Sunday, February 26, 2012

Hope

Hope. A word used too much with too little meaning. We all hope for A’s on our tests, hope to be good friends, hope to accomplish our goals. But do we hope in Christ? Are we actively exercising our hope? And by exercising, I mean truly living in hope. Hope is, after all, both a verb and a noun. It is not only something we act on but also something we must be. The definition of the verb hope is “to look forward to with confidence or expectation, to expect and desire, to have confidence; trust.” The noun definition of hope is “a thing, situation, or event that is desired; a person or thing that gives cause for hope.”


What gives us cause for hope? How do we hope actively? Elder Uchtdorf, second councilor in the first presidency in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day-Saints once said,


“Hope is not knowledge, but rather the abiding trust that the Lord will fulfill His promise to us. It is confidence that if we live according the God’s laws and the words of His prophets now, we will receive desired blessings in the future. It is believing and expecting that our prayers will be answered. It is manifest in confidence, optimism, enthusiasm, and patient perseverance. In the language of the gospel, this hope is sure, unwavering, and active. The Prophets of old speak of a ‘firm’ hope and a ‘lively’ hope. It is a hope glorifying God through good works, with hope comes joy and happiness. With hope, we can have patience, and bear our afflictions.”


When we truly hope, it moves us to change; it affects our very being. With hope, we are sustained during our daily walk in life, we are led to good works, we strengthen our faith, and we keep moving forward even when we feel like taking that next step is impossible. The prophet Nephi said, “Press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward, feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: ye shall have eternal life.” Elder Uchtdorf spoke of this proclamation, “This is the quality of hope we must cherish and develop. Such a mature hope comes in and through our Savior Jesus Christ, for ‘every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as [the Savior] is pure.”


If you want to be happy, have hope. As your ability to hope increases, so will your happiness until you are abounding in joy. Speaking from experience, I know that the increase in hope brings joy in the little things in life, joy in the element of surprise in life, joy in determination and persistence, and joy in Christ.


This past week for me was a challenge. I had much to ponder and felt that I had much reason to be depressed. On top of that, I had become ill and still had a lot of homework that had to be done and classes that could not be missed. I wanted to give up. It wasn’t even as hard for me this past week as it has been in other times, not even close, but I still despaired and felt that my heart was too heavy to look up and forward. But even in the darkest hour, there is still cause for hope. I was reminded by a friend to press forward in hope and once I made that decision, it changed my whole perspective and allowed me to end my week on a happy note. Suddenly, my feet were no longer cement blocks, my mind became unclouded, and my purpose clear.


The Article of Faith number thirteen, one of thirteen explanations of believes of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day-Saints, states, “…We believe all things, we hope all things, we have endured many things, and hope to be able to endure all things. If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy, we seek after these things.”


If you feel low, or just feel that something is missing, try hope. If you truly try it, you will be amazed at your gladness of heart. :)


For the full of President Uchtdorf’s address on hope, which I HIGHLY recommend, see: http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2008/10/the-infinite-power-of-hope?lang=eng&query=hope#22-PD00009501_000_009

Sunday, February 5, 2012

CHOOSE not to SNOOZE!

Spiritual “Alarm Clock”


You know those mornings where that blasted alarm goes off and you fumble for the ‘snooze’ button, not just once, but over and over? Or maybe you sleep through the alarm, too tired to hear the shrieking pitch that should sound similar to the scratching of nails across a chalkboard. You just cringed, didn’t you? You should! Alarms are there for awakening, warning, and protection. Their purpose is not to be ignored.


Today in one of my Sunday school classes we talked about being “awakened” by our spiritual alarm clocks and how important it is to never hit the “snooze” button.The following are some of my extended thoughts on the subject.


As stated in my last post, one of Satan’s best tools for winning includes ‘silencing’ the armies of God. There are so many ways he can do this; I won’t attempt to list them. You know what they are, or at least you have an idea. If you take each and every one of those things that just popped into your head, consider each one as a chain that will tether you to Satan. But this isn’t a heavy chain I’m talking about. No, these chains are so light in weight you don’t even realize just how tethered you are until you try to move/change. It is only heavy in the spiritual sense, and even then, it’s a while before you realize what is happening. Our family once had a lesson on this. My dad wrapped one thread of string around our wrists and then told use to break it. It was easy. Then he walked around and wrapped around our wrists the same string over and over and over again. Then, when we tried to break it, even the best effort of strength was not enough; the bands were too strong. It didn’t make sense that such a breakable strand of thread could become so strong. So it is with those seemingly harmless little things Satan wraps around our souls, one link at a time, until we are bound.


In The Book of Mormon, in 2 Nephi, the Prophet Lehi is giving his last words to his children. He admonishes them to awaken and change. In chapter 1 verse 13 it reads, “O that ye would awake; awake from a deep sleep, yea, even from the sleep of hell, and shake off the awful chains by which ye are bound, which are the chains which bind the children of men, that they are carried away captive down to the eternal gulf of misery and woe.”


In Charles Dickens’ story, The Christmas Carol, Scrooge’s old partner’s ghost, Jacob Marley, visits him in the night. During the visit Scrooge observes the chains Marley wears and says, “You are fettered, tell me why?” Marley replies, “I wear the chain I forged in life. I made it link by link, and yard by yard; I girded it on of my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it.”


One of the greatest of God’s gifts is our free will, or free agency. God will never force us to do or believe anything. This is a beautiful gift, one that shows a glimpse of the wondrous mercy of our God, but it goes two ways. How you use your agency will affect your soul eternally. God’s hope is for us to use our agency to choose the path back to His presence, so that we can live with Him again. However, the choices we make may lead us down another path, down the path to eternal misery and endless suffering. Jacob Marley said that the chains he wore were put there of his own free will, and they stayed there of the same effect. Marley’s acknowledgment of wearing the chains of his own free will shows how he had the option of discarding them, and he knew it, but he CHOSE not to. Because He loves us so, God gives us the warnings, the “spiritual alarms” to help guide us back to him, but if you aren’t willing to listen and follow Him, those alarms will ring fainter and fainter until your heart can no longer recognize their sound.


But there is hope! Because of our loving Heavenly Father, we have the opportunity to change. He gave His son to us to help remove those stumbling blocks in our way. Jesus Christ’s atonement for us pays our debt and makes up the difference in what we cannot give. This doesn’t mean we can lay back and let it all happen for us, we have to do our part. We have to have a broken heart and contrite spirit, and go to the Lord in repentance. Only through the atonement can those heavy chains be broken and we can become weightless again. How beautiful that promise!


Returning to Lehi’s words unto his children, he gives counsel on how to “shake off the awful chains.” He says, “…arise from the dust, my sons, and be men, and be determined in one mind and in one heart, united in all things, that ye may not come down into captivity (2 Nephi 1:21). . . Awake, my sons; put on the armor of righteousness. Shake off the chains with which ye are bound, and come forth out of obscurity, and arise from the dust (2 Nephi 1:23).”

*For the list of the armor of righteousness, see Ephesians 6:1-18.


There is never a time too late to change. God will never abandon us. If we feel far from our maker, it is because we have strayed, no Him. Christ is our constant Sheppard, and if we allow Him to be, our constant friend in whom we can confide in on the good days and the bad and on whom we can lean when we are weak.


President Gordon B. Hinckley once stated, “…We are engaged in a great eternal struggle that concerns the very souls of the sons and daughters of God. We are not losing. We are winning. We will continue to win if we will be faithful and true. We can do it. We must do it. We will do it.”


It is a long road, but it can be a happy one if we make it so. President Hinckley’s wife, Marjorie Hinckley said, “You do not find the happy life, you make it.”


If you become discouraged, there is always help along the way. In closing I will share my current favourite quote by Elder Jeffery R. Holland:

“Don’t you quit. You keep walking. You keep trying. There is help and happiness ahead. Some blessings come soon, some come late, and some don’t come ‘til heaven. But for those who embrace the gospel of Jesus Christ, they come. It will be all right in the end. Trust God and believe in good things to come."


If you hear your spiritual alarm clock sounding, listen to it. It will change your life.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

I've Enlisted, Have You?

“Hark! The sound of battle sounding loudly and clear;

Come join the ranks! Come join the ranks!”

(We Are All Enlisted, LDS Hymn #250)

For this week’s entry, I thought I’d start off with referring to Elder Jeffery R. Holland’s moving General Conference Address from this last October entitled, “We Are All Enlisted.” This address was part of my inspiration for this blog. Let me tell you why!

First off, I just LOVE Elder Holland’s addresses because of his frankness. He has no issue in telling it like it is. In this particular address, Elder Holland talks of how hard Satan will ALWAYS try to fault the moving forth of God’s plan. He said the following:

“Number one, Satan, or Lucifer, or the father of lies—call him what you will—is real, the very personification of evil. His motives are in every case malicious, and he convulses at the appearance of redeeming light, at the very thought of truth. Number two, he is eternally opposed to the love of God, the Atonement of Jesus Christ, and the work of peace and salvation. He will fight against these whenever and wherever he can. He knows he will be defeated and cast out in the end, but he is determined to take down with him as many others as he possibly can... his effort to stop the work will be reasonably well served if he can just bind the tongue of the faithful. Brethren, if that is the case, I am looking tonight for men young and old who care enough about this battle between good and evil to sign on and speak up. We are at war, and for these next few minutes, I want to be a one-man recruiting station.”

(For the full talk, here is the link: http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2011/10/we-are-all-enlisted?lang=eng ).

So, in my effort to “unbind my tongue,” I am writing this blog. I’m not a scholar, and I certainly don’t profess to be highly knowledgeable of any gospel topic, but I am a member of the “ranks,” so to speak, and I do have a testimony. This is part of my fight. So, here we go!

This week for my Doctrine and Covenants class, part of our assignment was to study out the meaning of “worship,” both the “how” and the “who.” I started the assignment thinking that I knew pretty well what worshiping entailed, but it turned out I was quite enlightened. Worship to many is a single thing done only on Sundays during sacrament or communion. However, worship is much more than that. Worship embodies our praises to God, how we live our lives, our willingness to give up our will to God in order to follow His, and how we represent Christ’s name (just to name a few). If we are not doing everything in our power to come to know Christ and His gospel, always moving closer to Him, always repenting and becoming that much better, “grace by grace” as it were, than we are not truly worshiping. It is not like I haven’t known this, but with most gospel studies, when I learn a principle it brings to my realization what I may have already known but needed to be reminded of. What I really love is this quote by Elder Bruce R. McConkie. It is pretty lengthy, so bear with me. But I assure you it’s worth reading:

“To worship the Lord is to follow after him, to seek his face, to believe his doctrine, and to think his thoughts. Its is to walk in his paths, to be baptized as Christ was, to preach that gospel of the kingdom which feel from his lips, and to heal the sick and raise the dead as he did. To worship the Lord is to put first in our lives the things of his kingdom, to live by every word that proceedeth forth from the mouth of God, to center our whole hearts upon Christ and that salvation which comes because of him. It is to walk in the light as he is in the light, to do the things that he wants done, to do what he would do under similar circumstances, to be as he is. To worship the Lord is to walk in the Spirit, to rise above carnal things, to bridle our passions, and to overcome the world. It is to pay our tithes and offerings, to act as wise stewards in caring for those things which have been entrusted to our care, and to use our talents and means for the spreading of truth and the building up of his kingdom. To worship the Lord is to be married in the temple, to have children, to teach them the gospel, and to bring them up in light and truth. It is to perfect the family unit, to honor our father and our mother; it is for a man to love his wife with all his heart and to cleave unto her and none else. To worship the Lord is to visit the fatherless and the widows in their affliction and to keep ourselves unspotted from the world. It is to work on a welfare project, to administer to the sick, to go on a mission, to go home teaching, and to hold family home evening. To worship the Lord is to study the gospel, to treasure up light and truth, to ponder in our hearts the things of his kingdom, and to make them part of our lives. It is to pray with all the energy of our souls, to preach by the power of the Spirit, to sings songs of praise and thanksgiving. To worship is to work, to be actively engaged in a good cause, to be about our Father’s business, to love and serve our fellowman. It is to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to comfort those that mourn, and to hold up the hands that hang down and to strengthen the feeble knees. To worship the lord is to stand valiantly in the cause of truth and righteousness, to let our influence for good be felt in civic, cultural, educational, and governmental fields, and to support those laws and principles which further the Lord’s interest on earth. To worship the Lord is to be of good cheer, to be courageous, to be valiant, to have the courage of our God-given convictions, and to keep the faith. It is ten thousand times ten thousand things. It is keeping the commandments of God. It is living the whole law of the whole gospel.”

(For the full talk here is the link: http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1971/10/how-to-worship?lang=eng ).

Phew! Did you make it through? :) As I read through that quote, I realized where I’m lacking in my worship. It certainly is a good way to learn. What better way to counter Satan’s efforts to take away light and truth than by building our homes in a worship/Christ centered way?

That’s all folks. I hope you learned a bit about worship like I did. Let me know what your thoughts are. I love you all! ‘Til next week :)

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Resolutions

Funny how it's been just inside a year since I started this blog. Funnier how this is only my 3rd post. That is about to change. I have a new goal to update this at least once a week. What about? Same pattern that I set up in the beginning; my journey of growing flowers from where dirt used to be. However, I will be adding in things that I learn and insights that I gain throughout the week. Being a student at BYU-I provides many opportunities for this and I feel I must record them somehow. Pen and paper just won't do. So, I hope you'll join me, you few who read this, in this process of expanding knowledge. Here's to a new start!

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Of Easter and Dirt

As I look back on my Easter Day I find myself having an epiphany. Easter has held more meaning to me in the past when all I thought about was Peter Cottontail and the basket I would receive with all that awesome candy and mini gifts in it. As I sat in Sacrament meeting in church today, I realized how very wrong I had been. Yes, I grew up in a home where the resurrection of the Lord, Jesus Christ, was taught as the center of the holiday, but I think somewhere in there my mind threw that to the back corner. I don't want that for my children. Easter should be celebrated just as much as Christmas when it comes to celebrating our Lord and Savior. Yeah, of course my future kids will still get the baskets and such, but I want/will stress the other importance of the holiday to them more clearly.
Now to get off my soap-box, I move on to another matter that is seriously stressing my heart: I'm home. All reason, along with everyone I know, tells me I should be happy about this; I get to be around family and people I haven't seen for "many moons." Here's the ticker: I'm happy, but I barely feel it. I have somehow managed to fall into this lack of feeling. I sit in church, and feel nothing but. . .blank. I'll read my scriptures and end up reading the same sentences repeatedly. Its like I can't feel any emotion nor the touch of the Holy Ghost. By all means I'm not perfect, but I have not done anything to remove myself from being close to Christ, I pray often and work through the repeats to continue reading my scriptures, but all I get is emptiness. I've been depressed many times in my life and I can recognize when that funk starts to weasel its way into a settlement, and this isn't that, its just. . empty. I don't know if it is anxiety about not being back in the 'burg, loss of concentration or maybe my thyroid is going rogue again, (or maybe a combo of all of the above) but its kinda creeping me out. I feel like a psychopath. This is not mentioned in search of pity (Heaven's please don't do that) but it is me mentioning the dirt that I have to find a way to turn into a flower. I have faith that somehow I will learn something from this that will make me a better person.
P.S. - In case I haven't mentioned, which I don't believe I have, the intention of this blog is for me to write out my "dirts" of life and update on the process/how I change them around and grow myself a little taller, better, and closer to my Savior, Jesus Christ. My inspiration was from the lyrics of a song "Merry Happy" by Kate Nash, "...I won't regret 'cuz you can grow flowers from where dirt used to be," and from the counsels of President Gordon B. Hinckley that I have been recently reading in his discourses.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Hibernation Realization

Amazingly enough, I just spent 2 hours creating this blog. As long as that took, one would think I had something equally lengthy to post. However, as I have sat here racking my brain for what I had earlier decided on posting I find myself coming up blank. Big surprise. Today marks the 3rd week that I have been home from BYU-I. I think the lack of being in a student town and not having classes to stimulate my mind, my thinker has decided to hibernate along with my social life until learning resumes in the fall. Here's to beginning the count down.