Without
Contracted Feelings
by Davis Bitton
When
purveyors of hate seem to fill the news–people who, if they
could, would exterminate Christians just because they are Christians,
Jews just because they are Jews, Mormons just because they are
Mormons, Americans just because they are Americans, and so on–I
find it calming to think about some sterling individuals who
have crossed my path.
When
pursuing a doctorate, I became well acquainted with a Presbyterian
professor named E. Harris Harbison. Affectionately known as “Jinx,” Harbison
was the embodiment of the Christian gentleman, always kind,
polite, concerned, helpful. Even then, it was unusual in academic circles to
be an avowed believer. Harbison was
known by some of his colleagues as “the departmental Christian.”
But his fairness and his adherence to the strictest standards
of scholarship were such that he was universally respected.
He became chairman of my advisory committee and taught me in
individual tutorials.
This
Presbyterian showed great interest in the graduate student from
Idaho who had served a Mormon mission in France. By guided
reading and kindly discussion he changed my thinking on John
Calvin. On the now unfashionable assumption that students should
understand the beliefs of religious people, both Catholic and
Protestant, he introduced his Reformation students to Reinhold
Neibuhr’s The Nature and Destiny of Man. I was being
stretched. I was enlarging my horizons. But he showed nothing
but respect for my own beliefs. When I experienced some momentary
turbulence in my personal life, he said,
“Davis, I know you have spiritual resources you can draw
upon. Stay close to them.”
As
a new professor at the University of Texas at Austin, I was
assigned a teaching assistant who was an Episcopalian. Having
pictured Episcopalians as reserved, perhaps stodgy, I was surprised
to find in Bill a young man full of faith and a desire to live
a good life. For him belief in Christ was nothing if it failed
to produce a disciple committed to serving others. Both individually
and through his church organization, he was constantly engaged
in doing something. In our conversations we never argued.
He asked questions and I asked questions. I hope he learned
to appreciate the huge amount of good done by Latter-day Saints.
I know my appreciation for another faith was enlarged.
I
have had a series of interactions with Roman Catholics. I remember
a Franciscan priest who accepted my
invitation to be a guest lecturer in a Reformation class at
the University of California at Santa Barbara. Kind, intelligent,
anxious to help students understand, he openly expressed some
of his frustrations with his own church, not in a spirit of
disloyalty but with an attitude of “Here are some things we
need to work on.” When a student asked him to explain the doctrine
of transubstantiation, he extended his hands and said, “Who
understands that? I don’t.” But we all recognized a good man
who had dedicated his life to accomplishing good.
More
recently it was my privilege to be host of a visiting Catholic
scholar, a Benedictine, who gave lectures
on science and religion. Having read most of his profound works
on this subject, I was honored to become personally acquainted
with him. At the university he acquitted himself well in presenting
his ideas and responding to questions.
Then
with some time to kill, I asked him if there was anything else
in Salt Lake City he would like to see. “Oh,” he said, “I would
just love to see Temple Square. Do you think that would be
possible?” So off we went, and the two of us strolled
the grounds, listened to the sister missionaries, and stood
silently before the imposing Christus
statue. It turned out that he was more than a little interested
in Mormonism, having read about it and having listened to missionaries
at his home in New Jersey. Committed to his own faith, he also
had the capacity to appreciate Mormonism and its fruits.
Just
a few days ago I attended a meeting in the historic Salt Lake
Tabernacle. The Ensign and Emigration stakes invited neighboring
Catholic, Presbyterian, and Episcopalian churches to participate
in a Community Celebration of Faith. Talks were given by each
of the three ministers, and a concluding comment was made by
Elder Bruce Porter, of the Seventy. All four speakers maintained
a tone of warm cordiality.
Prior
to each talk a choir performed. I hope the organists of these
other congregations enjoyed playing one of the world’s great
pipe organs.
Of
course, as we all know, there are differences between these
faith traditions. But this was a time to express good will,
a time to recognize we can do much in working together as children
of the same God, a time to affirm a common devotion to the Lord
Jesus Christ. As these neighbors sang “Happy Birthday,” a surprise
tribute to the Ensign Stake on its one hundredth anniversary,
I felt a warm affection. Those in the four choirs, whose voices
joined in singing “Come Thou Fount
of Every Blessing” and, at the end, Handel’s “Hallelujah, Amen,”
said they felt the same. These were not enemies but friends.
I
think we were responding to the counsel of President Gordon
B. Hinckley given at general conference in April 2004. “We
can never compromise the doctrine which has come through revelation,”
he said, “but we can live and work with others, respecting their
beliefs and admiring their virtues, joining hands in opposition
to the sophistries, the quarrels, the hatred–those perils which
have been with man from the beginning. Without surrendering
any element of our doctrine we can be neighborly, we can be
helpful, we can be kind and generous.”
And again: “May we reach out to those about us in friendship
and respect.”
In
1842 the Prophet Joseph Smith said, “While one portion of the
human race is judging and condemning the other without mercy,
the Great Parent of the universe looks upon the whole of the
human family with a fatherly care and paternal regard. He views
them as His offspring, and without any of those contracted feelings
that influence the children of men causes ‘His sun to rise on
the evil and the good, and sendeth
rain on the just and on the unjust.’” As we recognize, the Prophet
was quoting Matthew 5:45.
Thinking
of that beneficent sun, shining down on all, enjoy with me a
description by Claude T. Barnes, a Utah naturalist writing three
quarters of a century ago and more. Barnes, you will notice,
loved and appreciated colors.
“Just
after sundown the eastern sky is painted with clouds of safrano
pink interspersed with others of pale green blue gray; and as
the moon arises, like a translucent ball of illuminated silver,
it is set before a background of vinaceous gray. Overhead the heavens are campanula blue,
clear and incomprehensible; but the western horizon is suffused
with primrose yellow and purplish opaline.
“Gradually
all of the vinaceous hues fade out of the East; and the West, cloudless
though it be, becomes golden, then
orange chrome, then scarlet, which last brilliant coloring lingers
until the stars of night shine bright and clear.”