Post # 48 – The Small and Simple Things
Dear Family and Friends
I have been reviewing the
last general conference talks this month to help me be better prepared for our upcoming
General Conference the first part of October. I love listening to conference. And
even though I live in a home where there are only two of us that attend church
each week, they know that during Conference week end they shouldn’t plan on me
for things to do because I will be listening to conference.
Small and Simple Things
April 2018 General
Conference
By President
Dallin H. Oaks First Counselor in the First Presidency
We need to be reminded
that in total and over a significant period of time, seemingly small things
bring to pass great things.
I.
My dear brothers and
sisters, like you, I have been profoundly touched and edified and inspired by
the messages and music and the feelings of this time together. I’m sure I speak
for you in expressing thanks to our brothers and sisters who, as instruments in
the hands of the Lord, have given us the strengthening effect of this time
together.
I am grateful to speak to
this audience on Easter Sunday. Today we join other Christians in celebrating
the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ. For members of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, the literal Resurrection of Jesus Christ is a
pillar of our faith.
Because we believe the
accounts in both the Bible and the Book of Mormon about the literal
Resurrection of Jesus Christ, we also believe the numerous scriptural teachings
that a similar resurrection will come to all mortals who have ever lived upon
this earth. That resurrection gives us what the Apostle Peter called “a lively
hope” (1 Peter 1:3).
That lively hope is our conviction that death is not the conclusion of our
identity but merely a necessary step in our Heavenly Father’s merciful plan for
the salvation of His children. That plan calls for a transition from mortality
to immortality. Central to that transition is the sunset of death and the
glorious morning made possible by the Resurrection of our Lord and Savior that
we celebrate on this Easter Sunday.
II.
In a great hymn whose
words were written by Eliza R. Snow, we sing:
How
great, how glorious, how complete
Redemption’s
grand design,
Where
justice, love, and mercy meet
In harmony divine!1
In furtherance of that
divine design and harmony, we assemble in meetings, including this conference,
to teach and encourage one another.
This morning I have felt
to use as my text Alma’s teaching to his son Helaman, recorded in the Book of
Mormon: “By small and simple things are great things brought to pass” (Alma 37:6).
We are taught many small
and simple things in the gospel of Jesus Christ. We need to be reminded that in
total and over a significant period of time, these seemingly small things bring
to pass great things. There have been many talks on this subject by General
Authorities and by other respected teachers. The subject is so important that I
feel to speak of it again.
I was reminded of the
power of small and simple things over time by something I saw on a morning
walk. Here is the picture I took. The thick and strong concrete sidewalk is
cracking. Is this the result of some large and powerful thrust? No, this
cracking is caused by the slow, small growth of one of the roots reaching out
from the adjoining tree. Here is a similar example I saw on another street.
The thrusting power that
cracked these heavy concrete sidewalks was too small to measure on a daily or
even a monthly basis, but its effect over time was incredibly powerful.
So is the powerful effect
over time of the small and simple things we are taught in the scriptures and by
living prophets. Consider the scripture study we’ve been taught to incorporate
into our daily lives. Or consider the personal prayers and the kneeling family
prayers that are regular practices for faithful Latter-day Saints. Consider
attendance at seminary for youth or institute classes for young adults. Though
each of these practices may seem to be small and simple, over time they result
in powerful spiritual uplift and growth. This occurs because each of these
small and simple things invites the companionship of the Holy Ghost, the
Testifier who enlightens us and guides us into truth, as President Eyring has
explained.
Another source of
spiritual uplift and growth is an ongoing practice of repenting, even of
seemingly small transgressions. Our own inspired self-evaluations can help us
see how we have fallen short and how we can do better. Such repentance should
precede our weekly partaking of the sacrament. Some subjects to consider in
this process of repentance are suggested in the hymn “Have I Done Any Good?”
Have I
done any good in the world today?
Have I
helped anyone in need?
Have I
cheered up the sad and made someone feel glad?
If not,
I have failed indeed.
Has
anyone’s burden been lighter today
Because
I was willing to share?
Have
the sick and the weary been helped on their way?
When they needed my help was I there?2
Surely these are small
things, but surely they are good examples of what Alma taught his son Helaman:
“And the Lord God doth work by means to bring about his great and eternal
purposes; and by very small means the Lord … bringeth about the salvation of many
souls” (Alma 37:7).
President Steven C. Wheelwright gave an audience at Brigham Young University–Hawaii this inspired description of Alma’s teaching: “Alma confirms for his son that indeed the pattern the Lord follows when we exercise faith in Him and follow His counsel in small and simple things is that He blesses us with small daily miracles, and over time, with marvelous works.”3
President Howard W.
Hunter taught that “frequently it is the commonplace tasks … that have the
greatest positive effect on the lives of others, as compared with the things
that the world so often relates to greatness.”4
A persuasive secular
teaching of this same principle comes from former Senator Dan Coats of Indiana,
who wrote: “The only preparation for that one profound decision which can
change a life, or even a nation, is those hundreds and thousands of
half-conscious, self-defining, seemingly insignificant decisions made in
private.”5
Those “seemingly
insignificant” private decisions include how we use our time, what we view on
television and the internet, what we read, the art and music with which we
surround ourselves at work and at home, what we seek for entertainment, and how
we apply our commitment to be honest and truthful. Another seemingly small and
simple thing is being civil and cheerful in our personal interactions.
None of these desirable
small and simple things will lift us to great things unless they are practiced
consistently and continuously. President Brigham Young was reported as saying:
“Our lives are made up of little, simple circumstances that amount to a great
deal when they are brought together, and sum up the whole life of the man or
woman.”6
We are surrounded by
media influences and cultural deteriorations that will carry us downstream in
our values if we are not continually resisting. To move upstream toward our
eternal goal, we must constantly keep paddling. It helps if we are part of a
team that is paddling together, like a rowing crew in action. To extend
that example even further, the cultural currents are so strong that if we ever
stop paddling, we will be carried downstream toward a destination we do not
seek but which becomes inevitable if we do not constantly try to move forward.
After reciting a
seemingly small event that had great consequences, Nephi wrote, “And thus we
see that by small means the Lord can bring about great things” (1 Nephi
16:29). The Old Testament includes a memorable example of this.
There we read how the Israelites were plagued by fiery serpents. Many people
died from their bites (see Numbers 21:6).
When Moses prayed for relief, he was inspired to make “a serpent of brass, and
put it upon a pole.” Then, “if a serpent had bitten any man, when he beheld the
serpent of brass, he lived” (verse 9).
Such a small thing for such a miraculous result! Yet, as Nephi explained when
he taught this example to those who were rebelling against the Lord, even when
the Lord had prepared a simple way by which they could be healed, “because of
the simpleness of the way, or the easiness of it, there were many who perished”
(1 Nephi
17:41).
That example and that
teaching remind us that the simplicity of the way or the easiness of the
commanded task cannot mean that it is unimportant to achieve our righteous
desire.
Similarly, even small
acts of disobedience or minor failures to follow righteous practices can draw
us down toward an outcome we have been warned to avoid. The Word of Wisdom
provides an example of this. Likely the effect on the body of one cigarette or
one drink of alcohol or one dose of another drug cannot be measured. But over
time, the effect is powerful and may be irreversible. Remember the cracking of
the sidewalk by the gradual small expansions of the root of the tree. One thing
is certain, the terrible consequences of partaking of anything that can become
addictive, like drugs that attack our bodies or pornographic material that
degrades our thoughts, is totally avoidable if we never partake for the first
time—even once.
Many years
ago, President M. Russell Ballard described to a general conference
audience “how small and simple things can be negative and destructive to a
person’s salvation.” He taught: “Like weak fibers that form a yarn, then a
strand, and finally a rope, these small things combined together can become too
strong to be broken. We must ever be aware of the power that the small and
simple things can have in building spirituality,” he said. “At the same time,
we must be aware that Satan will use small and simple things to lead us into
despair and misery.”7
This is
an excellent picture to put in your mind, about the fibers that form a yarn. Imagine
yourself hanging onto a rope, at first the fibers are wrapped tightly, firm and
strong. These fibers are made up of you
doing the small and simple things in your life, like: saying daily prayers;
reading, pondering and studying your scriptures; holding and participating in
family home evenings, attending and participating in sacrament meeting and
Sunday classes at Church, serving others, sharing what you have with those in
need; paying tithing; and these are just to name a few. All these small and
simple things build up the fibers in your rope that will hold you safely no matter
how hard the adversary blows his strong winds of temptation. These small and
simple things help build and keep you spiritually strong.
Just as
these small and simple things can build your rope to protect and sustain you
spiritually and temporally with many blessings, when you stop doing them you
will get adverse effects. As President
Wainwright teaches us it is when we stop doing the small and simple things that
are building our spiritual foundation that the erosion begins to creep in and
the rope begins to wear away. Bit by bit it will continue to wear away if we do
not change our ways and begin again to do those small and simple things which
built out ‘rope’ of spiritual strength in the first place. I do hope my ramblings here are making some good
sense to each of you as you read it through😊
President Wheelwright
gave a similar caution to his BYU–Hawaii audience: “It is in failing to do the
small and simple things that faith wavers, miracles cease, and progress towards
the Lord and His kingdom is first put on hold and then begins to unravel as
seeking after the kingdom of God is replaced with more temporal pursuits and
worldly ambitions.”8
To protect against the
cumulative negative effects that are destructive to our spiritual progress, we
need to follow the spiritual pattern of small and simple things. Elder
David A. Bednar described this principle in a BYU Women’s Conference: “We
can learn much about the nature and importance of this spiritual pattern from
the technique of … dripping water onto the soil at very low rates,” in contrast
to flooding or spraying large quantities of water where it may not be needed.
He explained: “The steady
drips of water sink deep into the ground and provide a high moisture level in
the soil wherein plants can flourish. In like manner, if you and I are focused
and frequent in receiving consistent drops of spiritual nourishment, then
gospel roots can sink deep into our soul, can become firmly established and
grounded, and can produce extraordinary and delicious fruit.”
Continuing, he said, “The
spiritual pattern of small and simple things bringing forth great things
produces firmness and steadfastness, deepening devotion, and more complete
conversion to the Lord Jesus Christ and His gospel.”9
The Prophet Joseph Smith
taught this principle in words now included in the Doctrine and Covenants: “Let
no man count them as small things; for there is much … pertaining to the
saints, which depends upon these things” (D&C 123:15).
I have
always said, ‘I can do the small things,’ and I have always tried to do what I can
– in small and simple ways. Even something so small and simple as a smile can
brighten someone’s day. We can each do this for someone. We can each follow the
examples of our Savior, which are found in the scriptures, but if we do not
read and study them – we will not have the information we need to follow His
example or know His gospel. So let each of us promise ourselves that we are
going to do better, to be better, from this day forward. And if we forget and our
‘rope’ begins to wear away, we need to begin again to incorporate those things
we know will strengthen the fibers of our ‘rope’ – our spiritual foundation. We
need to be constantly aware of Satan and his followers who are trying with all
their cunning tricks and traps, to get us to do or not do things so that our ‘rope’
will become weakened.
In connection with the
earliest attempts to establish the Church in Missouri, the Lord counseled
patience for “all things must come to pass in their time” (D&C 64:32).
Then He gave this great teaching: “Wherefore, be not weary in well-doing, for
ye are laying the foundation of a great work. And out of small things
proceedeth that which is great” (D&C 64:33).
I believe we all desire
to follow President Russell M. Nelson’s challenge to press forward “on the
covenant path.”10
Our commitment to do so is strengthened by consistently following the “small
things” we are taught by the gospel of Jesus Christ and the leaders of His
Church. I testify of Him and invoke His blessings on all who seek to keep on
His covenant path, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
I love
how he has included examples of the positive effects of the small and simple
things as well as the negative effects of small and simple things and how we
can be caught in Satan’s snares through doing small and simple things that ‘don’t
seem so bad’, or I’ve heard from my children on many occasions, ‘there are
worse things I could be doing1’ it is the positive things that we can do in our
lives that help us to build a firm foundation upon which we cannot fall! I am
going to work hard to be more consistent with my daily prayers, my scripture reading
and study, my service, and as many of the other things that our Savior has
shown us that we need to be doing. Also doing what our living Prophet President
Russell M. Nelson has counseled us to be doing every day. So, until my next post, remember to add to
your ‘rope’ each day and make it a great week!
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