Dear Elders,
This Sunday’s Elder’s Quorum lesson
will be based on President Oaks’ talk “What Has Our Savior Done for Us?”, from
the Priesthood session of the last General Conference.
Our instructor will be Zach Goulding.
Enjoy, and have a good week.
What Has Our Savior Done for Us?
By President
Dallin H. Oaks
First Counselor in the First
Presidency
Jesus Christ has
done everything that is essential for our journey through mortality toward the
destiny outlined in the plan of our Heavenly Father.
In a
Saturday evening meeting at a stake conference many years ago, I met a woman
who said her friends had asked her to come back to church after many years of
inactivity, but she could not think of any reason why she should. To encourage
her, I said, “When you consider all of the things the Savior has done for you,
you have many reasons to come back to worship and serve Him.” I was astonished
when she replied, “What’s He done for me?”
What has Jesus Christ done for each of us? He has done everything that is essential for our journey through mortality toward the destiny outlined in the plan of our Heavenly Father. I will speak of four of the principal features of that plan. In each of these, His Only Begotten Son, Jesus Christ, is the central figure. Motivating all of this is “the love of God, which sheddeth itself abroad in the hearts of the children of men; wherefore, it is the most desirable above all things” (1 Nephi 11:22).
I.
Just before Easter Sunday, it is timely to speak first of the
Resurrection of Jesus Christ. The Resurrection from the dead is the reassuring
personal pillar of our faith. It adds meaning to our doctrine, motivation to
our behavior, and hope for our future.
Because we believe the Bible and
Book of Mormon descriptions of the literal Resurrection of Jesus Christ, we
also accept the numerous scriptural teachings that a similar resurrection will
come to all mortals who have ever lived upon this earth. As Jesus taught,
“Because I live, ye shall live also” (John 14:19). And His Apostle
taught that “the dead shall be raised incorruptible” and “this mortal shall
have put on immortality” (1 Corinthians 15:52, 54).
But the Resurrection gives us more than this assurance of immortality.
It changes the way we view mortal life.
The Resurrection gives us the perspective and the strength to
endure the mortal challenges faced by each of us and those we love. It gives us
a new way to view the physical, mental, or emotional deficiencies we have at
birth or acquire during mortal life. It gives us the strength to endure
sorrows, failures, and frustrations. Because each of us has an assured
resurrection, we know that these mortal deficiencies and oppositions are only
temporary.
The Resurrection also gives us a
powerful incentive to keep the commandments of God during our mortal lives.
When we rise from the dead and proceed to our prophesied Final Judgment, we
want to have qualified for the choicest blessings promised to resurrected beings.
In addition, the promise that the Resurrection can include an
opportunity to be with our family members—husband, wife, children, parents, and
posterity—is a powerful encouragement to fulfill our family responsibilities in
mortality. It also helps us live together in love in this life, and it comforts
us in the death of our loved ones. We know that these mortal separations are
only temporary, and we anticipate future joyful reunions and associations. The
Resurrection provides us hope and the strength to be patient as we wait. It
also prepares us with the courage and dignity to face our own death—even a
death that might be called premature.
All of these effects of the Resurrection are part of the first
answer to the question “What has Jesus Christ done for me?”
II.
For most of us, the opportunity to be forgiven of our sins is the
major meaning of the Atonement of Jesus Christ. In worship, we reverently sing:
His precious blood he
freely spilt;
His life he freely gave,
A sinless sacrifice for
guilt,
A dying world to save.
Our Savior and Redeemer endured incomprehensible suffering to
become a sacrifice for the sins of all mortals who would repent. This atoning
sacrifice offered the ultimate good, the pure lamb without blemish, for the
ultimate measure of evil, the sins of the entire world. It opened the door for
each of us to be cleansed of our personal sins so we can be readmitted to the
presence of God, our Eternal Father. This open door is available to all of the
children of God. In worship, we sing:
I marvel that he would
descend from his throne divine
To rescue a soul so
rebellious and proud as mine,
That he should extend his great love unto such as I.
The magnificent and
incomprehensible effect of the Atonement of Jesus Christ is based on God’s love
for each of us. It affirms His declaration that “the worth of souls”—every
one—“is great in the sight of God” (Doctrine and Covenants 18:10). In the Bible, Jesus
Christ explained this in terms of our Heavenly Father’s love: “For God so loved
the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16). In modern revelation, our
Redeemer, Jesus Christ, declared that He “so loved
the world that he gave his own life, that as many as would believe might become
the sons of God” (Doctrine
and Covenants 34:3).
Is it any wonder, then, that the
Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ concludes with the teaching
that to become “perfect” and “sanctified in Christ,” we must “love God with all [our] might, mind and
strength”? (Moroni 10:32–33). His plan motivated by
love must be received with love.
III.
What else has our Savior, Jesus Christ, done for us? Through the
teachings of His prophets and through His personal ministry, Jesus taught us
the plan of salvation. This plan includes the Creation, the purpose of life,
the necessity of opposition, and the gift of agency. He also taught us the
commandments and covenants we must obey and the ordinances we must experience
to take us back to our heavenly parents.
In the Bible, we read His
teaching: “I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in
darkness, but shall have the light of life” (John 8:12). And in modern revelation, we read, “Behold, I am Jesus
Christ, … a light which cannot be hid in darkness” (Doctrine and Covenants 14:9). If we
follow His teachings, He lights our path in this life and assures our destiny
in the next.
Because He loves us, He challenges
us to focus on Him instead of the things of this mortal world. In His great
sermon on the bread of life, Jesus taught that we should not be among those who
are most attracted to the things of the world—the things that sustain life on
earth but give no nourishment toward eternal life. As Jesus invited us
again and again and again, “Follow me.”
IV.
Finally, the Book of Mormon
teaches that as part of His Atonement, Jesus Christ “suffer[ed] pains and
afflictions and temptations of every kind; and this that the word might be
fulfilled which saith he will take upon him the pains and the sicknesses of his
people” (Alma 7:11).
Why did our Savior suffer these
mortal challenges “of every kind”? Alma explained, “And he will take upon him
their infirmities, that his bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the
flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor [which means to
give relief or aid to] his people according to their infirmities” (Alma 7:12).
Our Savior feels and knows our
temptations, our struggles, our heartaches, and our sufferings, for He
willingly experienced them all as part of His Atonement. Other scriptures
affirm this. The New Testament declares, “In that he himself hath suffered
being tempted, he is able to succour them that are tempted” (Hebrews 2:18). Isaiah teaches, “Fear
thou not; for I am with thee: … I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help
thee” (Isaiah 41:10). All who suffer any kind
of mortal infirmities should remember that our Savior experienced that kind of
pain also, and that through His Atonement, He offers each of us the strength to
bear it.
The Prophet Joseph Smith
summarized all of this in our third article of faith: “We believe that through
the Atonement of Christ, all mankind may be saved, by obedience to the laws and
ordinances of the Gospel.”
“What has Jesus Christ done for
me?” that sister asked. Under the plan of our Heavenly Father, He “created the
heavens and the earth” (Doctrine
and Covenants 14:9) so that each of us could have the mortal experience necessary to
seek our divine destiny. As part of the Father’s plan, the Resurrection of
Jesus Christ overcame death to assure each of us immortality. Jesus Christ’s
atoning sacrifice gives each of us the opportunity to repent of our sins and
return clean to our heavenly home. His commandments and covenants show us the
way, and His priesthood gives the authority to perform the ordinances that are
essential to reach that destiny. And our Savior willingly experienced all mortal
pains and infirmities that He would know how to strengthen us in our
afflictions.
Jesus Christ did all of this
because He loves all of the children of God. Love is the motivation for it all,
and it was so from the very beginning. God has told us in modern revelation
that “he created … male and female, after his own image … ; and
gave unto them commandments that they should love and serve him” (Doctrine and Covenants 20:18–19).
I testify of all of this and pray that we all will remember what
our Savior has done for each of us and that we all will love and serve Him, in
the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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