I have invested the past six
weeks to studying “The Family: A Proclamation to the World” in depth. I have
studied the words of prophets and apostles, and I have studied the words of
social scientists in support of the proclamation. The more I study this great
document, the more I recognize the greatness in it and the more I understand
the need for studying it.
This morning as I was studying a
talk from the October 2018 General Conference for The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, I came across a talk that gives more meaning to a portion of
the proclamation. The talk was given by President Henry B. Eyring and is titled
“Women and Gospel Learning in the Home.”
During the Women’s Session of
conference, President Eyring reminds us that the Lord is accelerating the rate
by which He is pouring knowledge into the minds and hearts of His children. “He
has made clear that the daughters of Heavenly Father will play a primary role
in that miraculous acceleration. One evidence of the miracle is His leading His
living prophet to put far greater emphasis on gospel instruction in the home
and within the family.”
When I read that statement I remembered
one made by President Spencer W. Kimball many years ago. He too speaks of the
role that righteous women will play in the final years of this world as we know
it.
Each of you should be grateful to be a
woman! … To be a righteous woman is a glorious thing in any age. To be a
righteous woman during the winding up scenes on this earth, before the second
coming of our Savior, is an especially noble calling. The righteous woman’s
strength and influence today can be tenfold what it might be in more tranquil
times. She has been placed here to enrich, to protect, and to guard the home –
which is society’s basic and most noble institution. Other institutions in
society may falter and even fail, but the righteous woman can help to save the
home, which may be the last and only sanctuary some mortals know in the midst
of storm and strife.
I hope that you can see the
connection that I made between the statements of the two prophets. Going back
to the talk by President Eyring, you may be wondering how to connect the new
emphasis on gospel instruction in the home to faithful sisters being a “primary
force to help the Lord pour out knowledge on His Saints.” President Eyring
gives the following explanation.
… The Lord gives the answer in “The
Family: A Proclamation to the World.” You remember the words, but you may see
new meaning and recognize that the Lord foresaw these exciting changes, which
are now occurring. In the proclamation, He
gave sisters charge to be the principal gospel educators in the family in
these words: “Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their
children.” This includes the nurture of gospel truth and knowledge. (Emphasis is mine.)
The proclamation goes on: “Fathers and
mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners.” They are equal
partners, equal in their potential for spiritual growth and for acquiring
knowledge, and so are unified by helping each other. They are equal in their
divine destiny to be exalted together. In fact, men and women cannot exalted
alone.
When, then, does a daughter of God in a
united and equal relationship receive the primary responsibility to nourish
with the most important nutrient all must receive, a knowledge of truth coming
from heaven? As nearly as I can see, that has been the Lord’s way since
families were created in this world.
President Eyring continues by
explaining that it was Eve who first received the knowledge that partaking of
the fruit was essential “for them to keep all of God’s commandments and to form
a family.” When Adam received the same knowledge, they became “perfectly
united.” President Eyring also reminds us of the 2000 stripling warriors who
were taught by their mothers to have faith and never doubt. “We do not doubt
that our mothers knew it.” Then he continues with his explanation.
While I do not know all the Lord’s
reasons for giving primary responsibility for nurturing in the family to
faithful sisters, I believe it has to do with your capacity to love. It takes
great love to feel the needs of someone else more than your own. That is the
pure love of Christ for the person you nurture. That feeling of charity comes
from the person chosen to be the nurturer having qualified for the effects of
the Atonement of Jesus Christ….
As daughters of God, you have an innate
and great capacity to sense the needs of others and to love. That, in turn,
makes you more susceptible to the whisperings of the Spirit. The Spirit can
then guide what you think, what you say, and what you do to nurture people so
the Lord may pour knowledge, truth, and courage upon them….
Yet, whatever your personal
circumstance, you are part – a key part – of the family of God and of your own
family, whether in the future, in this world, or in the spirit world. Your
trust from God is to nurture as many of His and your family members as you can
with your love and your faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Continuing, President Eyring
counsels us to ask God who it is that He wishes us to nurture as well as how,
and when, and he promises that He will let us know when someone is prepared to
accept our nurturing. In addition to prayer, we should study the scriptures to
strengthen our “growing power to nurture.” “So you will take more time to pray,
to ponder, and to meditate on spiritual matters. You will have knowledge of
truth poured out upon you and grow in your power to nurture others in your
family.” He counsels us to “not be weary in well doing” but to continue “laying
a foundation of a great work.”
I am very grateful for President
Eyring’s explanation of how the new policies can help women to better nurture
their families. He even goes so far as to share a few examples of how we might
know how to nurture specific members of our families. He concludes his remarks
with the following statement.
You will each find ways to contribute to
the outpouring of truth upon your families in the Lord’s restored Church. Each
of you will pray, study, and ponder to know what your unique contribution will
be. But this I know: each of you, equally yoked with sons of God, will be a
major part of a miracle of gospel learning and living that will hasten the
gathering of Israel and will prepare God’s family for the glorious return of
the Lord Jesus Christ.
This conference talk has added much
to my understanding of a small portion of the proclamation. I am confident that
there is much more awareness that I need and will receive as I increase my
capacity for it. Therefore, I am truly grateful for this semester when I have
the opportunity to study the proclamation in depth.
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