Post 56 – Christmas is A Time For Angels
Dear Family
and Friends
I have been
thinking a lot about Angels lately because angels are my youngest daughter’s
favorite thing to collect. She has collected angels since she was in a car
accident in the winter time in the mountains. I usually try to find her a new angel to add to her collection each Christmas. that is why I have had angels on my mind so much, but also in reading the Christmas Story with my students and my grandsons the angels seem to jump out at me. I guess I will share the story about my daughter and her friend.
She and he best friend were coming home from college for a visit over their Christmas break -- back then it was okay to call it Christmas break – now a days I think it is called Winter break. They were on their way home over the mountain through a local canyon pass when they hit a patch of ice which sent them over the cliff. Their car went head over heels down into a ravine 150 feet down from the road.
She and he best friend were coming home from college for a visit over their Christmas break -- back then it was okay to call it Christmas break – now a days I think it is called Winter break. They were on their way home over the mountain through a local canyon pass when they hit a patch of ice which sent them over the cliff. Their car went head over heels down into a ravine 150 feet down from the road.
I have never
been able to imagine what they both went through that night I mean I have been
in a few accidents in my lifetime and s few involving snow and ice, but never over
a 150-foot cliff. I don’t know that I would have been able to climb up out of
that ravine – even in my better health days😊
I know that we do some unheard of things when our adrenalin gets flowing within
us, and I know that I have done some irregular things myself in my lifetime
that I never would have imagined myself able to do prior to that particular
moment in time, but those are to tell in other posts😊
I know that I
have accomplished many things which I would not have ordinarily been able to do
in my lifetime – especially when it involved my children or other family
members. My daughter needed to get help for her friend who was in worse shape
from the accident than she was. Her friend was badly injured so she couldn’t walk
herself, to help herself up the mountainside. My dsughter was able to get her
friend out of the car with a lot of effort on her part – and a lot of pain as
well. The storm was getting worse, she was worried that the car might slide
further down into the ravine. The she made the decision that she was not going
to leave her best friend to die in the snowstorm.
At first, they started together up the
mountain ravine. If I remember it correctly my daughter got her out of the car
and onto a blanket or something that they had in the car. She was able to
drag/lift her a few feet at a time, sometimes only a few inches because of the foliage
in the ravine. Each time they rested she would look up the ravine to watch for
car lights to see if there were any cars traveling on the road that they had so
abruptly left a while before. So, my
daughter and her friend together made the decision that she would climb up
those 150 feet with her aching shoulder. My daughter did not want to leave her
friend, there in the snowstorm, but when she wasn’t able to move her friend any
further, she knew that she had to do something, or her friend and she herself would surely die.
My daughter went back to the car and found
everything she could find that might help keep her friend warm. She covered her
completely and promised her friend that she would be back with help as soon as
she could. she said it seemed like hours that it took her to climb up out of
that ravine, she couldn’t feel the pain in her shoulder any more because of the
cold. I think that the cold was in their favor that night despite the frostbite
of the limbs that could have happened to them both and worse things.
When she got
back up to the highway, she literally dropped down in front of the first car
that came down the mountain. She said she waited to long for a car to come she
was afraid her friend would freeze to death before she could get her the help
that she needed. I believe those two girls had angels with them until help arrived. It just so happened that 2 vehicles were traveling together
and hard strong young men in both vehicles. They too, were angels sent to help those two stranded, injured girls get home to their families, during that long-ago Christmas season.
They put my
daughter in one of the cars and put blankets around her to keep her warm, while
the young men went down the mountain and
carried her friend back up the mountain with her on one of their back while the
other one made sure that she didn’t fall off while trying to get her up to the
highway. They wrapped her friend in blankets while they waited on the ambulance
to come to transport them both to the hospital.
The first emergency person to arrive at the scene on the side of the
mountain was the sheriff – which happened to be the fiancé of her best friend,
who happened to be on duty that night.
When my
daughter called me to say that they were leaving svhool, I told them that we were
getting snow on our side of the mountain. I told them to be very careful during
their drive and if the roads were too bad they should turn back and give us a
call. This was before cell phones – so we had been waiting for them to show up.
We knew they would be driving in any minute
now. My husband had already gone to bed and I had a migraine headache and I had
taken sleeping pills to help me rest so my headache would get better. It was
just as I was slipping into a deep sleep when I got the phone call that every
parent worries about getting after their children learn to drive and are out on
their own.
I am here to say
that my adrenalin started pumping and wore through the effects of those
sleeping pills and I was at the local hospital as soon as safely possible. We arrived
to find our daughter in x-ray and her friend in surgery. I don’t remember the extent of all of her friends’
injuries, but I do know that she was hospitalized for a while. I do remember
that she had frostbitten fingers and toes, which my daughter felt was all her
fault for leaving her alone in the storm.
As it turned
out my daughter had broken her shoulder in the accident, but she was fixed up
and ready to be released. She would not leave the hospital until she knew that
her friend was going to be okay, so we stayed at the hospital and waited for
the doctor to tell her parents of the outcome of the surgery and her recovery
time. My daughter felt so bad for lraving her friend in the snowstorm and ‘causing’
her to get frostbitten fingers and toes.it didn’t seem to matter what I said to
her, until I told her that when she had left her friend there in the snow, she
saved her life. I don’t think she believed me at the time.
I told her
that when she left to get help for her friend I believed that the Lord had left
one of his angels with her friend and sent another one along with my daughter
to help her get back up that mountain to get the help that they both needed. I am
not sure that she believed me about the angels at the time I told her about
them, but she has been collecting angels ever since. I am certain that the Lord
had His angels watching over those girls that night. I still believe that to
this day all those years later.
We talked
with the EMTs that were on the scene while we were waiting on some news about
the girl’s condition. They told us that those girls were lucky. I asked them
why. They said that the place where their car had gone off the road into that
ravine could not be seen from the highway above. If my daughter had not been
prompted to leave her friend and climb up out of that ravine they both would
have died because no one would have known where they had disappeared to in that
storm. Their car tracks had been covered in the storm rather quickly after they
had gone over the edge.
The EMTs said
that they are usually called in to retrieve the bodies in the spring time when
a hiker will have wandered upon their car after the spring thaw. Usually the
bodies are so decomposed that there isn’t much to identify them except from the
car registration, and if there are more than one body it is even harder to find
out who they are after being there for so long. I do not ever want to receive a
phone call like that, the one about being in an accident is enough for me.
I do not even
want to thing about this any more it is too depressing. I mean decomposing bodies and all, it’s too gruesome
to think about any further don’t you think? I just want to let you all know how
grateful I am to my Heavenly Father for watching over those girls on that
stormy night. For sending His angels to their rescue in that snowstorm that had
blizzard conditions for several days afterward. For bring them safely back home
to their waiting families. For giving all of us as parents the peace and
comfort that we needed that night. So, to change the subject – or get back to
the subject of Angels -- I found this talk about Angels that I wanted to share
with each of you this Christmas season. It’s called ‘A Season For Angels’ By
Elder Merrill J. Bateman who served as a General Authority from 1992 50 2007.
At the
beginning of each Christmas season, our thoughts turn to the birth of the
Savior. For believers, Christ’s birth and death are the two greatest events in
the history of the earth or, for that matter, eternity. It is almost an anomaly
that in the untold years the universe has existed, its two greatest events occurred
within a 33-year span in a vassal nation on a small planet the Lord calls His
“footstool” (see Isaiah 66:1).
Christmas
carols are a special feature of the season. They bring feelings of joy to our
hearts as they describe the events and significance of the birth of Jesus
Christ. It is interesting to note that many Christmas hymns speak of
angels. This is because the biblical record contains numerous accounts of
heavenly beings speaking to mortals before and at the time of His birth. An
angel announced His pending birth to the young woman Mary and to Joseph, her
espoused husband (see Luke 1:26–33; Matthew 1:20–21). An angel
accompanied by a heavenly choir heralded the birth to the shepherds in the
fields (see Luke 2:8–14), and angels
kept watch over the family during the early years when Herod tried
to destroy the young Jesus (see Matthew 2:13, 19–20). Not
only is the story of the Savior’s birth replete with heavenly messengers, but
heavenly beings were also present at significant events throughout His life.
One
might ask, “Why were angels so prominent at the Savior’s birth? And why were
they such an important part of His life and ministry?” The answers are twofold.
The first pertains to the nature and mission of the personage whom they were
heralding—a divine Being, the Son of God, the Only Begotten in the flesh who
came to earth to save all of God’s children. The second concerns the ushering
in of a new dispensation, a period of time when the gospel would be restored in
its fulness. The ministry of angels is to assist in the ushering in of
dispensations (see Moroni 7:29–31). Let us
discuss each of these reasons to provide a clearer understanding of the
wonderful moment represented by the “meridian of time.”
Heralding
the Savior’s Mission
For
thousands of years, ancient prophets had looked forward to the time when the
Son of God would come to earth and atone for the sins of mankind. From Genesis
to Malachi and from 1 Nephi to 3 Nephi, the Lord’s messengers prophesied that
the God of ancient Israel, the Son of the Father, would come to earth and
ransom His people. The Lord told Adam that Satan would bruise the heel of their
offspring, but that the seed of the woman (Christ) would overcome Satan’s power
as He bruised Satan’s head (see Genesis 3:15).
Moses wrote of “a Star out of Jacob” (Numbers 24:17); the Psalmist spoke of the
special relationship between the Father and the Son, of the Father’s withdrawal
during the Crucifixion, and of Christ’s death (see Psalms 2:7; 22:1, 16; 34:20; 69:21); and Isaiah spoke of His miraculous
birth, mission, and death (see Isaiah 7:14; 9:6; 42:7; 53:5). The Book
of Mormon contains even more detail concerning Christ’s birth,
mission, death, and resurrection (see Topical Guide, “Jesus Christ,
Prophecies about,” 252).
Prophets
spoke often of Jesus’s birth together with His death because these two events
are inextricably linked—the nature of His birth as God’s Only Begotten Son
created an infinite life that could only be extinguished voluntarily. Jesus
said: “Therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I
might take it again. No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I
have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment
have I received of my Father” (John 10:17–18).
The
Savior’s Godly status was preserved through His birth. His infinite and eternal
nature gave Him the capacity to atone for the sins of all mankind and the power
to rise from the grave and make possible a resurrection for every person who
had or would live on the earth (see Alma 34:10, 14; John 1:1–3, 14; 11:25; Romans 8:11). As the “lamb without blemish and
without spot,” He maintained the inheritance of “divine power” to bless us with
“life and godliness” during His earthly sojourn (1 Peter 1:19; 2 Peter 1:3).
The
birth of Jesus Christ was extraordinary in that it involved the condescension
of both the Father and the Son—two eternal beings. When the prophet Nephi was
seeking to understand the meaning of the tree of life, an angel showed him in
vision a beautiful virgin in the city of Nazareth and asked the question
“Knowest thou the condescension of God?” Nephi indicated that he knew God
“loveth his children” but did not “know the meaning of all things.” The angel
then showed Nephi a woman “carried away in the Spirit for the space of a time.”
Nephi then saw her “bearing a child in her arms.” The angel said to Nephi,
“Behold the Lamb of God, yea, even the Son of the Eternal Father! Knowest thou
the meaning of the tree which thy father saw?” (See 1 Nephi 11:13–21.) Nephi
exclaimed that he now understood God’s great love for His children, a love so
great that He would give His Only Begotten Son for the salvation of men and
women (see 1 Nephi 11:22; John 3:16). The Father condescended in sending
His Son; the Savior condescended in taking upon Himself a mortal body and
offering Himself as a sacrifice for sin. Is it any wonder that angels were
assigned to declare the Savior’s birth?
The
first such angelic declaration was to the priest Zacharias. As he entered the
Holy of Holies in the temple, he saw an angel of the Lord standing on the right
side of the altar. The angel said, “I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of
God; and am sent to speak unto thee, and to shew thee … glad tidings” (Luke 1:19). Gabriel explained to Zacharias that
he and his wife, Elisabeth, would have a child and that he was to be named
John. Gabriel also explained John’s mission as an Elias, or forerunner for
Christ (see Luke 1:11–17).
A
short time later, this same angel, Gabriel, appeared to Mary and announced that
she would be the mother of the Son of God. She exclaimed, “How shall this be,
seeing I know not a man?” (Luke 1:34). Gabriel then stated that “the Holy
Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God” (Luke 1:35).
Although
the name of the angel who appeared to Joseph is not given, it may well have
been Gabriel who had the assignment. When Joseph learned that Mary, his
espoused wife, was with child, he contemplated a private disengagement. But
then an angel appeared in a dream, telling him not to fear to take Mary as his
wife, “for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost” (Matthew 1:20). The angel also told Joseph that
the child was to be named Jesus (see Matthew 1:21).
The
next angelic appearance occurred in the fields near Bethlehem when an angel of
the Lord announced to lowly shepherds the Savior’s birth. The angel declared:
“I bring you good tidings of great joy. … For unto you is born this day in the
city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10–11). Other angelic hosts appeared,
praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good
will toward men” (Luke 2:14). The shepherds then hurried to
Bethlehem, where they “found Mary, and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger”
(Luke 2:16). Since it was
springtime (see D&C 20:1), it is quite
likely that the shepherds were recently engaged in the lambing process. Thus,
the shepherds who delivered and cared for the lambs became witnesses of the
birth of the Lamb of God to those in the surrounding area (see Luke 2:15–17).
Following
the appearance of the Wise Men and Herod’s decision to kill all the male
children under the age of two, Joseph was warned by “the angel of the Lord” to
take Mary and Jesus into Egypt and “be thou there until I bring thee word: for
Herod will seek the young child to destroy him” (Matthew 2:13). When Herod died, Joseph was once
more instructed by the Lord’s messenger to “take the young child and his
mother, and go into the land of Israel” (Matthew 2:20).
Ushering
In a New Dispensation
The
last prophet of the Old Testament was Malachi, who lived 400 years before the
birth of Christ. At that time Israel in large part had turned away from the
covenants made with Jehovah. Consequently, they were in apostasy. Although the
Aaronic Priesthood was on earth when Jesus was born, the Melchizedek Priesthood
had been taken from the earth. Therefore, there was a need for the priesthood
and the gospel to be restored in their fulness.
Moroni
taught that angels play a special role in the early stages of a new
dispensation. He indicated that “the office of their ministry is … to prepare
the way among the children of men, by declaring the word of Christ unto the
chosen vessels [prophets] of the Lord, that they may bear testimony of him. And
by so doing, the Lord God prepareth the way that the residue of men may have
faith in Christ, that the Holy Ghost may have place in their hearts” (Moroni 7:31–32).
At
the beginning of a new dispensation following a period of apostasy, there is no
one with priesthood authority to administer the covenants in their fulness.
Consequently, the Lord sends messengers from the other side of the veil to
return priesthood keys and the gospel plan to the earth.
It
is not surprising then that an angel visited Zacharias and instructed him with
regard to the mission of his son. Angels appeared to Jesus in the wilderness
following the temptations of Satan and administered to Him in preparation for
His ministry (see Matthew 4:11). The Apostle Paul indicates that
“Christ glorified not himself to be made an high priest; but he that said unto
him, Thou art my Son, to day have I begotten thee.” Paul continues, indicating
that Christ was “called of God an high priest after the order of Melchizedec” (Hebrews 5:5, 10). In other words, the higher
priesthood came to Jesus from the other side of the veil.
After
Jesus promised Peter “the keys of the kingdom” (Matthew 16:19), He took the three chief
Apostles, Peter, James, and John, up into a high mountain where He, together
with Moses and Elijah, bestowed upon them these keys (see Matthew 17:1–2; 18:18; Bible
Dictionary, “Transfiguration, Mount of,” 786). Why did Moses and Elijah appear?
Moses returned the “keys of the gathering of Israel” while Elijah brought the
sealing keys (see D&C 110:11, 14–15).
In
three other key events, angels appear to prepare Jesus for the Atonement and
the Resurrection. The first occurs in the Garden of Gethsemane when “there
appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening him” (Luke 22:43). Although the Savior was to
complete the Atonement on His own, instructions and support were given in the
early stages.
The
second event occurs at the tomb on the Sunday morning following the
Resurrection. The women came early to the tomb with spices and ointments to
care for the body, which had been hastily encased as the Sabbath approached. To
their surprise, they found the stone had been rolled away from the sepulcher.
Two men in “shining garments” stood before them and said: “Why seek ye the
living among the dead? He is not here, but is risen: remember how he spake unto
you when he was yet in Galilee, Saying, The Son of man must be delivered into
the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again” (Luke 24:4–7).
Why
heavenly messengers at the tomb? Prior to the Savior’s resurrection, a few
mortals had been raised from the dead, but no one had experienced the change
from mortality to immortality, from corruption to incorruption.
No one prior to the Savior had been raised in glory (see 1 Corinthians 15:42–43).
Two witnesses from the other side of the veil provided the assurance that Jesus
had been resurrected.
The
final event occurs at Jesus’s ascension. Again, two men in white apparel
assured the Galileans that “this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into
heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven” (Acts 1:11).
These
marvelous events associated with the Savior’s ministry and ascension required
heavenly witnesses who left their testimonies written indelibly in the hearts
of Church leaders who remained behind to carry on the work.
What
is the lesson for us today as we enter a new Christmas season? Who will
minister to those in need? Who are the angels that will prepare the way for His
return? I have noticed that during the early stages of a dispensation, angelic
ministers come from the other side of the veil, but as time elapses and the
number of faithful members increases, more is expected of those in mortality.
For example, when a new country is opened to the gospel, missionaries learn
that many have been prepared in miraculous ways to receive the gospel, and
miracles occur with some frequency to advance the work. Once a core of members
is established, however, the Lord’s assistance changes as He provides
opportunities for the members to become the miracle workers.
Consequently,
miracles during this Christmas season require our faith and works. As we sing
the hymns of Christmas and speak of angels sent to earth to witness the Savior’s
birth in the meridian of time, may we rise to the occasion and minister to
those in need in our day. May we be reminded of our promises to “bear one
another’s burdens, … to mourn with those that mourn; yea, and comfort those
that stand in need of comfort, and to stand as witnesses of God at all times
and in all things, and in all places … and be numbered with those of the first
resurrection, that [we] may have eternal life” (Mosiah 18:8–9).
I
bear witness that Christmas is a season for angels. As they ministered to the
Savior and others in the “meridian of time,” may we, as angels of mercy,
minister to other families and to those in need in the “fulness of times” so
that the Lord’s work may move forward.
I loved
learning about the angels in the Christmas Story. I hope that my story wasn’t too long for you. Also,
that you enjoyed learning about Angels as well as reviewing the Christmas Story
with me through this talk. I will be posting more information about Christmas
as often as I can throughout the month of December – so until my next post, you
know what to do… make it a great week!
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