Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Capstone
Capstone
to Quote Book
This
semester we have been collecting quotes from modern-day apostles and prophets on
ten topics relevant to our lives. Most
of my quotes are from the living apostles, but I chose a couple from other
speakers in General Conference. Family,
atonement, agency and pornography were chosen for us. Though I may not have chosen pornography, I
understand why it was chosen. Pornography
is addictive and it attacks the family.
Family is the eternal unit.
Agency encompasses our choices and they, with the atonement, make it
possible to have forever families. I
also chose Priesthood power and how to exercise it in my life, recognizing the
Holy Ghost and living worthy of His direction, Endurance, with a smile if possible, remembering
that the suffering is optional, Charity--understanding how the nature of our
Father in Heaven can change our natures as we practice it, Humility/Pride
because if you are not practicing one, you are practicing the other and faith
and the many ways it is expressed. All of these subjects
pertain to our eternal salvation and strongly impact our status there.
As I learn about
the atonement, I gain understanding of its full power and effect in my life. One quote I found from Sis. Burton speaks to
how the atonement helps us put our adversities into perspective and gain peace
in knowing that it’s not about being fair.
Another quick quip from Elder Cook reminds me that there is great peace
in the grace of the atonement. In 1996
Elder Nelson gave a really great talk entitled, “The Atonement”. It was filled with good information. The culmination for me was this quote: “That is why we respond to our own
calls from the Lord. When we comprehend His voluntary Atonement, any sense of
sacrifice on our part becomes completely overshadowed by a profound sense of gratitude for the privilege of serving Him.” This leads us to agency.
Agency is our responsibility to
choose. It is freely given but certainly
costs in consequences. Elder Hales
speaks of agency often. One of the
things he clearly teaches is that “the devil made me do it” is a poor
excuse. The adversary must depart if we
tell him to depart. This is a powerful
principle that is often forgotten in the moment. When he affects our minds and bodies, we have
allowed it. He powerfully shows through
the only perfect example, Jesus Christ, “He taught us that when we choose to do
the will of our Heavenly Father, our agency is preserved, our opportunities
increase, and we progress.” Using our agency
we chose our family.
The Proclamation on the Family was
given in 1995. It was not new
information but needed to be reiterated for the benefit of all. It is concise and inclusive and states in no
uncertain terms what constitutes a family.
I collected quotes that pertain to how our choices affect a family. I do not have children but I come from a
family and it is my eternal goal to have a family. It is my responsibility to learn how to be a
mother, daughter, grandmother, granddaughter, sister, aunt and sister in Christ
while here on the earth so that I may continue those relationships in the
manner that God has prescribed. The disintegration
of the family is very evident in our society today. In this age of political correctness and
tolerance, we may have unwittingly played a part in this attack. The Brethren have been very direct and firm
in this matter. Pornography attacks the
family.
Pornography is addictive and has a
voracious appetite. It is the antithesis
of love and only satisfies lust in the moment.
It is degrading to women and we have been instructed to “avoid it like
the plague.” I like how Elder Holland differentiates between the fleeting
moment of lust and the permanence of love in his talk, “Place No More for the
Enemy of My Soul”.
The most detrimental thing about pornography is the
destruction of our spirits. “To be
carnally minded is death” refers to spiritual death. We cannot be true to our baptismal covenant
of always having the spirit with us if we are partaking of pornography. This leads us to the Holy Ghost.
I chose
the Holy Ghost because he speaks to me in a variety of ways depending on my needs. Sometimes I find it hard to differentiate and
only know in hindsight that something was a result of the Holy Ghost. Elder Richard G. Scott has spoken of this the
most. He has a tender spirit that seems
to ache for us as he speaks of the guidance and peace of the Holy Spirit. What I learned is that if I am being obedient
then I can have peace regardless of the circumstance and know that the Lord is
sustaining me through the Holy Ghost. Having
the Holy Ghost or lack of His spirit, reflects our degree of humility or pride.
I chose
humility and pride together because they are opposite ends of the same spectrum
and absolutely effect our decisions. I
have always loved President Benson’s talk on pride given at 1989 General
Conference. I keep a copy of this talk
in my scriptures with my patriarchal blessing.
It was shared with me by a friend long ago but I never saw it delivered
until this assignment. It was delivered
by then Elder Gordon B. Hinckley. He did
it justice because he too was a man that didn’t mince words when it came to our
eternal salvation. Many times in my life
the line “there is no such thing as righteous pride” has rung through my head
and I have been humbled. With humility
comes charity.
Charity Never
Faileth. It is the pure love of Christ
and impacts our lives and decisions. I
chose quotes about using charity to color our judgment. We must daily make judgments about what we
will do and how we will do it. If we do
it with love, we will not offend. We read in Moroni, “Cleave unto charity, which is the
greatest of all. … Whoso is found possessed of it at the last day, it shall be
well with him.” 8 Charity can be the outward
expression of faith and hope. If sought and obtained, these three foundation
elements of celestial character will abide with us in this life and beyond the
veil into the next life.” Elder
Wirthlin shared this statement in “Cultivating Divine Attributes” given October
1998. The way we love will affect how we
endure our trials.
I chose Endurance/Trials as a topic
because I have never been great at follow through. I am a great idea girl, but in the long haul
I lose interest and direction. The
quotes I chose are to remind me why I want to endure it well and stay true to
my covenants. You cannot discuss
covenants without discussing the power to administer them. That is why I chose priesthood power.
Priesthood is the power and
authority to act for God on the earth.
It is only given to men but I have full access to all the blessings of
the priesthood through my covenants. I
cannot know what I have access to if I do not understand the priesthood. Also, I have a responsibility to teach what I
learn. God
has freely given His power to those who accept and honor His priesthood, which
leads to the promised blessings of immortality and eternal life. Sometimes it is hard to comprehend the teachings
that apply to our spiritual lives which is why I also chose the topic of faith.
Faith is
why I am writing this summary today. I
take comfort and power from the statement, “Man cannot live without faith,
because in life’s adventure the central problem is character-building—which is
not a product of logic, but of faith in ideals and sacrificial devotion to them.” Elder Scott shared this in 2003. I am
comforted by the lyrics to the hymn When Faith Endures.
I will not
doubt, I will not fear; God's love and strength are always near. His promised
gift helps me to find An inner strength and peace of mind. I give the Father
willingly My trust, my prayers, humility.
His Spirit guides; his love assures That fear departs when faith endures.
I will never
forget last conference when Elder Holland instructed us not to lead with our
unbelief. He humorously equated it as
trying to stuff a turkey through the beak.
Why dwell on what we don’t know without first acknowledging what we
know? It is counterproductive and tool
of the adversary to convince us to give up.
Elder Holland adds, “Honestly
acknowledge your questions and your concerns, but first and forever fan the
flame of your faith, because all things are possible to them that believe.”
Friday, June 28, 2013
AGENCY QUOTES
You and I were among those who used their
agency to accept Heavenly Father’s plan to come to earth, to have a mortal
life, to progress. “We shouted for joy … to have the opportunity of coming to
the earth to receive bodies [for we knew] that we might become, through
faithfulness, like unto our Father, God.” Elder Robert D. Hales, To Act For Ourselves: The Gift and Blessings of Agency, April 2006
General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2006/04/to-act-for-ourselves-the-gift-and-blessings-of-agency?lang=eng
Although the devil laughs, his power is
limited. Some may remember the old adage: “The devil made me do it.” Today I
want to convey, in absolutely certain terms, that the adversary cannot make us
do anything. He does lie at our door, as the scriptures say, and he follows us
each day. Every time we go out, every decision we make,
we are either choosing to move in his direction or in the direction of our
Savior. But the adversary must depart if we tell him to depart. He cannot
influence us unless we allow him to do so, and he knows that! The only time he
can affect our minds and bodies—our very spirits—is when we allow him to do so. In other words, we do
not have to succumb to his enticements! Elder Robert D. Hales, To Act For Ourselves: The Gift and Blessings of Agency, April 2006
General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2006/04/to-act-for-ourselves-the-gift-and-blessings-of-agency?lang=eng
Throughout His life
our Savior showed us how to use our agency. As a boy in Jerusalem, He
deliberately chose to “be about [His] Father’s business.”10 In His ministry, He
obediently chose “to do the will of [His] Father.” 11 In Gethsemane, He
chose to suffer all things, saying, “Not my will, but thine, be done. And there
appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening him.” 12 On the cross, He chose
to love His enemies, praying, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what
they do.” 13 And then, so that He
could finally demonstrate that He was choosing for Himself, He was left alone.
“[Father,] why hast thou forsaken me?” He asked. 14 At last, He exercised
His agency to act, enduring to the end, until He could say, “It is finished.” 15
Though He “was in all
points tempted like as we are,” 16 with every choice and
every action He exercised the agency to be our Savior—to break the chains of
sin and death for us. And by His perfect life, He taught us that when we choose
to do the will of our Heavenly Father, our agency is preserved, our
opportunities increase, and we progress.
Elder Robert D. Hales, To Act For
Ourselves: The Gift and Blessings of
Agency, April 2006 General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2006/04/to-act-for-ourselves-the-gift-and-blessings-of-agency?lang=eng
Latter-day Saints are not obedient because
they are compelled to be obedient. They are obedient because they know certain
spiritual truths and have decided, as an expression of their own individual
agency, to obey the commandments of God.
Elder Boyd K. Packer, Agency and Control, April
1983 General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1983/04/agency-and-control?lang=eng
But agency is ours as
well. We look up, and in the universe we see the handiwork of God and measure
things by epochs, by eons, by dispensations, by eternities. The many things we
do not know we take on faith. But this
we know! It was all planned before the world was. Events from the Creation to
the final, winding-up scene are not based on chance; they
are based on choice! It was planned that
way. Elder
Boyd K. Packer, Agency and Control, April 1983 General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1983/04/agency-and-control?lang=eng
I experienced the joy of coming closer to the
Savior and of His coming closer to me most often through simple acts of
obedience to the commandments. Elder Henry B.
Eyring, Come unto Me, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/come-unto-me?lang=eng
Be obedient to the prophetic teachings Christ
would have you follow. Don’t rationalize away future happiness by taking
shortcuts instead of applying sound gospel principles. Remember: little things
lead to big things. Seemingly insignificant indiscretions or neglect can lead
to big problems. More importantly, simple, consistent, good habits lead to a
life full of bountiful blessings. Elder Richard G. Scott, For Peace at Home,
2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/for-peace-at-home?lang=eng
Agency is essential to the plan of happiness.
It allows for the love, sacrifice, personal growth, and experience necessary
for our eternal progression. This agency also allows for all the pain and
suffering we experience in mortality, even when caused by things we do not
understand and the devastating evil choices of others. The very War in Heaven
was waged over our moral agency and is essential to understanding the Savior’s
earthly ministry. Elder Quentin L. Cook, Personal Peace: The Reward
of Righteousness, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/personal-peace-the-reward-of-righteousness?lang=eng
The Lord’s way is that we hearken to our
leaders’ teachings, understand correct principles, and govern ourselves. Elder
Stanley G. Ellis, The Lord’s Way, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/the-lords-way?lang=eng
In addition, use your agency to develop
yourself personally. As you discover your gifts and talents, remember that
parents and mentors may assist you, but you must let the Spirit guide you.
Choose and act for yourself. Be motivated from within. Make a plan for your life,
including education or vocational training. Explore interests and skills. Work
and become self-reliant. Set goals, overcome mistakes, gain experience, and
finish what you begin. Elder Robert D. Hales, Stand Strong in Holy
Places, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/stand-strong-in-holy-places?lang=eng
PRIESTHOOD QUOTES
God has freely given His power to
those who accept and honor His priesthood, which leads to the promised
blessings of immortality and eternal life.
Elder M. Russell
Ballard, This is My Work and Glory, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/this-is-my-work-and-glory?lang=eng
Some young people in the world say
they are spiritual but not religious. Feeling spiritual is a good first step.
However, it is in the Church that we are fellowshipped, taught, and nourished
by the good word of God. More importantly, it is priesthood authority in the
Church that provides for sacred ordinances and covenants that bind families
together and qualify each of us to return to God the Father and Jesus Christ in the celestial
kingdom. Elder Quentin L. Cook, Personal
Peace: The Reward of Righteousness,
April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/personal-peace-the-reward-of-righteousness?lang=eng
If you deacons quorum presidents will
magnify your calling, you will be instruments in God’s hands even now, for the
priesthood in the boy is just as powerful as the priesthood in the man when
exercised in righteousness. Elder Tad R Callister, The Power of the
Priesthood in the Boy, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/the-power-of-the-priesthood-in-the-boy?lang=eng
The work of ministering is not
confined to ordinances or home teaching visits or occasional service projects.
We are always priesthood men—not just on Sunday and not only when we’re wearing
white shirts and ties. We have a duty to minister wherever we stand. Ministering
is not just something we do—it defines who we are. David L. Beck, Your Sacred Duty to
Minister, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/your-sacred-duty-to-minister?lang=eng
We who have been ordained to the
priesthood of God are called to practice “the healer’s art.” President Dieter F. Utchdorf, Four Titles, April
2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/four-titles?lang=eng
The Lord has put before us the divine promise that “whoso is
faithful unto the obtaining these two priesthoods, … magnifying their calling,
… [will] receive me, saith the Lord; … and he that receiveth me receiveth my
Father; … therefore all that my Father hath shall be given unto him.”9
It is beyond my
power of thought to imagine all that this promise entails. But I do know it is
grand, it is divine, it is eternal, and it is worth all of our efforts in life. Knowing this, how can we not willingly and
joyfully engage in serving the Lord and our fellowmen and living up to our
responsibilities in the priesthood of God?
President Dieter F. Utchdorf, Four Titles, April
2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/four-titles?lang=eng
The Lord made it clear at the very
start of this last dispensation that we were to take the gospel to all the
world. What He said to the few priesthood holders in 1831 He says to the many
now. Whatever our age, capacity, Church calling, or location, we are as one
called to the work to help Him in His harvest of souls until He comes again. President Henry B. Eyring, We Are One, April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/we-are-one?lang=eng
I pray that wherever we are and
whatever duties we have in the priesthood of God, we will be united in the
cause to bring the gospel to all the world and that we will encourage people we
love to be cleansed from sin and to be happy with us in the kingdom of God. President Henry B. Eyring, We Are One,
April 2013 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/we-are-one?lang=eng
Let us
embrace and understand the wonder and privilege of the priesthood. Let us
accept and love the responsibilities we are asked to fulfill. Dieter F. Uchtdorf, The Joy of the Priesthood, October 2012 General
Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/the-joy-of-the-priesthood?lang=eng
But
brethren, we are bearers of the Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of
God! Each of us had hands laid upon our head, and we received the priesthood of
God. We have been given authority and responsibility to act in His name as His
servants on earth. Whether in a large ward or a small branch, we are called
upon to serve, to bless, and to act in all things for the good of everyone and
everything entrusted to our care. Dieter F. Uchtdorf, The Joy of the
Priesthood, October 2012 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/the-joy-of-the-priesthood?lang=eng
ATONEMENT QUOTES
That brings us to the Atonement. Paul
said, “As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.” The
Atonement of Jesus Christ became the immortal creation. He
volunteered to answer the ends of a law previously transgressed. And
by the shedding of His blood, His 16 and our physical bodies could become
perfected. They could again function without blood, just as Adam’s and Eve’s
did in their paradisiacal form.
Paul taught that “flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; … this
mortal must put on immortality. Elder
Russell M. Nelson, The Atonement, October 1996 General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1996/10/the-atonement?lang=eng
The Savior’s gift of immortality comes to all who have ever lived. But
His gift of eternal life requires
repentance and obedience to specific ordinances and covenants. Essential
ordinances of the gospel symbolize the Atonement. Baptism by immersion is symbolic of the death,
burial, and Resurrection of the Redeemer.
Partaking of the sacrament renews baptismal covenants and also
renews our memory of the Savior’s broken flesh and of the blood He shed for us.
Ordinances of the temple symbolize our reconciliation with the Lord and seal
families together forever. Obedience to the sacred covenants made in temples
qualifies us for eternal life—the greatest gift of God to man 40 —the “object and end of our
existence.” Elder Russell M. Nelson,
The Atonement, October 1996 General Conference.
http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1996/10/the-atonement?lang=eng
That is why we respond to our own
calls from the Lord. When we comprehend His voluntary Atonement, any sense of
sacrifice on our part becomes completely overshadowed by a profound sense of gratitude for the privilege of serving Him. Elder Russell M. Nelson, The Atonement, October 1996 General
Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1996/10/the-atonement?lang=eng
Our testimonies, like yours, have been
written in our hearts as we have faced assorted soul-stretching challenges and
adversities. Without an understanding of Heavenly Father’s perfect plan of
happiness and the Savior’s Atonement as the central feature of that plan, these
challenges could seem unfair. We all share in the trials of life together. But
in faithful hearts is written, “All that is unfair about life can be made right
through the Atonement of Jesus Christ.” Sis. Linda K. Burton, Is Faith In The
Atonement of Jesus Christ Written in Our Hearts?, October 2012 General
Conference. http://www.lds.org/broadcasts/article/general-relief-society-meeting/2012/09/is-faith-in-the-atonement-of-jesus-christ-written-in-our-hearts?lang=eng
If we truly understood the Atonement
and the eternal value of each soul, we would seek out the wayward boy and girl
and every other wayward child of God. We would help them to know of the love
Christ has for them. We would do all that we can to help prepare them to
receive the saving ordinances of the gospel.
Elder M. Russell Ballard, The Atonement and the Value of One Soul,
April 2004 General Conference. http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2004/04/the-atonement-and-the-value-of-one-soul?lang=eng
Before the Crucifixion and afterward, many men have willingly
given their lives in selfless acts of heroism. But none faced what the Christ
endured. Upon Him was the burden of all human transgression, all human guilt.
And hanging in the balance was the Atonement. Through His
willing act, mercy and justice could be reconciled, eternal law sustained, and
that mediation achieved without which mortal man could not be redeemed. Elder Boyd K. Packer, Atonement, Agency,
Accountability. April 1988 General Conference.
http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1988/04/atonement-agency-accountability?lang=eng
Even
with the trials of life, because of the Savior’s Atonement and His grace,
righteous living will be rewarded with personal peace. Elder Quentin L. Cook, Personal
Peace: The Reward of Righteousness, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/personal-peace-the-reward-of-righteousness?lang=eng
The Savior’s Redemption
has two parts. First, it atones for Adam’s transgression and the consequent
Fall of man by overcoming what could be called the direct effects of the
Fall—physical death and spiritual death. Physical death is well understood;
spiritual death is the separation of man from God. In the words of Paul, “For
as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22).
This redemption from physical and spiritual death is both universal and without
condition. The second aspect of the
Savior’s Atonement is redemption from what might be termed the indirect
consequences of the Fall—our own sins as opposed to Adam’s transgression. By
virtue of the Fall, we are born into a mortal world where sin—that is,
disobedience to divinely instituted law—is pervasive. Elder D. Todd Christofferson, Redemption, April 2013 General
Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2013/04/redemption?lang=eng
There is no greater expression of love
than the heroic Atonement performed by the Son of God. Were it not for the plan
of our Heavenly Father, established before the world began, in a very real
sense, all mankind—past, present, and future—would have been left without the
hope of eternal progression. As a result of Adam’s transgression, mortals were
separated from God (see Rom.
6:23) and would be
forever unless a way was found to break the bands of death. This would not be
easy, for it required the vicarious sacrifice of one who was sinless and who
could therefore take upon Himself the sins of all mankind. M. Russell Ballard, The Atonement and the Value of One Soul, April
2004 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2004/04/the-atonement-and-the-value-of-one-soul?lang=eng
Concerning the importance
of the Atonement, in Alma we learn, “For it is expedient that an atonement
should be made; … or else all mankind must unavoidably perish.” If you have made no mistakes, then you do not
need the Atonement. If you have made mistakes, and all of us have, whether
minor or serious, then you have an enormous need to find out how they can be
erased so that you are no longer in darkness.
Boyd K. Packer, The Atonement, October
2012 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/the-atonement?lang=eng
CHARITY QUOTES
Said the Savior, “Judge not.” 1 He continued, “Why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy
brother’s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?” 2 Or, to paraphrase, why beholdest thou what you think is dirty
laundry at your neighbor’s house but considerest not the soiled window in your
own house?
None of us is
perfect. I know of no one who would profess to be so. And yet for some reason,
despite our own imperfections, we have a tendency to point out those of others.
We make judgments concerning their actions or inactions. President Thomas S.
Monson, Charity Never Faileth, 2010 General Relief Society Meeting, http://www.lds.org/broadcasts/article/general-relief-society-meeting/2010/09/charity-never-faileth?lang=eng
Mother Teresa, a Catholic nun who
worked among the poor in India most of her life, spoke this profound truth: “If
you judge people, you have no time to love them.” 5 The Savior has admonished, “This is my
commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you.” 6 I ask: can we love one another, as the
Savior has commanded, if we judge each other? And
I answer—with Mother Teresa: no, we cannot. President Thomas S. Monson, Charity Never
Faileth, 2010 General Relief Society Meeting, http://www.lds.org/broadcasts/article/general-relief-society-meeting/2010/09/charity-never-faileth?lang=eng
Hope is one leg of a three-legged
stool, together with faith and charity. These three stabilize our lives
regardless of the rough or uneven surfaces we might encounter at the time. President
Dieter F. Uchtdorf, The Infinite Power of Hope, October 2008 General
Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2008/10/the-infinite-power-of-hope?lang=eng
“Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have
not charity,” he told them, “I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling
cymbal.” Paul’s message to this new body
of Saints was simple and direct: Nothing you do makes much of a difference if
you do not have charity. You can speak with tongues, have the gift of prophecy,
understand all mysteries, and possess all knowledge; even if you have the faith
to move mountains, without charity it won’t profit you at all. “Charity is the pure love of Christ.” The
Savior exemplified that love and taught it even as He was tormented by those
who despised and hated Him. Joseph B. Wirthlin, The
Great Commandment, October 2007 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2007/10/the-great-commandment?lang=eng
Because the Savior laid down His life for us, we have a
brightness of hope, a confidence and security that when we pass from this
worldly existence, we will live again with Him. Through the Atonement of Jesus
Christ, we can be cleansed of sin and stand as partakers of the gift of our
Almighty Father. Then we will know the glory that God “hath prepared for them
that love him.”
This is the transforming power of charity. Joseph B. Wirthlin, The Great Commandment,
October 2007 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2007/10/the-great-commandment?lang=eng
The Book of Mormon provides insight into the relationship
between patience and charity. Mormon, after pointing out that if a man “have
not charity he is nothing; wherefore he must needs have charity,” goes on to
name the 13 elements of charity, or the pure love of Christ. Robert
C. Oaks, The Power of Patience, October 2006 General conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2006/10/the-power-of-patience?lang=eng
Moroni taught that “charity is the pure love of Christ.” (Moro. 7:47.) It was the suffering Redeemer who said, as he hung on
Calvary’s cross and looked down upon those who had so brutally crucified him,
“Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.” (Luke 23:34.)
If there be any within the sound of my voice who have harbored
grudges, who have let hatred develop in their hearts one toward another, I ask
you to make the effort to turn around. Hatred always fails and bitterness
always destroys, but “charity never faileth.” (1 Cor. 13:8.)
President Gordon B. Hinckley, Charity Never Faileth, October
1981 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1981/10/charity-never-faileth?lang=eng
We read in Moroni, “Cleave unto
charity, which is the greatest of all. … Whoso is found possessed of it at the
last day, it shall be well with him.” 8 Charity can be the outward expression
of faith and hope. If sought and obtained, these three foundation elements of
celestial character will abide with us in this life and beyond the veil into
the next life. Remember that the “same spirit which doth possess your bodies at
the time that [you] go out of this life … will have power to possess your body
in [the] eternal world.” 9 We should not wait a single day to
intensify our personal efforts to strengthen these virtuous, lovely, and
praiseworthy attributes. Joseph
B. Wirthlin, Cultivating Divine Attributes, October 1998 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/1998/10/cultivating-divine-attributes?lang=eng
The pure love of Christ. Let’s look at
that. What does this phrase mean? We find part of the answer in Joshua: “Take
diligent heed … to love the Lord your God … and to serve him with all your heart
and with all your soul.” 11 Charity is our love for the Lord, shown through our
acts of service, patience, compassion, and understanding for one another. Sister Bonnie D. Parkin, Choosing Charity:
That Good Part, October 2003 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2003/10/choosing-charity-that-good-part?lang=eng
Charity, the Savior’s pure love, is
the “highest, noblest, strongest kind of love,” 1 which we “pray unto the Father with
all the energy of heart” 2 to possess. Elder Dallin H. Oaks
teaches us that charity “is not an act but acondition or
state of being [one becomes].” 3 Our day-to-day offerings of charity
are “written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; … in [the]
fleshy tables of [our] heart[s].” Sis. Anne C. Pingree, Charity: One Family, One Home at a Time, October
2002 General Conference, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2002/10/charity-one-family-one-home-at-a-time?lang=eng
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