ELDER’S QUORUM LESSON – DECEMBER 27, 2020
By Ron Green
I hope that you and your family are able to have a wonderful Christmas and that you feel the love of Christ in your home. The new year is just a few days away and I feel we all hope that 2021 is filled with good health and that the COVID-19 pandemic will be contained. I am also looking forward to studying the Doctrine and Covenants with you this next year. The conference talk chosen for this week is by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland titled “Waiting on the Lord.” I love this talk and hope you will read and study it with your family. The trials and tribulations we receive in this mortal life come to us so that we can grow and gain experience. As we call upon the Savior our faith grows and we become more like Him.
“Waiting on the Lord” Jeffrey
R. Holland
My beloved brothers and sisters, we are all eager—no one more than I—to hear
concluding remarks from our beloved prophet, President Russell M. Nelson.
This has been a marvelous conference, but it is the second time that COVID-19
has altered our traditional proceedings. We are so tired of this contagion, we
feel like tearing our hair out. And apparently, some of my Brethren have
already taken that course of action. Please know that we do pray constantly for
those who have been affected in any way, especially for any who have lost loved
ones. Everyone agrees that this has gone on much, much too long.
How long do we wait for
relief from hardships that come upon us? What about enduring
personal trials while we wait and wait, and help seems so slow in coming? Why
the delay when burdens seem more than we can bear?
While asking such questions, we can, if we try, hear another’s cry
echoing from a dank, dark prison cell during one of the coldest winters then on
record in that locale.
“O God,
where art thou?” we hear from the depths of Liberty Jail. “And where is the
pavilion that covereth thy hiding place? How long shall thy hand be
stayed?” How long, O Lord, how long?
So, we are not the first
nor will we be the last to ask such questions when sorrows bear down on us or
an ache in our heart goes on and on. I am not now speaking of pandemics or
prisons but of you, your family, and your neighbors who face any number of such
challenges. I speak of the yearning of many who would like to be married and
aren’t or who are married and wish the relationship were a little more
celestial. I speak of those who have to deal with the unwanted appearance of a
serious medical condition—perhaps
an incurable one—or who
face a lifelong battle with a genetic defect that has no remedy. I speak of the
continuing struggle with emotional and mental health challenges that weigh
heavily on the souls of so many who suffer with them, and on the hearts of
those who love and suffer with them. I speak of the poor, whom the Savior told
us never to forget, and I speak of you waiting for the return of a child, no
matter what the age, who has chosen a path different from the one you prayed he
or she would take.
Furthermore,
I acknowledge that even this long list of things for which we might wait
personally does not attempt to address the large economic, political, and
social concerns that confront us collectively. Our Father in Heaven clearly
expects us to address these wrenching public issues as well as the personal
ones, but there will be times in our lives when even our best spiritual effort
and earnest, pleading prayers do not yield the victories for which we have
yearned, whether that be regarding the large global matters or the small
personal ones. So while we work and wait
together for the answers to some of our prayers, I offer you my apostolic
promise that they are heard and they are answered, though perhaps not
at the time or in the way we wanted. But they are always answered at the time and in the way an
omniscient and eternally compassionate parent should answer them. My
beloved brothers and sisters, please understand that He who never sleeps nor slumbers cares for the happiness and
ultimate exaltation of His children above all else that a divine being has
to do. He is pure love, gloriously personified, and Merciful Father is His
name.
“Well, if this is the case,” you might say, “shouldn’t His love
and mercy simply part our personal Red Seas and allow us to walk through our
troubles on dry ground? Shouldn’t He
send 21st-century seagulls winging in from somewhere to gobble up all of our
pesky 21st-century crickets?”
The
answer to such questions is “Yes, God can provide miracles instantaneously, but
sooner or later we learn that the times
and seasons of our mortal journey are His and His alone to direct.” He
administers that calendar to every one of us individually. For every infirm man healed instantly as he waits to enter the Pool of
Bethesda, someone else will spend 40 years in the desert waiting to enter
the promised land. For every Nephi and Lehi divinely protected by an
encircling flame of fire for their faith, we have an Abinadi burned at a
stake of flaming fire for his. And we remember that the same Elijah who in
an instant called down fire from heaven to bear witness against the priests of
Baal is the same Elijah who endured a period when there was no rain for
years and who, for a time, was fed only by the skimpy sustenance that could be
carried in a raven’s claw. By my estimation, that can’t have been anything
we would call a “happy meal.”
The point? The point is that faith means
trusting God in good times and bad, even if that includes some suffering until
we see His arm revealed in our behalf. That can be
difficult in our modern world when many
have come to believe that the highest good in life is to avoid all suffering,
that no one should ever anguish over anything. But that belief will never
lead us to “the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.”
With
apologies to Elder Neal A. Maxwell
for daring to modify and enlarge something he once said, I too suggest that “one’s life … cannot be both faith-filled
and stress-free.” It simply will not work “to glide naively through life,”
saying as we sip another glass of lemonade, “Lord, give me all thy choicest
virtues, but be certain not to give me grief, nor sorrow, nor pain, nor
opposition. Please do not let anyone dislike me or betray me, and above all, do
not ever let me feel forsaken by Thee or those I love. In fact, Lord, be
careful to keep me from all the experiences that made Thee divine. And then,
when the rough sledding by everyone else is over, please let me come and dwell
with Thee, where I can boast about how similar our strengths and our characters
are as I float along on my cloud of comfortable Christianity.”
My beloved brothers and sisters, Christianity is
comforting, but it is often not comfortable. The path
to holiness and happiness here and hereafter is a long and sometimes rocky one.
It takes time and tenacity to walk it.
But, of course, the reward for doing so is monumental. This truth is taught
clearly and persuasively in the 32nd
chapter of Alma in the Book of Mormon. There this great high priest teaches
that if the word of God is planted in
our hearts as a mere seed, and if we care enough to water, weed, nourish,
and encourage it, it will in the future bear
fruit “which is most precious, … sweet above all that is sweet,” the consuming
of which leads to a condition of no more thirst and no more hunger.
Many
lessons are taught in this remarkable chapter, but central to them all is the
axiom that the seed has to be nourished
and we must wait for it to mature; we “[look] forward with
an eye of faith to the fruit thereof.” Our harvest, Alma says, comes “by
and by.” Little wonder that he concludes his remarkable instruction by
repeating three times a call for diligence and patience in
nurturing the word of God in our hearts, “waiting,” as he
says, with “long-suffering … for the
tree to bring forth fruit unto you.”
COVID and cancer, doubt and dismay, financial
trouble and family trials. When will these burdens be lifted? The answer is “by
and by.” And whether that be a short period or a long one is not always
ours to say, but by the grace of God, the blessings will come to those who hold
fast to the gospel of Jesus Christ. That issue was settled in a very private
garden and on a very public hill in Jerusalem long ago.
As we now
hear our beloved prophet close this conference, may we remember, as Russell
Nelson has demonstrated all of his life, that those who “wait
upon the Lord shall
renew their strength [and] shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run,
and not be weary; … they shall walk, and not faint.” I
pray that “by and by”—soon or
late—those blessings will come
to every one of you who seeks relief from your sorrow and freedom from your
grief. I bear witness of God’s love and
of the Restoration of His glorious gospel, which is, in one way or another, the
answer to every issue we face in life. In the redeeming name of the Lord
Jesus Christ, amen.
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