Post # 67 --- Come, Follow Me / Review Week
2
Dear Friends
and Family
I have been
thinking this about this week’s review. I had my post ready when my computer
decided to shut down. I thought I had it saved, but apparently, I did not ☹ so, here we go again – hmm, seems like there’s a song with that
line in it, isn’t there? My youngest brother is a over the road truck driver,
and he calls me every week end. It is always good to hear from family 😊 Any way, he and I have these long
conversations every week end and we are always saying something that leads us
to say or sing a line from a song or two. You should try it, it is quite
interesting and keeps you alert and thinking on your feet – so to speak. Do you
have anything that you use in your conversations with Family or Friends that
you truly enjoy and are so grateful to have between you? Hold on to your family
they are the most important people in your lives.
Our lesson
this week of January 7—13 covered Matthew 1 and Luke 1. I hope you had a chance
to read and study it. In Matthew chapter
ne we learn a little bit about Mary’s character. She was highly favored of the
Lord, the Lord was with her; she was blessed among women; the angel told her
to: “Fear not, Mary: for thou hast found favor with God.” We learn that he wasn’t
afraid to ask the angel questions about the Lord’s plan for her life that she wasn’t
sure of how it would work. We learn from Mary that “with God nothing shall be
impossible.” I am sure she did not understand completely but she said: “Behold,
the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word.” We learn that Mary
was blessed as well as the child she was to conceive.
In Luke chapter
one we learned of the angel Gabriel’s visit to Mary, that she was espoused to
Joseph, that she was a virgin and highly favored, that the Lord was with her; she
was blessed among women. When Mary seemed troubled the angel told her not to fear,
that she had found favor with the Lord. The angel told her that she would have a
son, and his name would be JESUS. The angel told Mary of the greatness of her child,
that he ‘Shall be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God shall give
unto him the throne of his father David;” Again Mary was not afraid to ask
questions as they came to her mind. “Mary said unto the angel, How shall this
be, seeing I know not a man?” Remember that we can find out more about Mary in
these verses: Luke 1:26–56
The angel
also tells Mary of her cousin Elisabeth that she had “also conceived a son in
her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren.” Again,
we learn that nothing is impossible with God. “And just before the angel
Gabriel left her Mary said again, as in Matthew chapter one “behold the
handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word.” Mary then goes to visit her cousin Elisabeth,
here we learn that when Mary arrived: “when, Elisabeth heard the salutation of
Mary, the babe leaped in her womb; and Elisabeth was filled with the Holy Ghost.”
While
thus filled with the Holy Ghost Elisabeth also told Mary that she was “Blessed
art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb.” Elisabeth told
Mary how special her child was and that her own child recognized her when she
arrived. “For, lo, as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in mine ears,
the babe leaped in my womb for joy.” And
Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord,” though both of these accounts were
written by two different men, they both contain similar information and
sometimes I seems word for word of the account in places.
Elisabeth was a very righteous
woman, she kept the commandments all of her life; she was unable to have
children, she was long past the child bearing years of her life, and yet she
has a son. The Lord blessed her with her son, which she had prayed for, for
many years. She is a good example for each of us – that Heavenly Father answers
our prayers – even if it is not during our time-frame. She also reminds us that
our Heavenly Father is merciful. Remember that we find out more about Elisabeth
in these verses: Luke 1:5–7, 24–25, 40–45, 57–60
We learn that
Joseph was a very righteous man, he was
an honorable man -- he did not want to make a public example of Mary so he was
thinking of divorcing her privately (verse 19 make her a
publick aexample, bwas minded
to cput her
away privily.) when an angel of the Lord paid
him a visit and told him that it was good for him to take Mary as his wife, that
the child she was carrying was conceived of the Spirit of the Lord. Joseph agreed
to the partnership with God and Mary to raise the Son of God. He married her and
their life together began.
I looked up
some of the footnotes in this verse to make sure that I am explaining it correctly:
‘was minded’ (IE desired to release or divorce her
secretly). ‘to put her
away privily’ is explained in Deuteronomy 24:1 “When a man hath taken a wife, and married her, and it come to pass that
she find no favour in his eyes, because he hath found some uncleanness in her: then let him write her a bill
of divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send
her out of his house.” In verse 24 we
find out more about Joseph’s character. He sees an angel in his dream and when
he wakes up, he does exactly what the angel told him to do. This should be an example
for each of us that when we receive promptings from the Holy Ghost we should
act on it immediately😊 Remember that we can find out more about Joseph in these verses:Matthew 1:18–25
Zachariah was a very righteous man all the days of his life; he
kept the commandments, he obeyed the laws and ordinances of the Lord. Zacharias
and Elisabeth continued to live as God would have them live even though they
had prayed for a child and had not been blessed with one. Elisabeth was beyond child
bearing years and yet they weren’t angry with the Lord, but they continued to
keep the commandments and ordinances of the Lord. Zacharias even worked in the
temple of the Lord; in was while he was working in the temple one day that an
angel visited him and told him that his wife would conceive and bare him a son whom
he would be named John. In verse 12 we see what happened when he saw the angel: “And when Zacharias
saw him, he
was troubled, and fear fell upon him.”
When the angel told Zacharias that his wife would have a child
this was his reaction in verse 18:” And Zacharias said unto the angel, Whereby
shall I aknowthis? for I am
an bold man, and
my wife well cstricken in years.” I think Zacharias is not only a great example of one who kept
the commandments and ordinances of the Lord and of his prayers being answered
on the Lord’s time-table, but also of what can happen when one doesn’t believe what
an angel of the Lord tells him😊 we can see this for ourselves in verse 19 – 20 : “And
the aangel answering
said unto him, I am bGabriel, that stand in
the presence of God; and am sent to speak unto thee, and to shew thee these
glad tidings.” “And, behold, thou shalt
be adumb, and not able to
speak, until the day that these things shall be performed, because thou bbelievest not my words,
which shall be fulfilled in their season. “Remember that we can find
out more about Zacharias in these verses: Luke 1:5–23, 59–64
These are the four characters in these two chapters that we have
learned about this week, plus the angel Gabriel😊 We can
learn so much from these four people and from their lives as written in the
scriptures. Like in Matthew 1:18–25; Luke 1:5–80 we learn
that Heavenly Father works through His faithful children
to accomplish His purposes; or in Luke 1:5–25 we learn that God’s blessings come in His own
time; or in Luke 1:26–38 we learn that “With God nothing shall be
impossible;” and in Matthew 1:18–25; Luke 1:26–55 we learn that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
Elder Neal A.
Maxwell taught, “Faith … includes trust in God’s timing, for He has said, ‘All
things must come to pass in their time.’ (D&C 64:32.)” (“Lest Ye Be Wearied and Faint in Your Minds,” Ensign, May 1991, 90).
And this is the talk where the above quote comes
from that teaches us about faith and waiting on the Lord’s timing, there is so
much good information in this talk I wanted to share it all with you, it is
called:
“Lest Ye Be Wearied and Faint in Your Minds”
Neal A. Maxwell
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Having all been richly
nourished by this general conference, it is fitting to focus prescriptively on
the few in the Church who remain spiritually undernourished, including those
who have grown weary and fainted in their minds. (See Heb. 12:3.)
A few of these few have
had their faith scorched, such as by the circumstances of wrenching or
unrelieved sickness, grinding economic pressures, loss of a loved one, or deep
disappointment with a spouse or friend. Adversity can increase faith or instead
can cause the troubling roots of bitterness to spring up. (See Heb. 12:15.) A few have been overcome by the
preoccupying cares of the world, those wearying, surface things of life.
(See Matt. 13:6–7.) Emerson’s plea is surely appropriate:
“Give me truths: for I am weary of the surfaces.” (“Blight,” in The Complete Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson, New
York: Wm. H. Wise & Co., 1929, p. 874.) A few are fatigued by unconfessed
sins. A few tire from milling about haltingly in the “valley of decision.” (Joel 3:14; see also 1 Kgs. 18:21.) A few, foolishly focusing on something
other than Jesus, the Sure and True Foundation, are drained by disappointment.
(See Hel. 5:12.)
Whatever the preceding
causes, any fainting in our minds brings a loss of spiritual consciousness and,
with this, the inclination to charge God foolishly. (See Job 1:22.)
The urgings for us not to
weary in well-doing contain prescriptions to avoid such weariness. (See Gal. 6:9; 2 Thes. 3:13; Alma 37:34.) We are to work steadily, but
realistically, and only expect to reap “in due season.” (Gal. 6:9.) We are to serve while being “meek and lowly”
(Alma 37:34), avoiding thereby the wearying burdens of
self-pity and hypocrisy. We are to pray always so that we will not faint, so
that our performance will actually be for the welfare of our souls, which is so
much more than just going through the motions. (See 2 Ne. 32:5, 9; D&C 75:11; D&C 88:126.)
Even when righteously chastised or rebuked, we need not faint,
for in the correcting is renewing love: “My son, despise not thou the
chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of him:
“For whom the Lord loveth
he chasteneth.” (Heb. 12:5–8.)
One’s life, therefore,
cannot be both faith-filled and stress-free. President Wilford Woodruff
counseled us all about the mercy that is inherent in some adversity: “The
chastisements we have had from time to time have been for our good, and are
essential to learn wisdom, and carry us through a school of experience we never
could have passed through without.” (In Journal of Discourses, 2:198.)
Therefore, how can you and I really expect to glide naively
through life, as if to say, “Lord, give me experience, but not grief, not
sorrow, not pain, not opposition, not betrayal, and certainly not to be
forsaken. Keep from me, Lord, all those experiences which made Thee what Thou
art! Then let me come and dwell with Thee and fully share Thy joy!”
Serving, studying,
praying, and worshiping are four fundamentals in perfecting “that which is
lacking in [our] faith.” (1 Thes. 3:10.) If we cease nurturing our faith in any
of these four specific ways, we are vulnerable.
Failure to study, for
instance, is to be intellectually and spiritually malnourished. Inspired words
do matter, for “when a man works by faith he works by … words.” (Lectures on Faith, 7:3.)
In a hardening world, the Lord can pierce our consciousness by using “the sword
of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” (Eph. 6:17; see also Jarom 1:12.) However, hearing must be “mixed with
faith” (Heb. 4:2) and with Christian service, as we have heard
again and again in this conference.
“For how knoweth a man
the master whom he has not served, and who is a stranger unto him, and is far
from the thoughts and intents of his heart?” (Mosiah 5:13.)
A lack of deep personal
prayer and deep genuine worship also erodes our faith, and we may “faint in the
day of trouble.” (D&C 109:38.)
Much of any weariness is attributable to carrying the heavy
natural man. Unlike others we might carry, the natural man is heavy, and he is
not our brother!
So much depends upon our
individual faith. The Apostles pled, “Lord, Increase our faith.” (Luke 17:5.) No wonder, brothers and sisters, because we
are to “walk by faith, not by sight.” (2 Cor. 5:7.) Life is so designed that we are to
“overcome by faith” (D&C 76:53), not by intellectual acuity or wealth or
political prowess.
Nevertheless, seekers
after the rewards of faith are often disappointed when they are told to study,
serve, pray, and worship. As with leprous Naaman, they apparently expect some
great thing which requires no obedience to counsel. (See 2 Kgs. 5:13.)
if you remember the story of Naaman, he was told to go wash in the Jordan river three times and he would be cleansed of his leprosy. Naaman was upset because he felt that the prophet should have came out himself to talk with him and call on the Lord right in from of him to ask for a miracle. He also felt that if he had to wash in a river, there were better rivers than the Jordan. It wasn’t until his servants asked him if the prophet had asked you to do something great, would you do it? Then why not do the simple thing that he told your to do? I think sometimes we might get caught up in this same type of trap, not relying on or putting our faith and tryst in the Lord and His servants who are all there to help and guide each of us.
if you remember the story of Naaman, he was told to go wash in the Jordan river three times and he would be cleansed of his leprosy. Naaman was upset because he felt that the prophet should have came out himself to talk with him and call on the Lord right in from of him to ask for a miracle. He also felt that if he had to wash in a river, there were better rivers than the Jordan. It wasn’t until his servants asked him if the prophet had asked you to do something great, would you do it? Then why not do the simple thing that he told your to do? I think sometimes we might get caught up in this same type of trap, not relying on or putting our faith and tryst in the Lord and His servants who are all there to help and guide each of us.
Faith brings with it the
expanding “evidence of things not seen.” (Heb. 11:1.) Some mortals dismiss this real, spiritual
evidence because “the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of
God: for they are foolishness unto him … because they are spiritually
discerned.” (1 Cor. 2:14.) But this provincialism on the part of
others should not deprive the rest of us of energizing evidence.
Building faith is often
preceded by shaping circumstances, benefiting those who are “in a preparation
to hear the word.” (Alma 32:6.) These beginnings require at least a “desire
to believe” and then comes the exercising of a “particle of faith.” (Alma 32:27.) There is that “desire to
believe” that I have spoken of in prior posts.
As we “give place” and
plant the seed of faith, it grows discernibly. We are invigorated as it
enlightens and swells. (See Alma 32:28–30.) We become our own internal auditors,
confirming this increase in our faith. It is better to so nourish our faith in
what seems to be an ordinary process than to experience extraordinary things
only to stumble later over life’s ordinary challenges.
However, in this process
of personal experimentation and verification, the several, sacred steps cannot
be skipped over: “For ye receive no witness until after the trial of your
faith.” (Ether 12:6.)
Moreover, acquiring faith
is not a one-time thing: “But if ye neglect the tree, and take no thought for
its nourishment, behold it will not get any root; and when the heat of the sun
cometh and scorcheth it, because it hath no root it withers away.” (Alma 32:38.) Acquiring faith is not a “one-time
thing” so we need to continuously work on keeping the fires of our faith burning
brightly.
Our “neglect,” brothers and sisters, takes so many forms.
Similarly, the withering “heat of the sun” is felt in so many ways.
Experience by experience,
faith can yield to knowledge “in that thing,” meaning the particularized
verifications of gospel truths. (Alma 32:34.) It was so with the brother of Jared: “He
had faith no longer, for he knew.” (Ether 3:19.) Brigham Young assured that “every
principle God has revealed carries its own convictions of its truth to the
human mind.” (In Journal of Discourses, 9:149.)
Jesus clearly declared that “if any man will do his will, he shall know.” (John 7:17.) However, Jesus described the steady process
as being one of “line upon line, precept upon precept.” (D&C 98:12.) I think we have spoken of
“line upon line, precept upon precept” before as well.
But we’re all at
different points in this process, aren’t we, of desiring, experimenting,
verifying, and knowing. Hence “to some it is given … to know. … To others it is
given to believe on their words.” (D&C 46:13–14.)
While faith is not a
perfect knowledge, it brings a deep trust in God, whose knowledge is perfect!
Otherwise, one’s small data base of personal experience permits so few useful
generalizations! But by searching the holy scriptures, we access a vast, divine
data bank, a reservoir of remembrance. In this way, the scriptures can, as the
Book of Mormon says, enlarge the memory. (See Alma 37:8.) I love how Elder Maxwell
puts it that “faith is not a perfect knowledge, it brings a deep trust in God,
whose knowledge is perfect!” I know this to be true, I have put my trust in my
Heavenly Father for my very life – so I know that I am in good hands, no matter
what happens.
Fully formed faith has
several, distinct facets. Faith in God and in the Lord Jesus Christ includes
not only faith in Their existence but also in Their redemptive capacities. The
Lord has assured us, “I will show unto the children of men that I am able to do
mine own work.” (2 Ne. 27:21.) Is He ever able! Indeed, “in him all
things hold together.” (Revised Standard Version, Col. 1:17.) Nevertheless, some doubt that God’s
announced purposes will actually triumph.
Faith also includes trust
in God’s timing, for He has said, “All things must come to pass in their time.”
(D&C 64:32.) Ironically, some who acknowledge God
are tried by His timing, globally and personally!
Faith likewise includes
faith in God’s developmental purposes, for “the Lord seeth fit to chasten his
people; yea, he trieth their patience and their faith.” (Mosiah 23:21.) Still, some of us have trouble when
God’s tutoring is applied to us! We plead for exemption more than we do for sanctification,
don’t we, brothers and sisters?
A reassuring promise is
given us in this journey: “And any man that shall go and preach this gospel of
the kingdom, and fail not to continue faithful in all things, shall not be
weary in mind, neither darkened.” (D&C 84:80.)
But what if, from time to time, we appear to be doing all four
of these essential things—serving,
studying, praying, and worshiping—and still seem to obtain a lesser measure of the promised
blessings?
First, check “the equipment”! All four components are needed,
and one may be missing or malfunctioning.
Second, go back to a very
basic question: Does one really have an inner “desire to believe”? (Alma 32:27.) Frankly, some find discipleship constraining
and the world appealing. These individuals are merely going through the motions
without real intent.
Third, do we naively
expect Christ to come to us—instead
of our going to Him? Truly He waits “all the day long” with
open arms to receive the repentant. (2 Ne. 28:32; Morm. 6:17.) There are no restrictive “office hours.”
But it is we who must arise and go to Him! (See Luke 15:18.)
Blessed are the meek for
they shall not be easily offended, which is especially important, since “My
people must be tried in all things, … and he that will not bear chastisement is
not worthy of my kingdom.” (D&C 136:31.)
Genuine faith makes
increasing allowance for these individual tutorials. In view of these
tutorials, God cannot, brothers and sisters, respond affirmatively to all of
our petitions with an unbroken chain of “yeses.” This would assume that all of
our petitions are for that “which is right” and are spiritually “expedient.” (3 Ne. 18:20; D&C 18:18; D&C 88:64–65.) No petitioner is so wise! Paul even
acknowledged that we sometimes “know not what we should pray for as we ought.”
(Rom. 8:26; see also D&C 46:30.)
For example, in process
of time, our personal inconsistencies may be made inconveniently clear. How
else shall we see what we lack? Spiritual refinement is not only to make the
gross more pure but to further refine the already fine! Hence, said Peter, we
should not think a “fiery trial” to be “some strange thing.” (1 Pet. 4:12.) Did you catch that? “Spiritual
refinement is not only to make the gross more pure but to further refine the
already fine!” he has given us dome great advice here in this talk don’t you
thin?
Real faith, however, is required to endure this necessary but
painful developmental process. As things unfold, sometimes in full view, let us
be merciful with each other. We certainly do not criticize hospital patients amid
intensive care for looking pale and preoccupied. Why then those recovering from
surgery on their souls? No need for us to stare; those stitches will finally
come out. And in this hospital, too, it is important for everyone to remember
that the hospital chart is not the patient. Extending our mercy to someone need
not wait upon our full understanding of their challenges! Empathy may not be
appreciated or reciprocated, but empathy is never wasted.
When you and I make
unwise decisions, if we have frail faith, we not only demand to be rescued but
we want to be rescued privately, painlessly, quickly—or at least to be beaten
only “with a few stripes.” (2 Ne. 28:8.) Brothers and sisters, how can we really
feel forgiven until we first feel responsible? How can we learn from our own
experiences unless these lessons are owned up to?
In the trial of faith, we may sometimes feel God has deserted
us. The reality is that our behavior has isolated us from Him. It is when we
first feel the consequences of our mistakes and are just turning away from these,
but have not yet turned fully to God, that we may have these feelings of being
forsaken.
We must each remember that when we are feeling further away from
God it is because we ourselves have moved – or caused the distance between us,
not the other way around. Our Heavenly Father loves each of us so much He would
never leave us – especially when we need Him the most. He will never desert us!
No part of walking by
faith is more difficult than walking the road of repentance. However, with
“faith unto repentance” (Alma 34:16), we can push the roadblock of pride away
and beg God for mercy. One simply surrenders, worrying only about what God
thinks, not about what “they” think.
Growing out of our faith
in the Lord is our sustaining of His anointed leaders, as we have done at this
April conference. Faithful Church members have what Peter called an “unfeigned love
of the brethren.” (1 Pet. 1:22.) Collectively but not perfectly, those
sustained do the work to which God has called them. As with Joseph Smith, so it
is for his succeeding Brethren. The operative promise persists: namely, the
people of the Church will never be turned away “by the testimony of traitors.”
(D&C 122:3.) But the faithful know something about
divine determination. They know that the Lord’s purposes will finally triumph,
for “there is nothing that the Lord thy God shall take in his heart to do but
what he will do it.” (Abr. 3:17.) Of that divine determination and divine
love I gladly and publicly testify in the holy name of Jesus Christ, amen.
That’s
it for this week’s lesson review. As always, I hope and pray that I have helped
you learn some truths from this week’s lesson and from this post. Please continue
reading and studying your scriptures. For the week of January 7—13, the
scripture passages are Matthew and Luke 2. So, until my next post, please make
it a great week!
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