ELDERS QUORUM LESSON – 28 AUGUST 2022
Hello Elders,
This week’s Elder Quorum Lesson topic will be “Divine Love
in the Father’s Plan” by President Dallin H. Oaks
REMINDER – Nest month’s Ward Temple Night will be Wednesday,
September 28th, at 7pm at the Rexburg Temple
Here is President Oaks’ Talk
Divine Love in the Father’s Plan
By President
Dallin H. Oaks
First Counselor in the First
Presidency
The purpose of
the doctrine and policies of this restored Church is to prepare God’s children
for salvation in the celestial kingdom and for exaltation in its highest
degree.
The gospel plan shows our Heavenly
Father’s love for all His children. To understand this, we must seek to
understand His plan and His commandments. He loves His children so much that He
gave His Only Begotten Son, Jesus Christ, to be our Savior and Redeemer, to
suffer and die for us. In the restored Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, we have a unique understanding of our Heavenly Father’s plan. This
gives us a different way of viewing the purpose of mortal life, the divine
judgment that follows it, and the ultimate glorious destiny of all of God’s
children.
I love you, my brothers and
sisters. I love all of God’s children. When Jesus was asked, “Which is the
great commandment in the law?” He taught that to love God and to love our
neighbors are the first of God’s great commandments. Those commands are
first because they invite us to grow spiritually by seeking to imitate God’s
love for us. I wish we all had a better understanding of the loving doctrine
and policies that our Heavenly Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, have
established in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. What I say here
seeks to clarify how God’s love explains that doctrine and the Church’s
inspired policies.
I.
A common misunderstanding of the
judgment that ultimately follows mortal life is that good people go to a place
called heaven and bad people go to an everlasting place
called hell. This erroneous assumption of only two ultimate
destinations implies that those who cannot keep all the commandments required
for heaven will necessarily be forever destined for hell.
A loving Heavenly Father has a
better plan for His children. The revealed doctrine of the restored Church of
Jesus Christ teaches that all the children of God—with
exceptions too limited to consider here—will finally wind up in a kingdom
of glory. “In my Father’s house are many
mansions,” Jesus taught. From modern revelation we know that those
mansions are in three different kingdoms of glory. In the Final Judgment each
of us will be judged according to our deeds and the desires of our
hearts. Before that, we will need to suffer for our unrepented sins. The
scriptures are clear on that. Then our righteous Judge will grant us
residence in one of those kingdoms of glory. Thus, as we know from modern
revelation, all “shall be judged … , and every man shall receive
according to his own works, his own dominion, in the mansions which are
prepared.”
The Lord has chosen to reveal
comparatively little about two of these kingdoms of glory. In contrast, the
Lord has revealed much about the highest kingdom of glory, which the Bible
describes as the “glory of the sun.”
In the “celestial”
glory there are three degrees, or levels. The highest of these is exaltation
in the celestial kingdom, wherein we may become like our Father and His Son,
Jesus Christ. To help us develop the godly attributes and the change in
nature necessary to realize our divine potential, the Lord has revealed
doctrine and established commandments based on eternal law. This is what we
teach in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints because the purpose of
the doctrine and policies of this restored Church is to prepare God’s children
for salvation in the celestial glory and, more particularly, for exaltation in
its highest degree.
The covenants made and the
blessings promised to the faithful in the temples of God are the key. This
explains our worldwide building of temples, about which the choir has sung so
beautifully. Some are puzzled at this emphasis, not understanding that the
covenants and ordinances of the temple guide us toward achieving exaltation.
This can be understood only in the context of the revealed truth of three degrees of glory. Because of our Heavenly
Father’s great love for all of His children, He has provided other kingdoms of
glory—as Elder Quentin L. Cook explained yesterday—all of which are more
wonderful than we can comprehend.
The Atonement of Jesus Christ
makes all of this possible. He has revealed that He “glorifies the Father,
and saves all the works of his hands.” That salvation
is granted in different kingdoms of glory. We know from modern revelation that
“all kingdoms have a law given.” Significantly:
“He who is not able to abide the law of a celestial kingdom cannot
abide a celestial glory.
“And he who cannot abide the law of a terrestrial kingdom cannot
abide a terrestrial glory.
“And he who cannot abide the law
of a telestial kingdom cannot abide a telestial glory.”
In other words, the kingdom of glory we receive in the Final
Judgment is determined by the laws we choose to abide by in our Heavenly
Father’s loving plan. Under that plan there are multiple kingdoms so that all
of His children can be assigned to a kingdom where they can “abide.”
II.
The teachings and policies of the
Lord’s restored Church apply these eternal truths in a way that can be fully
understood only in the context of our Heavenly Father’s loving plan for all of His children.
Thus, we honor individual agency.
Most are aware of this Church’s great efforts to promote religious freedom.
These efforts are in furtherance of our Heavenly Father’s plan. We seek to
help all of His children—not just our own members—enjoy
the precious freedom to choose.
Similarly, we are sometimes asked why we send missionaries to so
many nations, even among Christian populations. We are also asked why we give
enormous humanitarian aid to persons who are not members of our Church without
linking this to our missionary efforts. We do this because the Lord has taught
us to esteem all of His children as our brothers and sisters, and we want to
share our spiritual and temporal abundance with everyone.
Eternal doctrine also provides a distinctive perspective on
children. Through this perspective we see the bearing and nurturing of children
as part of the divine plan. It is a joyful and sacred duty of those given the
power to participate in it. Therefore, we are commanded to teach and contend
for principles and practices that provide the best conditions for the development
and happiness of children under God’s plan.
III.
Finally, The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints is properly known as a family-centered Church. But
not well understood is the reality that our family-centeredness is not limited
to mortal relationships. Eternal relationships are also fundamental to our
theology. The mission of the restored Church is to help all the children
of God qualify for what God desires as their ultimate destiny. By the
redemption provided through the Atonement of Christ, all may attain eternal
life (exaltation in the celestial kingdom), which Mother Eve declared “God
giveth unto all the obedient.”
This is more than salvation.
President Russell M. Nelson has reminded us that “in God’s eternal plan,
salvation is an individual matter; [but] exaltation is a family matter.”
Fundamental to us is God’s
revelation that exaltation can be attained only through faithfulness to the
covenants of an eternal marriage between a man and a woman. That divine
doctrine is why we teach that “gender is an essential characteristic of
individual premortal, mortal, and eternal identity and purpose.”
That is also why the Lord has required His restored Church to
oppose social and legal pressures to retreat from His doctrine of marriage between
a man and a woman, to oppose changes that homogenize the differences between
men and women or confuse or alter gender.
The restored Church’s positions on
these fundamentals frequently provoke opposition. We understand that. Our
Heavenly Father’s plan allows for “opposition in all things,” and Satan’s
most strenuous opposition is directed at whatever is most important to that
plan.
Consequently, he seeks to oppose
progress toward exaltation by distorting marriage, discouraging childbearing,
or confusing gender. However, we know that in the long run, the divine purpose
and plan of our loving Heavenly Father will not be changed. Personal
circumstances may change, and God’s plan assures that in the long run, the
faithful who keep their covenants will have the opportunity to qualify for
every promised blessing.
A uniquely valuable teaching to
help us prepare for eternal life, “the greatest of all the gifts of
God,” is the 1995 proclamation on the family. Its declarations are,
of course, different from some current laws, practices, and advocacy, such as
cohabitation and same-sex marriage. Those who do not fully understand the
Father’s loving plan for His children may consider this family proclamation no
more than a changeable statement of policy. In contrast, we affirm that the
family proclamation, founded on irrevocable doctrine, defines the kind of
family relationships where the most important part of our eternal development
can occur.
That is the context for the unique doctrine and policies of the
restored Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
IV.
In many relationships and
circumstances in mortal life, each of us must live with differences. As
followers of Christ who should love our fellow men, we should live peacefully
with those who do not believe as we do. We are all children of a loving
Heavenly Father. For all of us, He has destined life after death and,
ultimately, a kingdom of glory. God desires all of us to strive for His highest
possible blessings by keeping His highest commandments, covenants, and
ordinances, all of which culminate in His holy temples being built throughout
the world. We must seek to share these truths of eternity with others. But with
the love we owe to all of our neighbors, we always accept their decisions. As a
Book of Mormon prophet taught, we must press forward, having “a love of God and
of all men.”
As President Russell M.
Nelson declared in our last conference: “There has never been a time in the
history of the world when knowledge of our Savior is more personally vital and
relevant to every human soul. … The pure
doctrine of Christ is powerful. It changes the life of everyone who understands
it and seeks to implement it in his or her life.”
May we all implement that sacred doctrine in our own lives, I pray
in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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