” By reversing
what is said in verse 14 about those who are not prepared,
I learn that to be prepared I must: hear the voice
of the Lord and his servants--give heed to the words of the
prophets and apostles; I must hold to the ordinances and keep
the everlasting covenant; I must seek the Lord to establish
His righteousness, rather than walk in my own way, following
the world. D&C 85:3 tells me I must pay my tithing:
“that he may tithe his people, to prepare them against
the day of vengeance and burning” and Malachi 4: 5-6 reminds
me of the importance of turning my heart to my children and
my ancestors.
The list
begins to sound daunting. How can I do it all, and more importantly,
how can I BE all I need to BE in order to be spiritually prepared?
Only the Savior can give me the power to make such changes.
How can I access His power?
The Key:
Taking the Holy Spirit for My Guide
The parable
of the five wise and five foolish virgins in Matthew 25:1
perfectly connects preparedness with spirituality. Colleen
said that the spirituality referred to is “real and practiced,
trusted and lived sufficiently that being led by the Spirit
is a familiar and beloved daily experience.” I have heard
from several Church leaders that all ten virgins are members
of the church. I don’t want to be one of the foolish! D&C
45:56-57 clearly defines the characteristics of the five wise
virgins: “And at that day, when I shall come in my glory,
shall the parable be fulfilled which I spake concerning the
ten virgins. For they that are wise and have received the
truth, and HAVE TAKEN THE HOLY SPIRIT FOR THEIR GUIDE,
and have not been deceived--verily I say unto you, they shall
not be hewn down and cast into the fire, but shall abide the
day.” (emphasis mine)
Only if
I take the Holy Spirit as my guide can I hope to avoid deception,
be wise, discern and receive truth, and be guided in my quest
to fill all the requirements for preparedness I’ve listed
above. The Spirit gives light, the Spirit witnesses of truth
and teaches the words of Christ (and so keeps me from being
deceived). Only if I take the Holy Spirit as guide will I
be counted among the five wise virgins, lamps full of oil,
flame burning brightly, prepared to meet the Bridegroom.
Squarely
Confronting the Question of Faith
My motivation
to put this quest as absolute priority came from an unlikely
source--the literature of Alcoholics Anonymous. A few years
ago I was brought to a study of A. A. literature through a
son’s temporary foray into the drug world. My interest burned
bright as I found the amazing applicability of the Twelve-Step
program to my own life (largely through Colleen Harrison’s
superb book He Did Deliver Me from Bondage). I have
found in the real-life stories of reformed alcoholics vivid
examples of a mighty change of heart. Without exception, those
who follow the program and succeed in transcending their addiction
do so because they come to realize that their very survival
depends on the decision to turn their lives over to a Higher
Power--on reaching out to Him, relying on Him, inviting His
Spirit into their lives moment by moment. Here’s how they
summarize:
“Crushed
by a self-imposed crisis that we could not postpone or evade,
we had to fearlessly face the proposition that either God
is everything, or he was nothing. Arrived at this point, we
were squarely confronted with the question of faith. We couldn’t
duck the issue” (Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How
Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered form Alcoholism,
p. 53).
My Spiritual
Life Depends on It
How many
times in my comfortable life, have I chosen to “duck the issue”?
How much of my life has been ruled by self-will? Alcoholics
who attend A.A. learn that their addiction is triggered by
unchecked anger, resentment, pride, and other negative emotions.
They learn that if they do not consistently take the Spirit
as their guide in order to dissolve, transcend and conquer
these negative emotions, they will continue to turn to liquor
and will die of alcoholism.
Here is
the amazing tie-in. I have learned that the bottom line principle
for my spiritual preparedness is identical to the principle
upon which their physical survival rests. If I do
not take the Spirit as my guide on a moment by moment basis--I
will die spiritually. I will not be stripped of
pride and envy; I will not have a heart full of charity.
I will not have the strength to fulfill the other requirements.
I will not abide the evil day. I will be hewn down
and cast into the fire.
I Must
Quit Trying to Run the Show
How do I
prepare my heart so I’m open for the Spirit’s guidance? First,
I must learn, just as an alcoholic must learn, that a life
run on self-will will surely fail. Operating from self-will
I am always on a collision course with something or somebody,
even though my motives are good. I have to stop being like
an actor who wants to run the whole show. I can see myself
so clearly in past years: Like the example given in the A.
A. book (Ibid pp 60-61), I, too was forever trying to rearrange
the lights and the scenery, and usurping the part of Director
by presuming I knew how the rest of the players should play
their roles. I was quite convinced that if others in my family
would only do things my way, the show would be great
and my life would be wonderful. What usually happened? The
show did not come off well at all. When I tried even harder
to direct things, exerting all my efforts, the play got lousy
reviews and eventually got shut down. I became self-pitying,
convinced that others were more to blame than I.
Let’s examine
the dynamics: In the very act of trying to convince others
to do life “my way” (the “right” way) I saw myself as virtuous--kind
and self-sacrificing, only wanting good for others. But was
I not self-seeking even then? Was I not a victim of the Korihor-type
delusion that I could surely wrest satisfaction and happiness
out of mortal life if I only managed well? In Alma
30:17 Korihor teaches that “Every man fared in this life
according to the management of the creature; therefore every
man prospered according to his genius, and that every man
conquered according to his strength.” Whenever I have
attempted to “manage” myself, my family, my life without constant
reliance on the Spirit, the rest of the “players” in my show
become resistant, even resentful of my “direction” and I become
a producer of confusion, rather than harmony.
I’ve learned
that the very root cause of most negative emotions is trying
to manage well enough to get what I want instead of
surrendering to what God wants (which is to let every
one of his children learn from their own mistakes). If I have
feelings of anger, resentment, or bitterness--it’s usually
because others are not reading off MY script. I’m trying to
rewrite God’s play--and am upset because others don’t prefer
my version. I know of no better way to lose the Spirit.
The A.A.
literature suggests than whenever a person thinks they could
“create a Utopia if the rest of the world would just behave,
they are being selfish and self-centered.” They conclude that,
“Above everything, we alcoholics must be rid of this selfishness.
We must, or it kills us! Only God makes that possible. . .
. We had to have God’s help. This is the how and why of it.
First of all, we had to quit playing God. It didn’t work.
Next, we decided that hereafter in this drama of life, God
was going to be our Director. He is the Principal, we are
His agents. He is the Father, and we are His children. Most
good ideas are simple, and this concept was the keystone of
the new and triumphant arch through which we passed to freedom.”
(Ibid, p. 62)
How Do I take the Spirit as Guide? Learning
the Process
Taking the
Holy Spirit as my Guide is the new and triumphant arch through
which I too may pass to freedom. Only by doing so can I be
spiritual prepared. I have found it a lifelong process, rather
than a sudden change, however--a process that requires far
more of surrender than white-knuckled will power. And knowing
what I need to do doesn’t mean I know HOW to do it. Part
Two, which I have named Spiritual Preparedness by Applying
the Precepts of the Book of Mormon, will introduce
the book He Did Deliver Me from Bondage, by Colleen
Harrison, which will be serialized by Meridian in the next
few months.