We are all faced with choices
every day. Our choices start first thing in the morning with the decision to
get up and face the day or to stay in bed. This decision is sometimes the most
difficult choice of the entire day. I am guilty on some mornings of staying in
bed longer than I should, and I pay the price by missing the valuable morning
hours.
Most of us face challenging choices
from time to time, and those most critical decisions are often difficult to
make. Whenever my children discuss a difficult decision with me, my first
question is, “Did you pray about it?” My best piece of advice is to pray about
choices.
This advice is becoming more
valuable to me as times passes. Where I once prayed about difficult choices, I
find myself asking quick prayers about fairly minor decisions. I will give you
a couple of examples of what I consider to be minor choices. They were small
decisions in the overall picture, but they were important to me.
The first decision was several years
ago when my husband and I were replacing our windows and doors. We opted to
have beige windows installed instead of white ones because we were planning to
stain the frames. I went to all the paint stores looking for the appropriate
stain but could not find it. I decided that I would have to paint the frames
and looked at various paints without being able to come to a decision. I gave
up and headed home. I was about half a mile from the store when the Holy Ghost
prompted me to go back to the store and buy some paint. I still had no idea
what color of paint to purchase, but I turned around and went back. As I stood
there looking at all the colors, the Spirit prompted me to purchase a certain
color. I bought the paint as prompted, but I also took several different paint chip
cards home with me. As I looked at all the colors and compared them with the
color of the windows, I decided on a certain color. Then I compared the color
that I had chosen with the color that I had purchased and found that it was the
same color. With the help of the Spirit, I made the right decision!
My second example happened a few
weeks ago when I stopped at a local nursery to purchase some plants for a new
garden. I have researched plants for this garden for months, so I had a fairly
good idea what type of plant I wanted. However, I did not know how many of each
plant to buy. Again, I went to the Lord for help. Should I get one of these
plants or two? With the Bleeding Heart plants, I was prompted to purchase two
plants. With another plant, I was prompted to purchase only one. When it came
time to put the plants in the garden, I discovered that I had purchased exactly
the number of plants that I needed to fill the spot. When I went to another
nursery later to purchase more plants, I had the same experience.
I fully subscribe to the counsel to
pray about decisions. When the decision is important, there is a greater need
for prayer. Then-Elder Russell M. Nelson spoke on the topic of “Choices”
in the October 1990 General Conference
of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and suggested three
questions that we should ask ourselves when we have choices to make.
I would suggest three questions you
might ask yourself as you consider your options. Whether they are
once-in-a-lifetime or routine daily decisions, serious reflection on these
three questions will help clarify your thinking. You might wish to review these
questions first alone and then with your [spouse].
1. “Who am I?”
2. “Why am I here?”
3. “Where am I going?”
Truthful answers to these three
questions will remind you of important anchors and unchanging principles.
As you consider these fundamental
questions, it will become clear that decisions you first thought to be purely
personal virtually always impact the lives of others. In answering these
questions, then, you must be mindful of the broader circle of family and friends
who will be affected by the consequences of your choice.
Elder Nelson then proceeds to
discuss the three questions and suggests some possible answers. He suggests
that the first answer for “Who am I?” is a simple one. We are all children of
God. I should be able to say, “I am a daughter of God.” As I remember that I am
a daughter of God, I will also remember that I was created in His image and
that I have the potential to become as He is. I will also remember that I came
to earth to perform a certain mission in preparation to returning to His
presence. As I ask this question, I will also remember that I am a wife,
mother, and grandmother and carry responsibility to love and support my family.
In answer to “Why am I here?” This
question can be asked of many situations. I often ask myself a similar question
– What did I come in here for? – when I forget why I went to another room. Elder
Nelson is speaking about why we came to earth and gives the following answer.
One of the most important reasons is to
receive a mortal body. Another is to be tested – to experience mortality – to determine
what you will do with life’s challenging opportunities. Those opportunities
require you to make choices, and choices depend on agency. A major reason for
your mortal existence, therefore, is to test how you will exercise your agency.
(See 2 Nephi 2:15, 25.)
Agency is a divine gift to you. You are
free to choose what you will be and what you will do. And you are not without
help. Counsel with your parents is a privilege at any age. Prayer provides
communication with your Heavenly Father and invites the promptings of personal
revelation….
As Elder Nelson explains, we are
here on earth for some very important reasons. We are here to gain a mortal
body and to be tested. We have the necessity to exercise our agency and the opportunity
to make decisions about what we will do and what we will become. Elder Nelson
then discusses the third question, “Where am I going?” This is a question that
I often ask as I drive around town, but Elder Nelson is asking a much more serious
question.
This question reminds us that eventually
you (and I) are going to die, be resurrected, be judged, and be awarded a place
in eternal realms…. With each passing sunset, you are closer to that inevitable
day of judgment. Then you will be asked to account for your faith, your hopes,
and your works….
As all will be resurrected, your
physical body will then be restored to its proper and perfect frame…. The day
of your resurrection will be a day of judgment that will determine the kind of
life you shall have hereafter.
That judgment will consider not only
your actions, but also your innermost intent and heartfelt desires. Your
everyday thoughts have not been lost. Scriptures speak of the “bright
recollection” (Alma 11:43) and “perfect remembrance” (Alma 5:18) that your mind
will provide in times of divine judgment.
Our everyday choices are important,
so we must make every effort to be sure that they are good ones. We can make good
choices, even the best ones, if we will remember to pray about our decisions
and to ask ourselves the three questions given by Elder Nelson. As we do this,
we will find ourselves making choices that will help us return to the presence
of our Heavenly Parents. As President Thomas S. Monson said, “Decisions determine destiny.” When we make our decisions in light of who we are, why we are here, and where
we are going and then ask Heavenly Father for help, our destiny will be eternal
life with God and our loved ones.
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