Friday, January 17, 2020

What does it mean to be the "true" church?




I came across this article and quite agree with it.

Here's the link to the original post 


A Different Way To Say “The Church Is True”



BY GREG TRIMBLE
For as long as I can remember, I have heard the same phrase regurgitated over and over again at church. It’s likely you’ve heard it thousands of times over the course of your life in the church as well.

That phrase is: “I know the church is true…”

I’ve used that phrase hundreds, maybe even thousands of times throughout my own life. But what does it all mean to say “the Church is true?” There are other related phrases you’ll be familiar with as well such as “I know I belong to the true church” or “I’m so glad I found the one and only true church.” But nothing might annoy a member of another Christian denomination more than when a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints makes that statement or claim. A new friend of mine and an adult convert to the church recalled that phrase almost as nails on a chalkboard during his investigative process.

Though an LDS member may not come out and say it, another person may interpret this “one true church” claim as an assault on their own faith or an attempt to make another’s faith or church irrelevant or inferior. A sort of Rameumptum if you will… with the insinuation of “I’m so glad I wasn’t born where you were born or raised in one of those other false churches.”

I don’t think that’s the intent of most of the members who use the phrase. I know when I have used that phrase, it has always been out of gratitude for my understanding of the fullness of the gospel and the restoration. But still, I can see how others might not interpret it the way I meant it when I said it.

So where did this language of “the one true church” come from anyway and why did we begin saying it so often?

It came out of Doctrine and Covenants Section 1, and in this case, the oft repeated phrase comes from the Lord. He says that this church is the “only true and living church upon the face of the whole earth with which I the Lord am well pleased.” Seems pretty cut and dry, right? The Lord is pleased with one church… the only true and living church. The restored Church. It’s kind of difficult to run away from or discount that language if you believe that the Doctrine and Covenants is indeed scripture, and if the Lord is saying it… then we should be able to say it too, right?

But I don’t think the Lord meant it in the way that it is so frequently conveyed over the pulpit and then interpreted by others.

If one says, “the Church is true”… what do they mean? Do they mean that the people are true? Or do they mean that the institution is true? Or maybe both?

If you say anything is “true,” what does it actually mean?

The etymology of the word “true” in the form of an adjective describes something as being “accurate or exact in relation to the direction.” That is key. “In relation to the direction.” It denotes making something “correctly positioned, balanced, or aligned; upright or level.” As a verb, the word “true” denotes “bringing something (an object, wheel, or other construction) into the exact shape, alignment, or position required.” A plane bearing 20 degrees west of north at 325 mph that has been calibrated to reach it’s intended destination, for example.

In effect, making something “true” is the act of taking something and correctly positioning it and then pointing it in the right direction. It’s less about where the church is now and more about the direction the church is headed in the future.

This is what the Lord is explaining to Joseph Smith in Hiram Ohio on November 1, 1831. He, (the Lord) is “well-pleased” that He was able to “position,” organize and restore an institution out of a broken, fragmented, and confused religious world, (obscurity and darkness) and then set a course for that church to go on. But even after having charted a “true” course, He knew that this church would have to make course corrections over time. So the Lord coupled the word “true” with the word “living” in order to further describe the nature of that church. The “living” part of the church is what continues to make that church move in a “true” direction. The “living” part of the church is what continually provides the course corrections, and without that, the church would no longer be true. The direction of the church is everything. Any institution that loses its direction becomes an institution that is not on a “true” course or trajectory. For instance, the Lord placed the whole church under condemnation for it’s neglect of the Book of Mormon in 1832. I’m assuming that the Lord was not well pleased with the direction of the church at that time, and his 1832 revelation to Joseph Smith about their neglect of the Book of Mormon is an example of a course correction made by the Lord through his “living” prophet in order to steer the ship back in a “true” direction.

That’s really what sets the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints apart from other denominations. Revelation. Living prophets. Direction. Direction. Direction. God picked up his church, out of the wilderness, out of the dust, out of the darkness… placed it on a secure and steadfast foundation of apostles, prophets, and revelation… and then pointed that church in the right direction. That is how the church became “true” in relation to the direction it was moving.

I believe we should specify what we mean when making a statement about the truthfulness of the church. If someone stands up and says that “we have all truth” contained within this church, then that is in direct contradiction to our basic beliefs. We don’t claim to have all truth, but in accordance with our articles of faith, we claim to be seekers of all truth. We are continually seeking after and embracing all truth from wherever it can be found. The church cannot be completely “true” in the sense of completeness or perfection. How can it be when we are anxiously waiting for more light and knowledge? “We believe that He (God) will yet reveal many great and important things pertaining to the Kingdom of God.” More truth, if you will. That is the “living” part of the church that keeps the church moving in a “true” direction.

What we do claim is that this church has been given the proper authority to administer the saving ordinances for the living and for the dead. That, coupled with a living prophet and continued revelation is what provides “direction” in a perplexed world. That is what most people mean when they say “the church is true.” But not everyone is going to understand that, especially if they’re visiting us for the first time.

Imagine how much more helpful and meaningful it would be for people if we were more precise in explaining what it means for our church to be “true” instead of just repeating the cliche over and over again. Imagine if we adopted phrases that were more effective in conveying the “true” value of what we derive from this restored Church of Jesus Christ.

Things like: “I am brought closer to Christ through the restoration of the gospel for these reasons…” (Direction = brought closer to Christ)

“I love that the doctrine of families brings me closer to my loved ones and closer to God.” (Direction = closer to family and God)

“I’m grateful for the temples that help me learn about my worth and potential in teaching me who I am and what I can become.” (from the Latin templum which denotes a “cutting” or intersection of two lines at right angles, or a place for one to get their bearings, or to chart a course to go in the right “direction”). (Direction = moving toward my greater potential.)

If Doctrine and Covenants 1:30 is going to be taught and reiterated in public places, then it should never be taught out of context and without the correct definitions. Most of all, it should never be taught without great humility and additional explanation. Being a part of the church doesn’t make anyone better than the next person or more important in the eyes of God. God is no respecter of persons… “But in every nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him.”

Being a member of this church just means that you have a great responsibility to seek after and apply truth. To stay on the directional path of truth and to stay open to the “living” part of the church that keeps us on the correct course toward God. Just as the Jews have long felt like it was their calling and duty to spread the Ten Commandments abroad, it is our duty and responsibility to administer the saving ordinances and share with the world the “living” truths that have come from and continue to come from this ongoing restoration.

There are boundless ways to describe our joy and excitement for the restoration. Unfortunately, for too long, we’ve used those four traditional words, “the church is true” to describe our feelings about the church and left many an interested investigator in a quandary.

I hope we can find a better way to describe and convey the truthfulness and beauty of the restoration in our conversation with the world.

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Mentored by His Grace

I'm a few months late, apparently. This was published in January, but I just saw it today and was really touched by it.

How This Latter-day Saint's Last Written Testimony Deepens Our Understanding of Grace

by Ashli Kristine Hansen | Jan. 31, 2019


“' ___________' by His Grace.

Saved.

Amazed.

Changed.

Empowered.

Overwhelmed.

Mentored.”

           — Jarem Hallows

The concept of grace can be hard to understand. Just the word itself can have many different meanings—it can be a title, it can mean a prayer, it can denote style, refinement, or civility.  It can mean different things in different religions.

According to the Bible Dictionary, grace is an “enabling power” to do what we cannot do on our own. It is a “divine means of help or strength, given through the bounteous mercy and love of Jesus Christ.” It is that enabling power of grace that gives us access to His Atonement.

Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf described grace as a powerful expression of God’s perfect and everlasting love for us. “That love is what the scriptures often call the grace of God—the divine assistance and endowment of strength by which we grow from the flawed and limited beings we are now into exalted beings of ‘truth and light, until we are glorified in truth and know all things.’”

An “endowment of strength” seems so fitting when we view grace through the lens of our deepest heartaches and most harrowing trials. Jesus Christ endows us with power as we face these struggles because He loves us. He knows that facing them head-on, armed with His grace, is how we grow and become more like Him.

Grace: An Endowment of Strength

I recently read another definition of grace that spoke to my soul. It builds upon this view of grace as an “endowment of strength” and adds another level of engagement with deity.

My cousin’s wife had a brother battling cancer. She often posted links to his blog detailing his latest health update. I had never met her brother, Jarem Hallows, before but his blog kept me interested in how he and his wife, Camilla, were coping with the cancer diagnosis. Not only would Jarem post health updates, but he would write the lessons he was learning as their family dealt with this immense trial. Every post seemed to testify of eternal truths, magnified by God’s outpouring of love for their family. He would write about the peace and hope he found in the Savior, even as the outcome of his own fight was in doubt.

In his final blog post, Jarem wrote about how his life had been changed by grace. During this valiant, hard-fought battle with cancer, he felt personally “mentored” by the Savior.

“What I’ve been feeling more and more lately is that while grace is a gift that Christ gives us, it also comes with an invitation to engage in a mentorship, or maybe better said, an apprenticeship,” Jarem wrote. “His desire is to have a hands-on experience with every aspect of our soul so that He can stretch and mold and shape us in every needful way. He gives us His grace, the power to make it through the apprenticeship, but He wants to personally teach us the lessons over a lifetime of experiences rather than some one-time injection or magic pill.”

Jesus Christ invites us to learn from Him, then teaches us and guides us in a way that stretches us to our core and shapes our very soul.

He is our ultimate Mentor.

Brad Wilcox spoke on this concept in an LDS Living “All-in” Podcast. “Grace isn’t just a description of God’s attributes; it’s actually how He engages with us. It’s His invitation to engage with Him. It’s the power He shares with us as we strive to make those attributes our own.”

The Savior’s grace refines us; it helps us become our best selves if  we let His enabling power do its work in us. But it is up to us to utilize its continuous influence.

“Receiving grace is like receiving a scholarship,” said Brad Wilcox, in his book Changed through His Grace. “It doesn’t guarantee learning. It facilitates it. The scholarship donor doesn’t want the money back—he or she wants it utilized.”

He doesn’t care if we pay Him back; His joy comes when we value His gift and use it to become more like Him.

Grace Given Freely

Too often we feel like we don’t deserve grace. Not yet. Others deserve it, but definitely not us! We may feel that we need to be better before we can qualify for it. We should know more, do more, be more . . . and we end up holding ourselves to a higher standard than the Lord does! There’s not some arbitrary spiritual height we must reach, as if we are riding some celestial roller coaster—“You must be this righteous to ride!” We qualify automatically, no matter where we are spiritually on the roller coaster of life, simply because the ride was built for us!

We each have an innate sense that we can be better than what we currently are. This desire helps us grow. Elder Neal A. Maxwell called this “divine discontent.” It comes when we compare what we are to what we have the power to become.

In the October 2018 general conference, Michelle D. Craig taught:

“We have these feelings because we are daughters and sons of God, born with the Light of Christ, yet living in a fallen world. These feelings are God given and create an urgency to act. . . . Divine discontent can move us to act in faith, follow the Savior’s invitations to do good, and give our lives humbly to Him.

"We should welcome feelings of divine discontent that call us to a higher way, while recognizing and avoiding Satan’s counterfeit—paralyzing discouragement.”

When we buy into Satan’s lies and convince ourselves we must wait until we feel “worthy” to receive God’s power and help in our lives, it denies the very purpose of grace!

Grace is the strength Christ offers us in order to make us even stronger. It is His enabling power, given unconditionally, that endows us with this strength so that, with Jesus Christ at our side, we can do hard things.

Beyond the Edge of Our Souls

Often Christ’s mentoring is most effective when we are fully immersed in the Refiner’s fire. When He forges us in the fiery furnace of affliction, we are at our most malleable, our most teachable. It is there, in the midst of our suffering, that we become most receptive to His tutelage as the Master shapes us in His image.

And then, just when we think we are at our very limit, and that our heart will simply break if it bends any more, the Savior takes us further than we ever imagined. He stretches us, He pushes us, He molds us into who He knows we can be. Sometimes we may feel like kicking and screaming along the way, but He patiently waits for us to realize that He knows better than we do. He knows what we need. He knows that if we will just hold on a little longer, we will begin to see His vision for us, one far greater than we could ever envision for ourselves.

“Forget staying in the comfortable core of our faith where we might mistake what is really His grace for some of our own ‘developed strength,’” Jarem wrote. “Christ takes us out to the edge of our soul, often to a spot we didn’t know existed, and where we can recognize in full humility that His grace is all that we have.”

Because it is there, at the edge of our soul, where He does His best work! We come to Him and offer up a heart broken seemingly beyond repair. We are finally humble enough to be teachable (Ether 12:27) and we can finally offer Him our will, fully relying on His merits. It is there where we come to know Him and that He is mighty to save (2 Nephi 31:19).

The Savior mentors us each individually, in a way wholly unique to each of us.

“As the omniscient Master Craftsman,” wrote Jarem, “the Savior knows when His apprentices need His close presence wrapped around them in order to survive, just like He knows when they need distance and silence to sort things out for themselves. He knows when to reward and when to discipline, when to use a warm blanket and when to use a fiery furnace. And His motive is always love—love that has been perfected through His own earthly experience.”

In the end, the full measure of God’s love for us, that enabling endowment of strength, is enough to see us through all of our earthly challenges, however they turn out.

For Jarem, God’s grace saw him through to the end of his mortal journey. He passed away just seven days after he shared this final written testimony:
“So as we all suffer through unforeseen and unwanted challenges, it feels natural to ask ‘Where is God? Am I now forsaken or forgotten by His grace? When will this end? How is this going to be resolved?’ . . . Christ and His infinite love are always there and He never leaves our side, especially in the most bitter of times. Contrary to how it might feel in the moment, His grace is most prevalent and most effective in our weakness and suffering. And so we carry on . . .
"Forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, press[ing] toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus’ (1 Philippians 3:13-14)."

Thursday, November 16, 2017

That We Might "Not ... Shrink" (D&C 19:18)

I hadn't heard this live. In fact, it was just shared online by someone recently, and I really appreciated it.


That We Might “Not … Shrink” (D&C 19:18)
David A. Bednar
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
CES Devotional for Young Adults • March 3, 2013 • University of Texas Arlington

I am grateful to participate in this devotional with young people of the Church from all over the world. I love you and appreciate this opportunity to worship together.

Susan has spoken and testified of important principles, and each of us will be blessed and strengthened as we apply consistently her teachings in our daily lives. Susan is a righteous woman, an elect lady, and the love of my life.

I have pondered and earnestly petitioned our Heavenly Father to know how I might best be able to serve you tonight. I pray the power of the Holy Ghost will be with each of us—that we may think what we need to think, feel what we need to feel, and learn what we need to learn so we can do what we know we should do and ultimately become what the Lord yearns for us to become.

A Devoted Disciple and an Example of Not Shrinking
Elder Neal A. Maxwell was a beloved disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ. He served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles for 23 years, from 1981 to 2004. The spiritual power of his teachings and his example of faithful discipleship blessed and continue to bless in marvelous ways the members of the Savior’s restored Church and the people of the world.

In October of 1997, Sister Bednar and I hosted Elder and Sister Maxwell at Brigham Young University–Idaho. Elder Maxwell was to speak to the students, staff, and faculty in a devotional assembly. Everyone on the campus eagerly anticipated his visit to the university and earnestly prepared to receive his message.

Earlier in that same year, Elder Maxwell underwent 46 days and nights of debilitating chemotherapy for leukemia. Shortly after completing his treatments and being released from the hospital, he spoke briefly in the April general conference of the Church. His rehabilitation and continued therapy progressed positively through the spring and summer months, but Elder Maxwell’s physical strength and stamina were nonetheless limited when he traveled to Rexburg. After greeting Elder and Sister Maxwell at the airport, Susan and I drove them to our home for rest and a light lunch before the devotional.

During the course of our conversations that day, I asked Elder Maxwell what lessons he had learned through his illness. I will remember always the precise and penetrating answer he gave. “Dave,” he said, “I have learned that not shrinking is more important than surviving.”

His response to my inquiry was a principle with which he had gained extensive personal experience during his chemotherapy. As Elder Maxwell and his wife were driving to the hospital in January of 1997, on the day he was scheduled to begin his first round of treatment, they pulled into the parking lot and paused for a private moment together. Elder Maxwell “breathed a deep sigh and looked at [his wife]. He reached for her hand and said … , ‘I just don’t want to shrink’” (Bruce C. Hafen, A Disciple’s Life: The Biography of Neal A. Maxwell [2002], 16).

In his October 1997 general conference message, entitled “Apply the Atoning Blood of Christ,” Elder Maxwell taught with great authenticity: “As we confront our own … trials and tribulations, we too can plead with the Father, just as Jesus did, that we ‘might not … shrink’—meaning to retreat or to recoil (D&C 19:18). Not shrinking is much more important than surviving! Moreover, partaking of a bitter cup without becoming bitter is likewise part of the emulation of Jesus” (Ensign, Nov. 1997, 22).

Elder Maxwell’s answer to my question caused me to reflect on the teachings of Elder Orson F. Whitney, who also served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles: “No pain that we suffer, no trial that we experience is wasted. It ministers to our education, to the development of such qualities as patience, faith, fortitude and humility. All that we suffer and all that we endure, especially when we endure patiently, builds up our characters, purifies our hearts, expands our souls, and makes us more tender and charitable, more worthy to be called the children of God … and it is through sorrow and suffering, toil and tribulation, that we gain the education that we come here to acquire” (quoted in Spencer W. Kimball, Faith Precedes the Miracle [1972], 98).

And these scriptures concerning the Savior’s suffering as He offered the infinite and eternal atoning sacrifice became even more poignant and meaningful to me:

“Therefore I command you to repent—repent, lest I smite you by the rod of my mouth, and by my wrath, and by my anger, and your sufferings be sore—how sore you know not, how exquisite you know not, yea, how hard to bear you know not.

“For behold, I, God, have suffered these things for all, that they might not suffer if they would repent;

“But if they would not repent they must suffer even as I;

“Which suffering caused myself, even God, the greatest of all, to tremble because of pain, and to bleed at every pore, and to suffer both body and spirit—and would that I might not drink the bitter cup, and shrink—

“Nevertheless, glory be to the Father, and I partook and finished my preparations unto the children of men” (D&C19:15–19).

The Savior did not shrink in Gethsemane or on Golgotha.

Elder Maxwell also did not shrink. This mighty Apostle pressed forward steadfastly and was blessed with additional time in mortality to love, to serve, to teach, and to testify. Those concluding years of his life were an emphatic exclamation point to his example of devoted discipleship—through both his words and his deeds.

I believe most of us likely would expect a man with the spiritual capacity, experience, and stature of Elder Maxwell to face serious illness and death with an understanding of God’s plan of happiness, with assurance and grace, and with dignity. And he surely did. But my purpose today is to bear witness that such blessings are not reserved exclusively for General Authorities or for a select few members of the Church.

Since my call to fill the vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve created by the death of Elder Maxwell, my assignments and travels have enabled me to become acquainted with faithful, courageous, and valiant Latter-day Saints all over the world. I want to tell you about one young man and one young woman who have blessed my life and with whom I have learned spiritually vital lessons about not shrinking and about allowing our individual will to be “swallowed up in the will of the Father” (Mosiah 15:7).

The account is true, and the characters are real. I will not, however, use the actual names of the individuals who are involved. I refer to the young man as John and the young woman as Heather. I also use with permission selected statements from their personal journals.

Not My Will but Thine Be Done
John is a worthy priesthood holder and served faithfully as a full-time missionary. After returning home from his mission, he dated and married a righteous and wonderful young woman, Heather. John was 23 and Heather was 20 on the day they were sealed together for time and for all eternity in the house of the Lord. Please keep in mind the respective ages of John and Heather as this story unfolds.

Approximately three weeks after their temple marriage, John was diagnosed with bone cancer. As cancer nodules also were discovered in his lungs, the prognosis was not good.

John recorded in his journal: “This was the scariest day of my life. Not only because I was told I had cancer, but also because I was newly married and somehow felt that I had failed as a husband. I was the provider and protector of our new family, and now—three weeks into that role—I felt like I had failed. I know that thought is absurd, but it is one of the crazy things I told myself in a moment of crisis.”

Heather noted: “This was devastating news, and I remember how greatly it changed our perspectives. I was in a hospital waiting room writing wedding thank-you notes as we anticipated the results of [John’s] tests. But after learning about [John’s] cancer, crock-pots and cookware did not seem so important anymore. This was the worst day of my life, but I remember going to bed that night with gratitude for our temple sealing. Though the doctors had given [John] only a 30 percent chance of survival, I knew that if we remained faithful I had a 100 percent chance to be with him forever.”

Approximately one month later John began chemotherapy. He described his experience: “The treatments caused me to be sicker than I had ever been in my life. I lost my hair, dropped 41 pounds, and my body felt like it was falling apart. The chemotherapy also affected me emotionally, mentally, and spiritually. Life was a rollercoaster during the months of chemo with highs, lows, and everything in between. But through it all, [Heather] and I maintained the faith that God would heal me. We just knew it.”

Heather chronicled her thoughts and feelings: “I could not stand to let [John] spend the night alone in the hospital, so I would sleep every night on the small couch in his room. We had lots of friends and family visit during the day, but the nights were the hardest. I would stare at the ceiling and wonder what Heavenly Father had planned for us. Sometimes my mind would wander into dark places, and my fear of losing [John] would almost overtake me. But I knew these thoughts were not from Heavenly Father. My prayers for comfort became more frequent, and the Lord gave me the strength to keep going.”

Three months later John underwent a surgical procedure to remove a large tumor in his leg. John stated: “The surgery was a huge deal for us because pathology tests were to be run on the tumor to see how much of it was viable and how much of the cancer was dead. This analysis would give us the first indication of the effectiveness of the chemotherapy and of how aggressive we would need to be with future treatments.”

Two days following the operation, I visited John and Heather in the hospital. We talked about the first time I met John in the mission field, about their marriage, about the cancer, and about the eternally important lessons we learn through the trials of mortality. As we concluded our time together, John asked if I would give him a priesthood blessing. I responded that I gladly would give such a blessing, but I first needed to ask some questions.

I then posed questions I had not planned to ask and had never previously considered: “[John,] do you have the faith not to be healed? If it is the will of our Heavenly Father that you are transferred by death in your youth to the spirit world to continue your ministry, do you have the faith to submit to His will and not be healed?”

I frankly was surprised by the questions I felt prompted to ask this particular couple. Frequently in the scriptures, the Savior or His servants exercised the spiritual gift of healing (see 1 Corinthians 12:9;D&C 35:9; 46:20) and perceived that an individual had the faith to be healed (see Acts 14:9; 3 Nephi 17:8; D&C 46:19). But as John and Heather and I counseled together and wrestled with these questions, we increasingly understood that if God’s will were for this good young man to be healed, then that blessing could only be received if this valiant couple first had the faith not to be healed. In other words, John and Heather needed to overcome, through the Atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ, the “natural man” (Mosiah 3:19) tendency in all of us to demand impatiently and insist incessantly on the blessings we want and believe we deserve.

We recognized a principle that applies to every devoted disciple: strong faith in the Savior is submissively accepting of His will and timing in our lives—even if the outcome is not what we hoped for or wanted. Certainly, John and Heather would desire, yearn, and plead for healing with all of their might, mind, and strength. But more importantly, they would be “willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon [them], even as a child doth submit to his father” (Mosiah 3:19). Indeed, they would be willing to “offer [their] whole souls as an offering unto him” (Omni 1:26) and humbly pray, “Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me: nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done” (Luke 22:42).

What initially seemed to John, Heather, and me to be perplexing questions became part of a pervasive pattern of gospel paradoxes. Consider the admonition of the Savior: “He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life for my sake shall find it” (Matthew 10:39). He also declared, “But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first” (Matthew 19:30). And the Lord counseled His latter-day disciples, “By thy word many high ones shall be brought low, and by thy word many low ones shall be exalted” (D&C 112:8). Thus, having the faith to not be healed seemed to fit appropriately into a powerful pattern of penetrating paradoxes that require us to ask, to seek, and to knock that we might receive knowledge and understanding (see 3 Nephi 14:7).

After taking the necessary time to ponder my inquiries and to talk with his wife, John said to me: “Elder Bednar, I do not want to die. I do not want to leave [Heather]. But if the will of the Lord is to transfer me to the spirit world, then I guess I am good with that.” My heart swelled with appreciation and admiration as I witnessed this young couple confront the most demanding of all spiritual struggles—the submissive surrender of their wills to God’s will. My faith was strengthened as I witnessed this couple allowing their strong and understandable desires for healing to be “swallowed up in the will of the Father” (Mosiah 15:7).

John described his reaction to our conversation and the blessing he received: “Elder Bednar shared with us the thought from Elder Maxwell that it is better to not shrink than to survive. Elder Bednar then asked us, ‘I know you have the faith to be healed, but do you have the faith not to be healed?’ This was a foreign concept to me. Essentially he was asking if I had the faith to accept God’s will if His will were that I not be healed? If the time were approaching for me to enter the spirit world through death, was I prepared to submit and accept?”

John continued: “Having the faith not to be healed seemed counterintuitive; but that perspective changed the way my wife and I thought and allowed us to put our trust fully in the Father’s plan for us. We learned we needed to gain the faith that the Lord is in charge whatever the outcome may be, and He will guide us from where we are to where we need to be. As we prayed, our petitions changed from ‘Please make me whole’ to ‘Please give me the faith to accept whatever outcome Thou hast planned for me.’

“I was sure that since Elder Bednar was an Apostle, he would bless the elements of my body to realign, and I would jump out of the bed and start to dance or do something dramatic like that! But as he blessed me that day, I was amazed that the words he spoke were almost identical to those of my father, my father-in-law, and my mission president. I realized that ultimately it does not matter whose hands are on my head. God’s power does not change, and His will is made known to us individually and through His authorized servants.”

Heather wrote: “This day was filled with mixed emotions for me. I was convinced that Elder Bednar would place his hands on [John’s] head and completely heal him of the cancer. I knew that through the power of the priesthood he could be healed, and I wanted so bad for that to happen. After he taught us about the faith to not be healed, I was terrified. Up to that point, I had never had to come to grips with the fact that the Lord’s plan might include losing my new husband. My faith was dependent upon the outcomes I wanted. In a manner of speaking, it was one-dimensional. Though terrifying at first, the thought of having the faith not to be healed ultimately freed me from worry. It allowed me to have complete trust that my Heavenly Father knew me better than I knew myself, and He would do what was best for me and John.”

A blessing was given, and weeks, months, and years passed by. John’s cancer miraculously went into remission. He was able to complete his university studies and obtained gainful employment. John and Heather continued to strengthen their relationship and enjoy life together.

Some time later I subsequently received a letter from John and Heather informing me that the cancer had returned. Chemotherapy was resumed and surgery scheduled. John explained: “Not only did this news come as a disappointment to [Heather] and me, but we were puzzled by it. Was there something we did not learn the first time? Did the Lord expect something more from us? Growing up as Latter-day Saints, it was common to go to church and hear the phrase, ‘every trial God gives us is for our benefit.’ Well, to be honest, I could not see how this was benefitting me!

“So I began to pray for clarity and for the Lord to help me understand why this recurrence of the cancer was happening. One day as I was reading in the New Testament I received my answer. I read the account of Christ and His Apostles on the sea when a tempest arose. Fearing the boat would capsize, the disciples went to the Savior and asked, ‘Master, carest thou not that we perish?’ This is exactly how I felt! Carest thou not that I have cancer? Carest thou not that we want to start a family? But as I read on in the story, I found my answer. The Lord looked at them and said, ‘O ye of little faith,’ and He stretched forth His hand and calmed the waters.

“In that moment I had to ask myself, ‘Do I really believe this?’ Do I really believe He calmed the waters that day? Or is it just a nice story to read about?’ The answer is: I do believe, and because I know He calmed the waters, I instantly knew He could heal me. Up until this point, I had a hard time reconciling the need for my faith in Christ with the inevitability of His will. I saw them as two separate things, and sometimes I felt that one contradicted the other. ‘Why should I have faith if His will ultimately is what will prevail,’ I asked? After this experience, I knew that having faith—at least in my circumstance—was not necessarily knowing that He would heal me, but that He could heal me. I had to believe that He could, and then whether it happened was up to Him.

“As I allowed those two ideas to coexist in my life, focused faith in Jesus Christ and complete submission to His will, I found greater comfort and peace. It has been so remarkable to see the Lord’s hand in our lives. Things have fallen into place, miracles have happened, and we continually are humbled to see God’s plan for us unfold.”

I repeat for emphasis John’s statement: “As I allowed those two ideas to coexist in my life, focused faith in Jesus Christ and complete submission to His will, I found greater comfort and peace.”

Righteousness and faith certainly are instrumental in moving mountains—if moving mountains accomplishes God’s purposes and is in accordance with His will. Righteousness and faith certainly are instrumental in healing the sick, deaf, or lame—if such healing accomplishes God’s purposes and is in accordance with His will. Thus, even with strong faith, many mountains will not be moved. And not all of the sick and infirm will be healed. If all opposition were curtailed, if all maladies were removed, then the primary purposes of the Father’s plan would be frustrated.

Many of the lessons we are to learn in mortality can only be received through the things we experience and sometimes suffer. And God expects and trusts us to face temporary mortal adversity with His help so we can learn what we need to learn and ultimately become what we are to become in eternity.

The Meaning of All Things
This story about John and Heather is both ordinary and extraordinary. This young couple is representative of millions of faithful, covenant-keeping Latter-day Saints all over the world who are pressing forward along the strait and narrow path with steadfast faith in Christ and a perfect brightness of hope. John and Heather were not serving in highly visible leadership positions in the Church, they were not related to General Authorities, and sometimes they had doubts and fears. In many of these aspects, their story is quite ordinary.

But, brothers and sisters, this young man and young woman were blessed in extraordinary ways to learn essential lessons for eternity through affliction and hardship. I have shared this episode with you because John and Heather, who are just like so many of you, came to understand that not shrinking is more important than surviving. Thus, their experience was not primarily about living and dying; rather, it was about learning, living, and becoming.

The potent spiritual combination of faith in and on the holy name of Jesus Christ, of meekly submitting to His will and timing, of pressing forward “with unwearied diligence” (Helaman 15:6), and of acknowledging His hand in all things yields the peaceable things of the kingdom of God that bring joy and eternal life (see D&C 42:61). As this couple faced seemingly overwhelming challenges, they lived a “peaceable life in all godliness and honesty” (1 Timothy 2:2). They walked peaceably (see Moroni 7:4) with and among the children of men. “And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, [kept their] hearts and minds through Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:7).

For many of you, their story is, has been, or could be your story. You are facing, have faced, or will yet face equivalent challenges in your lives with the same courage and spiritual perspective that John and Heather did. I do not know why some people learn the lessons of eternity through trial and suffering—while others learn similar lessons through rescue and healing. I do not know all of the reasons, all of the purposes, and I do not know everything about the Lord’s timing. With Nephi, you and I can say that we “do not know the meaning of all things” (1 Nephi 11:17).

But some things I absolutely do know. I know we are spirit sons and daughters of a loving Heavenly Father. I know the Eternal Father is the author of the plan of happiness. I know Jesus Christ is our Savior and Redeemer. I know Jesus enabled the Father’s plan through His infinite and eternal Atonement. I know that the Lord, who was “bruised, broken, [and] torn for us” (“Jesus of Nazareth, Savior and King,” Hymns, no. 181), can succor and strengthen “his people according to their infirmities” (Alma 7:12). And I know one of the greatest blessings of mortality is to not shrink and to allow our individual will to be “swallowed up in the will of the Father” (Mosiah 15:7).

Though I do not know everything about how and when and where and why these blessings occur, I do know and I witness they are real. I testify that all of these things are true—and that we know enough by the power of the Holy Ghost to bear sure witness of their divinity, reality, and efficacy. My beloved brothers and sisters, I invoke upon you this blessing: even that as you press forward in your lives with steadfast faith in Christ, you will have the capacity to not shrink. I bear this witness and I invoke this blessing in the sacred name of the Lord Jesus Christ, amen.