C. S. Lewis wrote a story about a
living house as a metaphor of how God is changing us as mere humans into
follows of Christ. I think that it is most appropriate and applicable.
Imagine
yourself as a living house. God comes in to rebuild that house. At first,
perhaps, you can understand what He is doing. He is getting the drains right
and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on; you knew that those jobs needed
doing and so you are not surprised. But presently He starts knocking the house
about in a way that hurts abominably and does not seem to make any sense. What
on earth is He up to? The explanation is that He is building quite a different
house from the one you thought of - throwing out a new wing here, putting on an
extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You thought you were
being made into a decent little cottage: but He is building a palace. He
intends to come and live in it Himself.” (Mere Christianity)
All
who have given their lives to Christ understand how this living house feels.
The first repairs are minor and not to painful. However, when He starts taking
out walls and adding more stories, it is a bit painful. We must remember that
God knows our potential much better than we do. He also gives us prophets and
apostles to help us understand what is happening to us. Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf spoke about a God’s blueprint for us, and he said that it means for us
to believe in Christ, to love as He loves, and to do the works that He does.
Elder Uchtdorf
begins his talk by stating that “hope is found in the transformative power of
the gospel of Jesus Christ and in the Savior’s redemptive power to heal us of
our soul-sickness.” Jesus declared, “I am come that they might have life, and
that they might have it more abundantly” (John 10:10). Elder Uchtdorf explains
that we “achieve that abundant life … by becoming true disciples of Jesus
Christ – by following in His ways and engaging in His work. We find the
abundant life by forgetting ourselves and engaging in the great cause of
Christ.” He continues by explaining that the cause of Christ “is to believe in
Him, love as He loved, and do as He did.”
We are told that
the gospel of Jesus Christ makes bad men good and good men better. Elder
Uchtdorf says that the gospel of Jesus Christ is “a blueprint for happiness and
meaning in this life and a way to experience eternal joy in the halls of glory
in the life to come.” This blueprint is to help us to become like Christ by
believing in Him, loving as He loved, and doing as He did.
We first must believe in Him. Elder
Uchdorf: “In my experience, belief is not so much like a painting we look at
and admire and about which we discuss and theorize. It is more like a plow that
we take into the fields and, by the sweat of our brow, create furrows in the
earth that accept seeds and bear fruit that shall remain.” What should we
believe?
We should believe in the power of
His Atonement. Bishop Merrill J. Bateman, while serving as the Presiding
Bishop, said the following:
“The Savior’s atonement in the garden
and on the cross is intimate as well as infinite. Infinite in that it spans the
eternities. Intimate in that the Savior felt each person’s pains, sufferings,
and sicknesses. Consequently, he knows how to carry our sorrows and relieve our
burdens that we might be healed form within, made whole persons, and receive
everlasting joy in his kingdom.”
(“The Power to Heal from Within,” Ensign, May 1995, 13-14).
We should believe that God is still
in control and that He has a plan for us. He knows how things are going to turn
out and has told us to put our trust in Him. The following quote has been
attributed to Elder Jeffrey R. Holland and was supposedly given in a devotional
at BYU. It could have originated in an email from Elder Holland to John
Bytheway, 1 June 2004.
The future of [the] world
has long been declared; the final outcome between good and evil is already
known. There is absolutely no question…because the victory has already been
posted on the scoreboard. The only really strange thing in all of this is that
we are still down here on the [playing] field deciding whose jersey we’re going
to put on.
We should
believe that we can be happy even in the darkest of times IF we wear the Lord’s
jersey. There were extensive wars, death, and corruption in high places during
the time of Captain Moroni. Yet the scriptures tell us that it was a happy
time. “But behold there never was a happier time among
the people of Nephi, since the
days of Nephi, than in the days of Moroni, yea, even at this time, in the
twenty and first year of the reign of the judges” (Alma 50:23).
The next
requirement is that we must love as He loves. Elder Uchtdorf says:
The scriptures reveal that
the more we love God and His children, the happier we become…. The love God
speaks of is the kind that enters our hearts when we awake in the morning,
stays with us throughout the day, and swells in our hearts as we give voice to
our prayers of gratitude at evening’s end.
As a parent and
grandparent, I am particularly grateful for those people who love and serve my
children and grandchildren. I feel confident that Heavenly Father feels the
same way to those who serve His children. In fact, when we truly love the
Father, we will love His children. King Benjamin explains to his people that he
has given his life in their service, but in reality that had “only been in the
service of God” (Mosiah 2:16-17, 19). So, service is a way that we can develop
love for God and our neighbors. President Thomas S. Monson says:
An
attitude of love characterized the mission of the Master. He gave sight to the
blind, legs to the lame, and life to the dead. Perhaps when we make
face-to-face contact with our Maker, we will not be asked, “How many positions
did you hold?” but rather, “How many people did you help?” In reality, you can
never love the Lord until you serve Him by serving His people (“Great Expectations,” BYU Devotional, Jan. 11, 2009).
We
must do the works that He does. Elder Uchtdorf says:
In the
Savior’s work, it is often by small and simple means that `great things [are]
brought to pass’ [Alma 37:6].
We know
that it requires repetitive practice to become good at anything. Whether it’s
playing the clarinet, kicking a ball into a net, repairing a car, or even
flying an airplane, it is through practicing that we may become better and
better.
The
organization our Savior created on earth – The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints – helps us to do just that. It offers a place to practice
living the way He taught and blessing others the way He did.
As
Church members, we are given callings, responsibilities, and opportunities to
reach out in compassion and minister to others.
We
are asked to minister to each other and to people in our community, but our
first responsibility is in our homes. We
are all needed in the building up of the kingdom of God even in our
imperfections. Girls ages 8-11 were invited to the Women Session of General
Conference as a way to strengthen them against the evils of the world. However,
it was quickly learned that the women and teenagers need the younger girls –
for their faith, testimonies, and personal revelation – in this battle against
evil. There is much work to be accomplished before the world will be ready to
welcome the Savior. We need everyone because everyone has at least one talent
that would further the work of the Lord.
Elder
Uchtdorf says that we need to remember to welcome everyone to the work and then
show love and support to them. “But they do have this in common – they want to
improve and draw closer to the Lord, our Savior, even Jesus Christ. They are
trying to get it right. They believe.
They love. They do. They want to become less selfish, more compassionate, more
refined, more like Jesus.”
Elder
Uchtdorf closes by acknowledging that we all go through hard times and bouts of
despair and discouragement. “But the gospel of Jesus Christ offers hope.” We
can get through the hard times if we will continue to believe, love, and do.
No comments:
Post a Comment