The Internet is a wonderful
thing, and it has brought a great change in the way most people act and
interact. I appreciate the Internet for many reasons, the most important of
which is the ease that I now have to stay in contact with family members and
friends in distant places. However, I also appreciate the ease with which I can
gain instant information about many subjects. I can ask Google almost any
question and receive an answer immediately.
Tonight I asked the Internet this
question: What day most changed the course of history? I discovered some interesting
answers that include following: Ken Burns, documentary filmmaker, says that it
is June 28, 1914. On this date “Franz Ferdinand’s carriage driver took a wrong
turn” and “put in motion the two largest wars in world history” – World Wars I
and II.
Christina
H. Paxson, President, Brown University, says that it is the day in 1440 when “Johannes
Gutenberg finished his wooden printing press” and “Western civilization turned
onto a path toward more efficient, accessible communication of knowledge.”
Other people listed the day that the steam engine was invented, the day that
the American colonists signed the Declaration of Independence, and even the
date when American women received the right to vote. Surely, others would say the
date of the first flight by the Wright brothers as well as other worthwhile
achievements.
Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints suggests that we should raise our thinking to a higher level. He believes that
the event that changed the course of history for all mankind happened on a day nearly
2000 years ago.
In my mind the answer is clear.
To find the most important day in
history, we must go back to that evening almost 2,000 years ago in the Garden
of Gethsemane when Jesus Christ knelt in intense prayer and offered Himself as
a ransom for our sins. It was during this great and infinite sacrifice of
unparalleled suffering in both body and spirit that Jesus Christ, even God,
bled at every pore. Out of perfect love, He gave all that we might receive all.
His supernal sacrifice, difficult to comprehend, to be felt only with all our
heart and mind, reminds us of the universal debt of gratitude we owe Christ for
His divine gift.
Later that night, Jesus was brought
before religious and political authorities who mocked Him, beat Him, and
sentenced Him to a shameful death. He hung in agony upon the cross until,
finally, “it [was] finished” (John 19:30). His lifeless body was laid in a
borrowed tomb. And then, on the morning of the third day, Jesus Christ, the Son
of Almighty God, emerged from the tomb as a glorious, resurrected being of splendor,
light, and majesty.
Yes, there are many events throughout
history that have profoundly affected the destiny of nations and peoples. But
combine them all, and they cannot begin to compare to the importance of what
happened on that first Easter morning.
Elder Uchtdorf asks what it is about
this infinite sacrifice as well as the Resurrection of Jesus Christ that makes
this “the most important event in history” – even “more influential than world
wars, cataclysmic disasters, and life-changing scientific discoveries?” He says
that the answer to this question “lies in two great, insurmountable challenges”
faced by all mankind.
The first challenge is the fact that
“we all die.” However, death is a temporary condition. Jesus Christ overcame
death and was resurrected. He also made it possible for all mankind to be
resurrected. At that time, the spirit and body will be reunited for all
eternity.
The second challenge is that we all
sin. God said that “no unclean thing can enter into his kingdom” (3 Nephi
27:19). Since we all sin, none of us would qualify to live with God, and we
would all be shut out of His presence for all eternity. However, Jesus Christ
paid the price for our sins – every single one – when He “offered His life as a
ransom for our sins.” He is the only sinless person who has ever lived on earth,
and He “owed no debt to justice.” Therefore, “He could pay our debt and meet
the demands of justice for every soul.”
On that most important day in history,
Jesus the Christ opened the gates of death and cast aside the barriers that
prevented us from passing into the holy and hallowed halls of everlasting life.
Because of our Lord and Savior, you and I are granted a most precious and
priceless gift – regardless of our past, we can repent and follow the path that
leads to celestial light and glory, surrounded by the faithful children of
Heavenly Father.
The first challenge and solution are
definite. We will all die, but we will all be resurrected. The solution to the
second challenge – sin – comes by choice. We can choose whether or not we will choose
to follow Jesus Christ. We can repent and overcome the problems caused by our
sins. If we choose this solution, we can return to the presence of God and live
with our loving Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ for all eternity.
I agree with Elder Uchtdorf when he
testifies that “the most important day in the history of mankind” is the day
that Jesus Christ overcame death and sin for all of us. I also agree with him
when he says that the most important day in each of our lives is the day that
we commit ourselves to follow Christ. I know that as we make this commitment
and keep it, we will be on the path that leads to eternity life and exaltation.
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