When I was baptized and
joined the Church, I was put through some horrible
times with my parents. They continue to this day
to rail against my membership, accuse, and shun.
Although, I handle things much better emotionally
today than in the beginning, my creativity disappeared
off the map for over two years: I couldn’t write anything
longer than my name.
While this disaster was
going on in my writing life, I was having more success
than ever before in my police career. Still, the
emotional upset leading to creative stagnation drove
me to spend time in therapy. I worked separately
with an LDS counselor and a police therapist, both
of whom helped me tremendously. I worked hard in
therapy ― always having been blessed with the
ability to self-analyze and an optimistic disposition
― and made good progress.
With therapy now over
more than years behind me, I recently had an epiphany:
If I had experienced worldly success in publishing,
television, or movies, I would have been led further
and further away from the Church. If I had been given
what I asked for ― if I’d have had the kind
of money and celebrity that comes with that type of
secular success ― I may have become unbearably
self-centered, puffed up, and selfish. Today I could
be spiritually empty.
I understand myself well
enough to know the path of the Pharisees would have
been hard to avoid. With that kind of secular success,
it would have taken me a lot longer to reach conversion
― if ever in this life. Fortunately, I had
already turned my life over to the Lord. He had a
hard enough time getting me to where he wanted me
without having to deal with me had I been on the bestseller
list.
I now pray for something
quite different in my writing ― not secular
success, but to be able to use the gift of words the
Lord has given me for His purposes. As soon as I
started doing this, the opportunity to write for Meridian
opened and the amazing reader response to my articles
has been gratifying. Even as I began writing this
particular series on The Ripples of Adult Conversion,
I found myself turning to the Lord for guidance.
Creative Prayer
Like many of the other
self-revealing points I have discussed in this series,
I do so simply as a testimony to the power of adult
baptism and conversion in my life. I struggled with
writing the articles in this personally open fashion
because I did not want to be misperceived. I started
and restarted the first article in the series over
and over, only to have it run out of steam each time.
Finally, the light bulb
went on (why do we forget these simple things?).
I asked the Lord to help me find the right approach
for the article if it was a subject he wanted me to
explore. The next morning when I sat down at the
computer there was an email waiting for me. It was
from an LDS writing acquaintance whom I hadn’t had
contact with in quite a while. Out of the blue, he
was writing to ask me if cops ever prayed for solutions
to cases, if I’d ever done so, and what if anything
had been the effect!
I sat there gobsmacked!
The heart of the article I was striving to write could
not have been captured more precisely.
The resulting correspondence
over a half-dozen emails eventually formed the skeleton
outline for these articles. I gained the strength
to share my experiences with a wider audience and,
in the less formal setting of an email, was able to
write what was essentially an unpolished first draft.
In his epistle to the
Hebrews (Hebrews 11:1), Paul wrote, “Now faith is
the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of
things not seen.” As we engage in creative endeavors
with the revelations of conversion, what we create
gives substance to “things hoped for” through paint,
language, sculpture, music or any art form. Artistic
creation becomes a form of translation ― God’s
message through art.
In bringing the fire
of conversion and baptism to creative fields, we must
consider what the Lord would have us portray and how
he would have us portray it. As a writer, it is my
job to entertain. My goal, however, should be to
uplift and edify. So, when I write another novel,
do I seek to capitalize on the commercialism of humanities
basest attributes?
If an offer comes to
write a feature film with an R rating because
of language, sexuality, and violence, do I accept
the commission? What if it is to star an Oscar-winning
actor and has a strong chance of being a huge financial
success? Do I waste the creative gifts entrusted
to me, or do I seek a creative path to glorify the
one who gave me the gifts?
Commercial Success
Commercial success and
adherence to creative integrity are not mutually exclusive.
Many LDS writers, musicians, filmmakers, and other
artists honor their creative inheritance in a manner
that has also blessed them secularly. Two prominent
LDS authors, Anne Perry and Orson Scott Card, are
both upstanding examples of this combination.
Many of their works are
secular in setting, plotting, and exposition, yet
they possess an underlying quality that makes their
novels works of principle. Others of their works
are unapologetically spiritual in seeking more direct
paths to exalt the Lord, his love, and his message.
Seeking to create with the same integrity as they
display will no doubt keep us closer to the message
the Lord would have us craft.
All experiences add to
the well of human understanding from which we draw
inspiration. Often, the most stressful and demanding
life experiences are those that pour most heavily
into our wells. This is especially true if we work
to find the difficult blessings within them.
Through the trials of
lack of secular writing success, I have known the
Lord has had everything in hand. As horrible as the
situation has been with my parents’ avid and vocal
disapproval of my conversion, I know that I continue
to move through that fire for a reason.
I asked the Lord to allow
me to serve Him ― and in order for me to do
so, He has had to put me through the refiner’s fire
of change. It has humbled me; it has changed my priorities;
it has strengthened my marriage. When I was recently
called to the bishopric, I told my wife I would never
have been called to this position, or been prepared
in any way to accept its challenges, had I not been
through what I had with my parents.
My favorite scripture
comes from Paul’s epistle to the Thessalonians. He
tells them, “In every thing give thanks: for this
is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you”
(I Thessalonians 5:18). Paul is not referring to
just good things ― he specifically states, every
thing. So, as hard as our trials are, if we have
truly given ourselves to Christ, then we can find
comfort in knowing our trials are part of his purpose.
If we can give thanks
during hard times, willingly undergoing them because
we know Father needs us to carry these burdens and
has a purpose behind them, we can find great comfort
― especially if we keep our minds and hearts
open to the purpose, so if Father chooses to make
his purpose clear, we will gain understanding and
move forward.
Ethics guru Michael Josephson
puts it this way, “It's not easy, but if we develop
the wisdom to treat frustrations and failures as empowering
experiences and generate the strength to let go of
self-destructive resentments and grudges, our lives
will be filled with a lot more sunshine.”
Will we always understand
his purpose? No, for His ways are not our ways ―
He is unbound by time and flesh. But if we as parents
had to put a child through a difficult trial because
we knew it was in the child’s best interest, and that
child had no concept of why he had to undergo this
difficult thing, yet turned to us and said, “I’ll
do this because I trust you and know you would never
do anything that wasn’t in my best interest,” how
great would our tears of joy be?
If we can get on our
knees and say the same thing to Father when we are
in the depths of pain and despair, the power of the
heavens will be with us.
As a writer I recognize
Jesus Christ as a master storyteller. The simple
parables he used to teach, enlighten, and uplift stand
as beacons because of the truths within them. While
simple on the surface, there are far reaching consequences
within each tale. Creatively, we can not wander if
we seek to employ artistic skills in emulation of
the son of the master creator.
The Call
The Lord has given artists,
writers, musicians, actors, and others in the creative
disciplines specific talents. At some point in time,
each of us will be held accountable for how we have
used these gifts. Will we have to admit to squandering
them in prideful pursuit of vain ambition?
How much greater our
joy will be if we can show creative works reflecting
spiritual value. Each of us as individual creative
artists need to seek through prayer and fasting the
path the Lord would have us follow. How does he want
us to use the gifts and talents he has given us?
As members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, have we not covenanted those gifts and talents
to him.
If our post conversion
creativity reaches a wide audience, commercial reward
may follow. If it does, we must seek to treat it
as a blessing, not an invitation from the adversary
to stray from our covenants. If confronted with commercial
opportunities which compromise our spirituality, may
we remember those covenants and keep our eyes on the
higher prize.
My own early works have
helped make me a writer. The creative lessons learned
crafting each novel and writing project have honed
my skills. I wrote in a worldly manner expedient
for me at the time. Through conversion and baptism,
I now realize the Lord expects more of me and it is
time to step up. I will write the best books I can,
I will mentor others, I will look for opportunities
to serve the Lord with my writing ― I place
all else in His hands.