Topic Suffering
“If we love the Savior more, will we suffer less?
Rex E Lee's wife and sister talk....
Liz question... What do I do about a woman that annoys the heck out of me?
Can we love others more?
In what ways?
Have we reached a pleateu in our service and commitment to follow the Savor?
Are we at ease in Zion?
Satan wants to case doubt. Like a defense attorney.
Is suffering good?
What is suffering spritually?
Time, talk, trust touch.
Telling others you love them.
“Come, Follow Me” by Practicing Christian Love and Service
Doctrine and Covenants 122:9; President George Q. Cannon said: “No matter how serious the trial, how deep the distress, how great the affliction, [God] will never desert us. He never has, and He never will. He cannot do it. It is not His character. He is an unchangeable being; the same yesterday, the same today, and He will be the same throughout the eternal ages to come. We have found that God. We have made Him our friend, by obeying His Gospel; and He will stand by us. We may pass through the fiery furnace; we may pass through deep waters; but we shall not be consumed nor overwhelmed. We shall emerge from all these trials and difficulties the better and purer for them, if we only trust in our God and keep His commandments” (“Remarks,” Deseret Evening News, Mar. 7, 1891, 4); see also Jeffrey R. Holland, “Come unto Me,” Ensign, Apr. 1998, 16–23.
As the Savior’s latter-day disciples, we come unto Him by loving and serving God’s children.
Nobel
laureate Elie Wiesel was in the hospital recovering from open-heart
surgery when he was visited by his five-year-old grandson. As the little
boy looked into his grandfather’s eyes, he saw his pain. “Grandpa,” he
asked, “if I loved you more, would you [hurt less]?”1 Today I ask a similar question of each of us: “If we love the Savior more, will we suffer less?”
When the Savior called His disciples to follow Him, they were living the law of Moses, including seeking “an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,”2
but the Savior came to fulfill that law with His Atonement. He taught a
new doctrine: “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to
them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and
persecute you.”3
The
disciples were taught to turn from the ways of the natural man to the
loving and caring ways of the Savior by replacing contention with forgiveness, kindness, and compassion. The “new commandment” to “love one another”4
was not always easy to keep. When the disciples worried about
associating with sinners and certain classes of people, the Savior
patiently taught, “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of
these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”5 Or, as a Book of Mormon prophet explained, “When ye are in the service of your fellow beings ye are only in the service of your God.”6
As
the Savior’s latter-day disciples, we come unto Him by loving and
serving God’s children. As we do, we may not be able to avoid
tribulation, affliction, and suffering in the flesh, but we will suffer
less spiritually. Even in our trials we can experience joy and peace.
Our Christian
love and service naturally begin in the home. Parents, you are called
to be loving teachers and missionaries to your children and youth. They
are your investigators. You bear the responsibility to help them become
converted. In truth, all of us are seeking to be converted—which means
being filled with our Savior’s love.
As we follow Jesus Christ, His love motivates us to support each other on our mortal journey. We cannot do it alone.7 You have heard me share the Quaker proverb before: Thee lift me, I’ll lift thee, and we’ll ascend together eternally.8
As disciples, we begin to do this when we are baptized, showing our
willingness “to bear one another’s burdens, that they may be light.”9
1. “Teach[ing] one another the doctrine of the kingdom”10
is a way to love and serve each other. Parents and grandparents, we
tend to bemoan the state of the world—that schools are not teaching
moral character. But there is much we can do. We
can take advantage of the teaching moments in our own families—that
means now. Don’t let them slip by. When an opportunity comes to share
your thoughts about the gospel and the lessons of life, stop everything,
sit down, and talk with your children and grandchildren.
We
should not worry that we are not professionally trained gospel
teachers. No training class or manual is as helpful as personally
studying our scriptures, praying, pondering, and seeking the guidance of
the Holy Spirit. The Spirit will lead you along. I promise you: the
calling to be a parent includes the gift to teach in the ways that are
right for you and for your children. Remember, God’s power to influence
us righteously is His love. “We love him, because he first loved us.”11
Youth,
you are some of our most effective gospel teachers. You come to church
to learn so that you can go home to teach and serve your family,
neighbors, and friends. Don’t be afraid. Have faith to testify of what
you know to be true. Think how full-time missionaries grow because they
are faithfully living a consecrated life—using their time and talents
and bearing testimony to serve and bless others. As you share your
testimony of the gospel, your faith will grow and your confidence will
increase!
Some
of our most impactful Christian service is given by holding family
scripture study, family prayer, and family council meetings. For more
than a hundred years, Church leaders have called us to set aside
uninterrupted time each week. But many of us are still missing the
blessings. Family home evening is not a lecture from Mom and Dad. It is
our family time to share simple spiritual concepts and experiences, to
help our children learn to care and share, have fun together, bear
testimony together, and grow and progress together. As we hold family
home evening every week, our love for one another will grow stronger and
we will suffer less.
Let us remember, the most important work we do in our families is through the power of the Holy Ghost.
Whenever we raise our voices in anger, the Spirit leaves our
companionships and families. When we speak in love, the Spirit can be
with us. Let us remember that our children and grandchildren measure our
love by how much devoted time we give them. Above all, don’t lose
patience and don’t give up!
The scriptures tell us that when some of Heavenly Father’s spirit children chose not to follow His plan, the heavens wept.12
Some parents who have loved and taught their children also weep when
their grown children choose not to follow the Lord’s plan. What can
parents do? We cannot pray away another’s agency. Remember the father of
the prodigal son, who patiently waited for his son to “[come] to
himself,” all the while watching for him. And “when he was yet a great
way off,” he ran to him.13
We can pray for guidance about when to speak, what to say, and yes, on
some occasions, when to be still. Remember, our children and family
members already chose to follow the Savior in their premortal realm.
Sometimes it is only by their own life’s experiences that those sacred
feelings are awakened again. Ultimately, the choice to love and follow
the Lord has to be their own.
2. There
is another special way disciples show their love for the Savior. Today I
pay tribute to all who serve the Lord as caregivers. How the Lord loves
you! In your quiet, unheralded service, you are following Him who
promised, “Thy Father who seeth in secret, himself shall reward thee
openly.”14
I
think of my neighbor whose wife was afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease.
Every Sunday he would help her dress for Church meetings, comb her
hair, apply her makeup, even put on her earrings. In rendering this
service, he was an example to every man and woman in our ward—in fact,
for the world.
One day his wife said to him, “I just want to see my
husband again and be with him.”
He answered, “I am your husband.”
And she sweetly replied, “Oh, good!”
I
cannot speak of giving care without acknowledging the special caregiver
in my life—the Savior’s special disciple to me—my eternal companion,
Mary. She has given all in compassionate nurturing and love. Her hands
reflect His gentle, sustaining touch. I would not be here without her.
And with her, I will be able to endure to the end and be with her in
eternal life.
If you are suffering deeply, with others or alone, I urge you to let the Savior be your caregiver. Lean on His ample arm.15 Accept His assurance. “I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you,” He promises.16
3. Brothers and sisters, if we have not fully done so yet, let us turn more toward forgiveness,
kindness, and love. Let us renounce the war that so often rages in the
heart of the natural man and proclaim
Christ’s caring, love, and peace.17
If “ye have come to the knowledge of the glory [and goodness] of God”18 and also “the atonement which was prepared from the foundation of the world,”19
“ye will not have a mind to injure one another, but to live peaceably. …
And ye will not suffer your children that … they transgress the laws of
God, and fight and quarrel one with another. … But ye will teach them …
to love one another, and to serve one another.”20
Just
before the Savior’s Crucifixion, He taught His Apostles: “A new
commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved
you”21 and “If ye love me, keep my commandments.”22
I testify that the Savior’s true posture toward us is the one posed by the outstretched arms of Thorvaldsen’s statue Christus. He continues to stretch forth His hands,23 beckoning, “Come, follow me.” We follow Him by loving and serving one another and keeping His commandments.
I bear my special witness that He lives and loves us with a perfect love. This is His Church. Thomas S. Monson
is His prophet on the earth today. That we may love our Heavenly Father
and His Son more, and suffer less, is my prayer. In the name of Jesus
Christ, amen.