What
Earthly Good Are Heavenly Beings?
by
H. Wallace Goddard
Earth
life often seems to be long stretches of darkness punctuated
by rare pinpricks of light.
Some
years ago my dear father was giving me a tour of the Church
Office Building where he worked. As we walked along a hall,
a short man stepped out of an office into the hall. We paused
and stared. We were face-to-face with Spencer W. Kimball.
He might have dashed off to important business. Instead he
came to a young gawker and greeted me warmly. I am still
warmed by the blessing of greeting a prophet.
Yet
must mortality be so spiritually barren that we count ourselves
lucky if we have a single encounter with a prophet in an
entire lifetime? Who among us would not love to spend an
hour with one of our heroes? Who would not like to be personally
instructed by Gordon B. Hinckley? Who wouldn’t want to spend
time with beloved ancestors?
I
have sometimes wished I could spend an hour with my great-grandfather.
In 1879 he immigrated from England to the United States following
his girlfriend whose parents had joined the Church. As he
sold Bibles across Utah, Latter-day Saints opened the scriptures
to him. He joined the Church, served a mission, struggled
to find his niche, and ultimately became a spokesman for
the Church, serving as chief of the Bureau of Information
on Temple Square for 27 years. I would love to sit at his
feet and have him tell me about his spiritual journey and
life lessons. I would never miss another family home evening
if I knew I could be taught by great-grandfather Ben.
Heavenly
Classes
I
would also love to spend time with Elijah. After showing
a great manifestation of God’s power to assembled Israel,
he hoped to turn the spiritual tide for the nation. But Queen
Jezebel put out a death warrant for the disturber of her
apostate religion. Elijah shrank to the desert begging the
Lord to take his life. God invited Elijah to trek 40 days
across desolation to Mount Horeb where Elijah learned that
God was not in the wind, earthquake or fire; He is in the
still, small voice. I would love to have Elijah teach me
in periodic training sessions about finding God’s power in
our lives.
I
would love to spend an hour with Mary, the mother of our
Lord. That sweet, devoted, faithful woman who, when asked
to do the impossible, replied: “Behold the handmaid of the
Lord; be it unto me according to thy word” (Luke 1:38). She
never quite understood everything that she saw. But she had
the faith to keep “all these things, and pondered them in
her heart” (Luke 2:19; c.f. 2:33, 2:51). I don’t think that
I would have any questions for Mary. I would love to simply
feel her faithful spirit as she recounted those days of wonder
as mother to that remarkable Boy.
Elisha
is one of my scriptural favorites. In his life and ministry
there is an amazing theme of seeing rightly (See 2 Kings
6:8-22). His helper saw enemy warriors but failed to see
the heavenly protection all around them. “And Elisha prayed,
and said, LORD, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he may see.
And the LORD opened the eyes of the young man; and he saw:
and, behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots
of fire round about Elisha” (2 Kings 6:17). So Elisha approached
the Aramean army that had come to capture him. He closed
their eyes so that he could lead them into Israelite captivity.
When the king of Israel found he had enemy hostages, he was
ready to kill them. Elisha taught him to see the opportunity
to minister to his captives thereby making them into friends.
I would love to have Elisha keep me company and teach me
about seeing as heaven sees.
There
are so many others! I would like to sit at the feet of Moses
and be taught about the lessons he learned in Egypt, the
desert, at the edge of the Red Sea, and in the wilderness.
I would love to have Adam share with me about making the
journey through thistle and briar in companionship with such
a spiritual giant as Eve.
I
would love to have the unnamed woman in the house of Simon
the Pharisee describe the experience of being lifted from
despair to peace by the Prince of Peace. I would love to
have an hour with my departed father to get his counsel and
one more father’s blessing. I would love to have an hour
with my maternal grandfather, Harold E. Wallace, to learn
about his lifetime of family and community service.
I
cannot number all those whose eyes could restore my soul,
whose words could stretch my faith, and whose stories could
enlarge my appreciation of God. Yet as I reflect on this
yearning, I realize that our heartfelt wishes are clues to
eternal possibilities. Someday I hope to be taught by others
who have gone before me in this journey and who have been
true believers.
Maybe
in the eternal worlds I can enroll for Making Room for God
by Emptying Ourselves of Ourselves by Alma the Younger. I
would like to pre-register for Advanced Rejoicing by Ammon.
I would wait centuries for the chance to take Learning by
Experience to Know Good from Evil by Mother Eve.
Wow!
We could spend eternity learning from those Great Souls who
have written the history of this world with their love and
faith. How will we fit it all in? Eternity will be packed
with learning---not only from those giants who fill the pages
of scripture but also those unnamed thousands, nay, millions,
who have struggled against spiritual odds and kept their
eyes single to the glory of God. How will we find time for
it all?
Time
and Eternity
Alma
gives us an answer. He taught that “all is as one day with
God, and time only is measured unto men” (Alma 40:8). Time
binds us to mortality but disappears in eternity. Since time
is not an issue in the eternal worlds, maybe we will not
have to crowd into a vast coliseum to hear Joseph of ancient
Israel teach about Keeping Faith During Twelve Years in Prison.
Maybe we can be mentored and tutored individually. Imagine!
We could sit with Joseph as he teaches us how he resisted
Potiphar’s wife and, more amazingly, how he kept growing
spiritually while incarcerated unjustly for year after year.
I would love to hear him tell about the ways he kept himself
spiritually fit and energized.
Maybe
when time is no more, I can spend 10 years (whatever that
means in eternity) being trained by Elisha on Seeing Correctly:
The Mountains Are Filled. I would like to spend 100 years
with Joseph Smith learning about Being Tutored by Immortals.
He was the master of that subject!
Lucy
Mack Smith reported that Joseph “would describe the ancient
inhabitants of this continent, their dress, mode of traveling,
and the animals upon which they rode; their cities, their
buildings, with every particular; their mode of warfare;
and also their religious worship. This he would do with as
much ease, seemingly, as if he had spent his whole life among
them" (History of Joseph Smith by His Mother,
p. 83). How much we could learn about spiritual sensitivity
from Joseph Smith!
I
would love to spend time with Nephi studying Being Naïve
Enough to Trust. Nephi regularly chose simple faith over
complicated sophistry. There is much that we moderns could
learn from him.
Traveling
Across Time
Some
of these great lessons are available to us now as we study
the accounts in scripture and seek the insight that Heaven
gladly grants. Anyone who has had the scriptures come to
life before his or her eyes knows the miracle of having the “eyes
of our understanding opened.” In fact, maybe immortals stand
ready to whisper words of counsel to us even now. Maybe we
can call on ancestors to look after, teach, and bless members
of our families who are struggling. Maybe we can be taught
and comforted by those who have an eternal perspective. Maybe
we open our eyes to eternity.
A
few years ago I made a list of those places in the history
of this world that I would like to see. The list did not
include the big historical moments such as the parting of
the Red Sea; they were more personal. I wanted to be there
on July 13, 1929 when Ben Goddard was honored at a reception
after almost 30 years of serving on Temple Square. I wanted
to see admiring friends and beloved family greet my dear
great-grandfather. I wanted to see my father who was then
12 years old, serve refreshments to guests. So I studied
Ben’s life, work, and documents. I studied his patriarchal
blessing and letters. I found a quiet time to imagine that
scene. I went there. Because I have taken part in his life,
Ben continues to be a blessed inspiration to me.
I
testify that heavenly beings, eternal truths, and scenes
from the history of this world are more available to us than
we ever supposed. May the Lord open our eyes. The mountains
and plains are full of Eternity.