There is an adage that family and friends should never discuss politics and religion. The reason for this saying is that both politics and religion bring strong feelings to the surface. Many relations are destroyed by anger and hate that explodes, particularly this year. I have never seen so much anger and hatred in our nation as I have witnessed toward President Donald Trump and his supporters. There is most likely strong negative feelings on both sides of the political divide, but the negativity seems to be boiling over on the liberal side.
Different political beliefs recently
caused a big problem between a man and his father, and the turmoil went viral. Writer
Leo Guinan became angry when he saw a Trump sign in his parent’s yard, so he
sent a text message to them. He was so angry that his hands were shaking, and
tears were in his eyes. This is what he wrote:
Due to the signs in the yard, the kids and
I will not be down. The current occupant of the White House is preaching hate
and violence, endangering the lives and safety of many of my friends. This is
not acceptable to me at all. There is a complete disregard for women,
minorities, science, ethics, and morality. Please consider if you support Trump
that much. Because I hate him that much. I wanted to be upfront and honest
about my feelings.
My heart hurt for Guinan’s father
and mother because I feel certain that they love him and his children and want
to see them. I also felt some empathy for Guinan’s parents because my children
have different political views than I do. They tell me about their feelings for
Donald Trump and how they can never vote for him. At the same time, they know
that I am passionate about the Constitution and the American way of life. They know
that I am concerned about socialism creeping into our nation. They know my
fears that a Joe Biden presidency will send us further down the slippery slope
towards socialism and ultimately to communism. They know that I do not understand
their negative feelings towards Trump. Yet, they still love me!
They know my political views – and I
know their political views – because we discuss them. Even though I would like
my children to share my views and support me in them, I understand that they
have agency to make their own decisions. I pray for them that they will not go
off the deep end in political fervor, and I have found a few blessings in
having children with opposing views.
One of those blessings is the opportunity
to have a different perspective. I recognize that I have strong feelings about
people who think differently than I do, and I know that I could become hateful
in my opinions. However, I temper my feelings because some of those people are
my children. Instead of thinking that all Democrats are either crazy (like
Maxine Waters) or evil (like Nancy Pelosi), I remember that my children are
intelligent, wise, and compassionate adults and good citizens of the nation.
Just knowing my children as I do, I can look at the average Democrat in a
different light.
My children and I can discuss our
political views without anger and hate because we all recognize that our
relationships are more important than our political views. I do not force my
views on them, and they do not force their views on me. We are fortunate to belong
to a church – The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – that teaches
the importance of family relationships. I and my children believe that families
can be together forever, and we strive to be worthy of that eternal blessing.
We also believe that eternal relationships should be developed on this side of
the veil as well as on the other.
As I thought about what I could write on
this topic, I remembered a talk that was given by President Thomas S. Monson in
the October 2008 General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ. He spoke on
the topic “Finding Joy in the Journey.”
President Gordon B. Hinckley died eight
months before that conference, and President Monson was ordained and later sustained
as the Prophet, Seer, and Revelator in the April 2020 General Conference. He reminisced
about the 45 years that had passed since he was ordained as an Apostle. He also
spoke of the sixty years that he had been married to his wife and how his
grandchildren were mostly grown with children of their own.
Day by day, minute by minute, second by
second, we went from where we were to where we are now. The lives of all of us,
of course, go through similar alternations and changes. The difference between
the changes in my life and the changes in yours is only in the details. Time
never stands still; it must steadily march on, and with the marching come the
changes.
This is our one and only chance at mortal
life – here and now. The longer we live, the greater is our realization that it
is brief. Opportunities come, and then they are gone. I believe that among the
greatest lessons we are to learn in this short sojourn upon the earth are
lessons that help us distinguish between what is important and what is not. I
plead with you not to let those most important things pass you by as you plan
for that illusive and nonexistent future when you will have time to do all that
you want to do. Instead, find joy in the journey – now….
Stresses in our lives come regardless of
our circumstances. We must deal with them the best we can. But we should not
let them get in the way of what is most important – and what is most important
almost always involves the people around us….
… Never let a problem to be solved become
more important than a person to be loved.
President Monson offered many other nuggets
of counsel, but only one of them stands out in my mind. I remembered only one
sentence from this talk, but it has had great influence on my life. I often
remember his statement, “Never let a problem to be solved become more important
than a person to be loved.” It has been a great influence on me on numerous
occasions.
I wonder what Leo Guinan would have
done if he had remembered that his relationship with his parents was more
important than any presidential election. I think that he would have refrained
from sending that text to his parents. To his credit, he did apologize to his
parents and tried to heal the relationship. However, he can never take back the
hurt that he inflicted on his parents and the pain that will always be in his
heart.
There is a little over one month
until the November 2020 presidential election. With the passing of Associate
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the political racket will become even more heated
and hateful with the nomination and confirmation process of a new justice. I
hope that we will all remember that relationships with our friends and loved
ones are much more important than who is elected to the White House or
appointed to the Supreme Court.
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