Elder’s Quorum Message – 14 February 2021
By Steve
Smith
Hello
Chester Ward Brethren
HAPPY
VALENTINES DAY!! I hope that those of you who have a significant other take
advantage of this day to express your love and appreciation.
As I reflected on this week’s “Come Follow Me” lesson
(February 8-14), I enjoyed how the lesson introduction helped us relate to the
fact that the Lord will reveal his Doctrine at the least of locations, or to
those that are least unknown.
“Most people around the world have
probably never heard of a place called Harmony, Pennsylvania. But the Lord
often chooses obscure locations for the most significant events in His kingdom.
In a wooded area near Harmony on May 15, 1829, John the Baptist appeared
as a resurrected being to Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery. He placed his hands
on their heads and conferred the Aaronic Priesthood upon them, calling them “my
fellow servants”.
To be considered a fellow servant with John the Baptist, who baptized the Savior and prepared the way for His coming must have been humbling, perhaps even overwhelming to these two young men in their twenties. At the time, Joseph and Oliver were relatively unknown, much as Harmony was. But service in God’s work has always been about how we serve, not about who notices. However small or unseen your contribution may seem at times, you too are a fellow servant in the Lord’s great work.”
Great words to live by…
For this week’s Elder’s Quorum
message, we have selected Elder Eyring’s talk given during the Sunday Afternoon
Session of the last General Conference. Here are selected sections from that
talk, with highlights that stood out to me.
I hope you enjoy his words.
Have a great week!
By President
Henry B. Eyring
Second Counselor in the First
Presidency
The greatest
blessing that will come when we prove ourselves faithful to our covenants
during our trials will be a change in our natures.
My dear brothers and sisters, I am grateful to speak with you
today. My hope is to give encouragement when life seems especially difficult
and uncertain. For some of you, that time is now. If not, such a time will
come.
That is not a gloomy view. It is realistic—yet optimistic—because
of God’s purpose in the Creation of this world. That purpose was to give His
children the opportunity to prove themselves able and willing to choose the
right when it is hard. In so doing, their natures would be changed and they
could become more like Him. He knew that would require unshakable faith in Him.
Much of what I know came from my family. When I was about eight
years old, my wise mother asked my brother and me to pull weeds with her in our
family’s backyard garden. Now, that seems a simple task, but we lived in New
Jersey. It rained often. The soil was heavy clay. The weeds grew faster than
the vegetables.
I remember my frustration when the weeds broke off in my hands,
their roots stuck firmly in the heavy mud. My mother and my brother were soon
far ahead in their rows. The harder I tried, the more I fell behind.
“This is too hard!” I cried out.
Instead of giving sympathy, my mother smiled and said, “Oh, Hal, of
course it’s hard. It’s supposed to be. Life is a test.”
In that moment, I knew her words were true and would continue to
be true in my future.
The reason for Mother’s loving smile became clear years later when
I read of Heavenly Father and His Beloved Son speaking of Their purpose in
creating this world and giving spirit children the opportunity of mortal life:
“And we will prove them herewith, to see if they will do all
things whatsoever the Lord their God shall command them;
“And they who keep their first estate shall be added upon; and they who keep not their first estate shall not have glory in the same kingdom with those who keep their first estate; and they who keep their second estate shall have glory added upon their heads for ever and ever.”
You and I accepted that invitation to be tested and to prove that
we would choose to keep the commandments of God when we would no longer be in
the presence of our Heavenly Father.
Even with such a loving invitation
from our Heavenly Father, Lucifer persuaded a third of the spirit children to
follow him and reject the Father’s plan for our growth and eternal happiness.
For Satan’s rebellion, he was cast out with his followers. Now he tries to
cause as many as he can to turn away from God during this mortal life.
Those of us who accepted the plan did so because of our faith in
Jesus Christ, who offered to become our Savior and Redeemer. We must have
believed then that whatever mortal weaknesses we would have and whatever evil
forces would be against us, the forces of good would be overwhelmingly greater.
Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ know and love you. They want you to return to Them and become like Them. Your success is Their success. You have felt that love confirmed by the Holy Ghost when you have read or heard these words: “For behold, this is my work and my glory—to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man.”
God has the power to make our way easier. He fed manna to the children of Israel in their wandering to the promised land. The Lord in His mortal ministry healed the sick, raised the dead, and calmed the sea. After His Resurrection, He opened “the prison to them that were bound.”
Yet the Prophet Joseph Smith, one of the greatest of His prophets, suffered in prison and was taught the lesson we all profit from and need in our recurring tests of faith: “And if thou shouldst be cast into the pit, or into the hands of murderers, and the sentence of death passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep; if the billowing surge conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if the heavens gather blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way; and above all, if the very jaws of hell shall gape open the mouth wide after thee, know thou, my son, that all these things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good.”
You might reasonably wonder why a loving and all-powerful God
allows our mortal test to be so hard. It is because He knows that we must
grow in spiritual cleanliness and stature to be able to live in His presence in
families forever. To make that possible, Heavenly Father gave us a Savior
and the power to choose for ourselves by faith to keep His commandments and to
repent and so come unto Him.
When you wonder how much pain you can endure well, remember Him.
He suffered what you suffer so that He would know how to lift you up. He may
not remove the burden, but He will give you strength, comfort, and hope. He
knows the way. He drank the bitter cup. He endured the suffering of all.
The way to come unto Him <Christ> is to feast upon His
words, to exercise faith unto repentance, to choose to be baptized and
confirmed by His authorized servant, and then to keep your covenants with God.
He sends the Holy Ghost to be your companion, comforter, and guide.
As you live worthy of the gift of the Holy Ghost, the Lord can
direct you to safety even when you cannot see the way. For me, He has most
often shown the next step or two to take. Rarely has He given me a glimpse of
the distant future, but even those infrequent glimpses guide what I choose to
do in daily life.
The Lord explained:
“Ye cannot behold with your natural eyes, for the present time,
the design of your God concerning those things which shall come hereafter, and
the glory which shall follow … much tribulation.
“For after much tribulation come the blessings.”
The greatest blessing that will come when we prove ourselves
faithful to our covenants during our trials will be a change in our natures. By
our choosing to keep our covenants, the power of Jesus Christ and the blessings
of His Atonement can work in us. Our hearts can be softened to love, to
forgive, and to invite others to come unto the Savior. Our confidence in the
Lord increases. Our fears decrease.
Now, even with such blessings promised through tribulation, we do
not seek tribulation. In the mortal experience, we will have ample opportunity
to prove ourselves, to pass tests hard enough to become ever more like the
Savior and our Heavenly Father.
I have seen people rise to great heights through proving faithful
in terrible trials. Across the Church today are examples. People are driven to
their knees by adversity. By their faithful endurance and effort, they become
more like the Savior and our Heavenly Father.
I learned another lesson from my mother. As a girl she had
diphtheria and nearly died. Later she had spinal meningitis. Her father died
young, and so my mother and her brothers helped support their mother.
All her life, she felt the effects of the trials of illness. In
her last 10 years of life, she required multiple operations. But through it
all, she proved faithful to the Lord, even when bedridden. The only picture on
her bedroom wall was of the Savior. Her last words to me on her deathbed were
these: “Hal, you sound as if you are getting a cold. You ought to take care of
yourself.”
At her funeral the last speaker was Elder Spencer W. Kimball.
After saying something of her trials and her faithfulness, he said essentially
this: “Some of you may wonder why Mildred had to suffer so much and so long. I
will tell you why. It was because the Lord wanted to polish her a little
more.”
I express my gratitude for the many faithful members of the Church
of Jesus Christ who bear burdens with steady faith and who help others to bear
theirs as the Lord seeks to polish them a little more. I also express love and
admiration for caregivers and leaders across the world who serve others while
they and their families endure such polishing.
I testify that we are children of a Heavenly Father, who loves us.
I feel President Russell M. Nelson’s love for us all. He is the Lord’s
prophet in the world today. I so testify in the sacred name of the Lord Jesus
Christ, amen.
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