Sometimes
the Seagulls Don’t Come
By Susan Law Corpany
When the pioneers were
about to lose their crops to a plague of locusts, seagulls
came and devoured the locusts, saving the crops. Sometimes,
though, our crops are not saved. We pray, we fast,
we exercise faith, and we may not get the desired outcome.
What do you do when the seagulls don’t come?
This morning I read a news
story about a man who won $225,000 in a lottery on his
last day at work before the plant where he had been
employed closed its doors. I’m sure that we would all
like such immediate relief from our trials (perhaps
coming as an unexpected inheritance from a long-lost
relative unearthed by years of faithful genealogical
research as opposed to lotto winnings).
I imagine the man said
something like this to his friends and family, “Somebody
up there likes me!”
As members of the Church,
we are always mindful of our responsibility to build
one another’s faith and to give credit to the Lord for
the blessings we receive. There are dramatic instances
of promptings heeded, blessings of healing, prayers
of faith answered and missionaries led to a certain
door behind which is their golden contact. Because
of our gratitude when things happen in a positive or
dramatic way, those are often the stories that are shared,
many times from the pulpit on fast Sunday.
Shortly after meeting the
widower who would later become my husband, we attended
a fast and testimony meeting at the ward of the friends
we were visiting. I was seated in the middle of the
row by two little girls anxious to get acquainted with
me. Thom sat on the end of the same row next to his
best friend. The first person who shared told of a
family member’s cure from cancer, referenced the faith
that had been exercised and the fasting and prayers
that had resulted in this great miracle. As often happens
in testimony meetings, one testimony prompts another
person with a similar experience to share their story.
My heart ached for the man at the end of the row who
had recently lost his wife to cancer. We heard three
people in a row share stories of loved ones miraculously
cured from cancer.
I sent my thoughts heavenward.
Please, won’t someone get up and talk about tithing,
the Book of Mormon, a great genealogical find—anything
but cancer.
I was greatly relieved
when a lady got up and began to tell a “feel-good story”
from earlier that week. While driving, cars in front
of her had stopped abruptly. She wondered why and then
she saw a mother duck crossing the road, with a following
of little ducklings waddling behind her. All the cars
in both directions waited while the mother and her babies
crossed the road. I was feeling all warm and fuzzy.
She continued. “Then a car that couldn’t see why everyone
was stopped came through in the far lane and hit the
mother duck.” She graphically described the flying
feathers, and out of the corner of my eye I saw a grieving
man at the end of the row get up and leave the meeting,
unable to listen to the ensuing description of the little
ducklings confused and scattered on the road, unsure
where to go with no mother to follow.
Please someone get up
and talk about cancer again.
As we prepare to share
stories (which hopefully lead to testimony of a gospel
principle), we should be mindful of the fact that in
the congregation might be someone who has faithfully
paid tithing and yet suffered severe financial hardship.
As we rejoice about the return of a child to activity
in church, there sits a couple still worried about a
son or daughter gone astray. As we talk of astonished
doctors and miraculous healings, we should also remember
that perhaps we speak to someone who likewise exercised
faith and did not receive the hoped-for outcome. As
we sit in these meetings it is easy to begin to feel
that the seagulls come for everyone else but not for
us.
The furloughed workers
at the closing plant who did not receive a windfall
don’t make the news. Likewise, you will not likely
hear someone at the pulpit sharing the story of a wayward
child and how they have prayed for him for years and
just want to update everyone that he recently committed
grand theft auto and is going to be spending some time
at the county jail.
Today our wise bishop said
a few words after the Primary children presented their
program. Referring to God’s promises being sure, he
referred to the story of faith found in the book of
Daniel. When King Nebuchadnezzar was getting ready
to throw Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego into the fiery
furnace because of their refusal to worship his gods,
they answered him with the following:
If it be so, our God whom
we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery
furnace, and he will deliver us out of thine hand, O
king. But if not, be it known unto thee, O king,
that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden
image which thou hast set up.
Daniel 3:17-18
They knew the Lord could
deliver them, but they went into the furnace willing
to consider that He might not, and their faith did not
waiver. Neither should we allow our faith to waiver
during the times that we do not get the outcome hoped
for and prayed for. Abinadi was no less righteous than
those three men and yet God did not intervene when he
was burned at the stake. The bishop then related some
personal experiences of times he had done the right
things and had still struggled. It is something we
all need to be reminded of, and I was grateful for his
message.
We endeavor to teach our
Primary children that God keeps his promises, and in
so doing, we have to make sure they understand that
we aren’t the ones who decide how things turn out.
Even when we fast and pray for a desired outcome, it
simply isn’t up to us. Some of God’s promises to us
will be fulfilled in this life. Many will be fulfilled
in the next life. If righteousness always brought immediate
results, we would be righteous for all the wrong reasons.
Sometimes God surprises us with something wonderful
we hadn’t even thought to ask for. Other times he may
try us in ways we could not imagine.
One Sunday in an attempt
to reach my group of young women, I presented a container
of shampoo. I read from the label about the smooth
satin finish that would reflect light and how by using
this shampoo my hair would be turn from “lackluster
brittle brown to glossy supple brunette with multi-dimensional
shine,” that my hair would be “restored, revitalized
and lustrous.” I then asked them if my hair looked
any different to them than it had looked the week before.
I told them how much more I had paid for this shampoo
than I usually did because of all the things it said
it would do. Then I asked them why we are so quick
to believe what is written on the back of a bottle of
shampoo and yet question the things that God has promised
us.
Whether the seagulls come
to save our crops or whether we clear the land and plant
again, at the end of the day, remember that it isn’t
the shampoo that is going to come through with the promised
blessings.