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© Norman Chan. Image from BigStockPhoto.com
For many, many years, even though
I professed to have a testimony of Jesus Christ and his restored
gospel, even though I went to church every Sunday and held “important”
callings, even though I read my scriptures, had family home evening,
and said my prayers, I faced the world alone.
I’m not saying that the Lord
was not with me, because now, looking back, I can see that He
most certainly was. But I didn’t feel his presence, because
I didn’t trust him. I didn’t rely on him. I didn’t
rely on anyone. I thought it was just me against the vagaries
of the universe.
I was constantly braced for disaster.
Never knowing what horrible thing lay just around the corner,
my body was always tense, always on the verge of fight or flight.
Such tension cannot be sustained for years by the human body without
physical consequences.
Inability to Trust
There are many of us who have a terrible time with trust. Even
though we profess to believe in Jesus Christ and Heavenly Father,
that relationship is not seen as a trustworthy one. Bad things
happen to good people. Abuse, divorce, natural disasters, illness,
financial difficulties are but a few of the trials of mortality.
Many of us who have been through
these things have natural physical/psychological reactions that
make us guarded, closed inside. We are natural men and women with
natural responses to mortality. And yet there is that scary scripture
in Mosiah 3:19 that says:
For the natural
man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall of Adam, and
will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticing of
the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh
a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord, and becometh
as a child, submissive, meek, humble, patient, pull of love, willing
to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon
him, even as a child doth submit to his Father.
I don’t know about you, but
when King Benjamin talks about submission in all things, it used
to scare me to death. That’s just what I was afraid of.
I wasn’t going down without a fight! Being a child was not
a pleasant experience for me at all, and I wasn’t going
back there. I was going to have control over my life!
But mortality is a teacher, and the longer we live, the more we
find out that if anyone has control, it surely isn’t us!
So the day comes when we have to take King Benjamin seriously.
Enemies of God
Are we an enemy to God? Do we see
him as an enemy to us — causing calamity in our lives? Do
we keep a shield up, saying “This far and no further”?
I don’t think most of us would
consider ourselves enemies to God. But when we react as natural
men and women to the calamities of mortality, we are not yielding
to the enticings of the Holy Spirit. We are spiritually sitting
in a hole in the ground and eating beans.
This life isn’t just about
enduring, it’s about becoming.
Do we want to get out of that hole?
Where is our ladder? King Benjamin tells us. It is the atonement
of Christ. We become a saint through the atonement of Christ.
Okay. That’s our ladder. How
do we use it? Elder Bednar gives us some clues in his address
“In the Strength of the Lord.” He first addresses
the redeeming power of the atonement, with which most of us are
familiar. But we are not talking about sin here. In this hypothetical
situation, we are assuming that we are repentant victims of worldly
sorrows. We are in the hole because we are scared.
Elder Bednar says,
I suspect that you and I are much
more familiar with the nature of the redeeming power of the
Atonement than we are with the enabling power of the Atonement.
It is one thing to know that Jesus Christ came to earth to die
for us. That is fundamental and foundational to the doctrine
of Christ. But we also need to appreciate that the Lord desires,
through His Atonement and by the power of the Holy Ghost, to
live in us — not only to direct us but also to empower
us.
I am not so sure,
however, that we know and understand that the Atonement is also
for saints — for good men and women who are obedient and
worthy and conscientious and who are striving to become better
and serve more faithfully. I frankly do not think many of us “get
it” concerning this enabling and strengthening aspect of
the Atonement, and I wonder if we mistakenly believe we must make
the journey from good to better and become a saint all by ourselves
through sheer grit, willpower, and discipline, and with our obviously
limited capacities. (“In the Strength of the Lord,”
David A. Bednar, Devotional Address, BYU, 23 Oct 2001)
So we have a ladder and that is the
atonement. And through that atonement we have the means to
climb that ladder. We can get out of our hole where we have
been sitting alone and damaged, by using the enabling power of
the atonement.
Exactly how does this work? How do
we go from a traumatized, fragile human being to a saint with
the strength to climb the ladder? First, we have to lose the attitude.
Elder Scott says:
Clearly, it is what
you do and what you think about that determine what you are and
what you will become.” (“The Sustaining Power of Faith
in Times of Uncertainty and Testing,” Liahona, May, 2003.)
Are we going to become angry human
beings with chips on our shoulders for the rest of our lives?
Where is that going to get us? Not out of the hole.
Having a Contrite Spirit
We are already broken. Do we have
a contrite spirit? That’s the hard part.
Total submission is never, ever easy.
It wasn’t even easy for the Savior, who prayed in the Garden
for the cup to pass from him. But we have been promised by Elder
Bednar that we can become saints through the enabling power of
the Atonement.
On our own, as natural men and women
we can’t be submissive. But by studying and praying we can
learn contrition. As we repent of our attitude, as we realize
how very much we owe our Savior, as we understand how much he
suffered for not only our sins but also the very sorrows that
have us bowed down, we will be brought low in contrition. We will
realize that it was a fallacy to ever think that we could stop
whatever earthly tsunami brought us low.
But as Elder Holland says, “Christ
knows the way because he is the way.” (“Broken Things
to Mend,” Ensign, May, 2006) “He is the way
out and He is the way up.”
Holy Ladder
Our broken heart and contrite spirit
are the requirements for stepping onto that most holy of ladders.
As we climb, ever closer to the Lord, we will be faced with more
trials, but if we seek the Lord, he will hold our hand and comfort
us through them. We will not be facing the world alone.
In the aforementioned article, Elder
Scott says of this climb, “You need to ponder, pray, and
exercise faith to willingly make choices consistent with the teachings
of the Master. Such choices are made with trust in things that
are believed and when acted upon will be confirmed. [Thus redeeming
us from our “trust issues”] Only enough guidance is
given to lead you aright and not to weaken your growing character.
That guidance will solidify your trust in Heavenly Father
and the Savior.”
When I placed myself on the altar
and finally sacrificed my last shred of will, it was in order
to save my life. I gave my life to the Lord. He has done unbelievable
things with it. As I climb my ladder out of my deep, dark hole,
I find that I am very glad I’ve given up beans! There is
a banquet spread for me. A banquet of opportunities.
The world is still a trying place.
But I have a child’s delight now in the simple and beautiful
things of the earth. In the chance to help and lift another. In
the love of friends and family. In the opportunity to develop
and refine my talents. In the sure, warm knowledge that I have
a
Savior who is my friend, who travels with me over treacherous
seas.
If you haven’t done so, I would
advise you most lovingly to submit yourself to the Savior as a
child to his parent. The climb up and out is more than worth it.
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© 2007
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved
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About
the Author: |
|

G.G. Vandagriff is a Stanford
graduate and also received her master's degree from George Washington
University. She is the author of Voices in Your Blood:
Discovering Identity through Family History (Andrews
and McMeel), as well as being
the first LDS mystery writer with a genealogical mystery series
(begun in the early 1990's).
Although she has lived throughout the
country, she and her husband have settled in Provo, Utah.
They are the parents of three children
and one grandchild. You can write to GG through her website at www.GGVandagriff.com. |
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