Source I invite all members of the Church to live with ever more attention to the life and example of the Lord Jesus Christ, especially the love and hope and compassion he displayed.... I invite the Latter-day Saints to look to the temple of the Lord as the great symbol of your membership. It is the deepest desire of my heart to have every member of the Church worthy to enter the temple. It would please the Lord if every adult member would be worthy of—and carry—a current temple recommend. |
My beloved brothers and sisters, thank you for your sustaining vote. I come before you humbly and meekly, saddened by the recent passing of our beloved prophet, President Ezra Taft Benson. My heart is tender upon the passing of my dear friend, particularly in light of the new responsibilities that have come to me.
I have shed many tears and have sought my Father in Heaven
in earnest prayer in the desire to be equal to this high and holy calling. I
have prayed to be worthy to bear the assignment which thirteen other men in
this dispensation have borne. Perhaps only they, watching from the other side
of the veil, can fully understand the weight of responsibility and the deep
dependence on the Lord that I feel in accepting this sacred calling.
My greatest strength through these past months has been my
abiding testimony that this is the work of God and not of men. Jesus Christ is the
head of this church. He leads it in word and deed. I am honored beyond
expression to be called for a season to be an instrument in his hands to
preside over his church. But without the knowledge that Christ is the head of
the Church, neither I nor any other man could bear the weight of the calling
that has come.
In assuming this responsibility, I acknowledge God’s
miraculous hand in my life. He has repeatedly spared my life and restored my
strength, has repeatedly brought me back from the edge of eternity, and has
allowed me to continue in my mortal ministry for another season. I have
wondered on occasion why my life has been spared. But now I have set that
question aside and ask only for the faith and prayers of the members of the
Church so we can work together, I laboring with you, to fulfill God’s purposes
in this season of our lives.
I also acknowledge the prayers and faith of my wife and
family, my Brethren of the General Authorities, and the multitudes of faithful
members who have prayed for me, cared for me, and shown concern for my health.
It has been thirty-five years since I was sustained as a
member of the Quorum of the Twelve. Those years have been rich in preparation.
I have met the Saints and borne testimony in North and South America; in Europe
and Eastern Europe; in Asia, Australia, and Africa; and in the islands of the
sea. Many times have I been to the Holy Land and walked where Jesus walked. My
walk is slower now, but my mind is clear, and my spirit is young.
As I answer the call from the Lord to lead the Church, I am
overcome with gratitude for the revelations which have established the
marvelous system by which his church is governed. Each man who is ordained an
Apostle and set apart as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve is sustained as a
prophet, seer, and revelator. The First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles, called and ordained to hold the keys of the priesthood, have the
authority and responsibility to govern the Church, to administer its
ordinances, to teach its doctrine, and to establish and maintain its practices.
When a President of the Church is ill or not able to
function fully in all of the duties of his office, his two Counselors, who,
with him, comprise a Quorum of the First Presidency, carry on the work of the
Presidency. Any major questions, policies, programs, or doctrines are
prayerfully considered in council by the Counselors in the First Presidency and
the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. No decision emanates from the First
Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve without total unanimity among all
concerned.
Following this inspired pattern, the Church will move
forward without interruption. The governance of the Church and the exercise of
the prophetic gifts will always be vested in those apostolic authorities who
hold and exercise all of the keys of the priesthood.
I feel just as President Joseph F. Smith felt on a similar
occasion many years ago, when he said:
“I propose that my counselors and fellow Presidents in the
First Presidency shall share with me in the responsibility of every act which I
shall perform in this capacity. I do not propose to take the reins in my own
hands to do as I please; but I propose to do as my brethren and I agree upon
and as the Spirit of the Lord manifests to us. I have always held, and do hold,
and trust I always shall hold, that it is wrong for one man to exercise all the
authority and power of presidency in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. I dare not assume such a responsibility, and I will not, so long as I
can have men like these to stand by and counsel with me in the labors we have
to perform and in doing all those things that shall tend to the peace,
advancement and happiness of the people of God and the building up of Zion.”
President Smith then continued:
“If at any time my brethren of the Apostleship shall see in
me a disposition to depart from this principle or a forgetfulness on my part of
this covenant that I make today before this body of Priesthood, I ask them in
the name of my Father, that they will come to me, as my brethren, as counselors
in the Priesthood, as watchmen on the towers of Zion, and remind me of this
covenant and promise which I make to the body of the Church in general
conference assembled at this time.
“The Lord never did intend that one man should have all
power, and for that reason He has placed in His Church Presidents, Apostles,
High Priests, Seventies, Elders and the various offices of the Lesser
Priesthood, all of which are essential in their order and place according to
the authority bestowed on them” (in Conference Report, Oct.–Nov. 1901, p. 82).
Those words of President Joseph F. Smith represent my
feelings today.
Like my Brethren before me, I receive with this calling the
assurance that God will direct his prophet. I humbly accept the call to serve
and declare with the Psalmist, “The Lord is my strength and my shield; my heart
trusted in him, and I am helped” (Ps. 28:7).
At the time of my call, I issued two invitations to the
members of the Church. I feel impressed to give these continued emphasis.
First, I invite all members of the Church to live with ever
more attention to the life and example of the Lord Jesus Christ, especially the
love and hope and compassion he displayed. I pray that we will treat each other
with more kindness, more patience, more courtesy and forgiveness.
To those who have transgressed or been offended, we say,
come back. The path of repentance, though hard at times, lifts one ever upward
and leads to a perfect forgiveness.
To those who are hurt or are struggling and afraid, we say,
let us stand with you and dry your tears. Come back. Stand with us in The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Take literally his invitation to
“come, follow me” (see Matt. 16:24; Matt. 19:21; Mark 8:34; Mark 10:21; Luke
9:23; Luke 18:22; John 21:22; D&C 38:22). He is the only sure way; he is
the light of the world.
We will, as you would expect us to do, continue to hold to
the high standards of conduct which define a Latter-day Saint. It is the Lord
who established those standards, and we are not free to set them aside.
Let us study the Master’s every teaching and devote
ourselves more fully to his example. He has given us “all things that pertain
unto life and godliness.” He has “called us to glory and virtue” and has “given
unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these [we] might be
partakers of the divine nature” (2 Pet. 1:3–4).
I believe in those “exceeding great and precious promises,”
and I invite all within the sound of my voice to claim them. We should strive
to “be partakers of the divine nature.” Only then may we truly hope for “peace
in this world, and eternal life in the world to come” (D&C 59:23).
In that spirit I invite the Latter-day Saints to look to the
temple of the Lord as the great symbol of your membership. It is the deepest
desire of my heart to have every member of the Church worthy to enter the
temple. It would please the Lord if every adult member would be worthy of—and
carry—a current temple recommend. The things that we must do and not do to be
worthy of a temple recommend are the very things that ensure we will be happy
as individuals and as families.
Let us be a temple-attending people. Attend the temple as
frequently as personal circumstances allow. Keep a picture of a temple in your
home that your children may see it. Teach them about the purposes of the house
of the Lord. Have them plan from their earliest years to go there and to remain
worthy of that blessing.
If proximity to a temple does not allow frequent attendance,
gather in the history of your family and prepare the names for the sacred
ordinances performed only in the temple. This family research is essential to
the work of the temples, and blessings surely will come to those who do that
work.
We desire to bring the temples closer to our people. New
temples have been announced and are under construction. Others are being
planned. Soon we will dedicate the Orlando Florida and Bountiful Utah temples.
In the ordinances of the temple, the foundations of the
eternal family are sealed in place. The Church has the responsibility—and the
authority—to preserve and protect the family as the foundation of society. The
pattern for family life, instituted from before the foundation of the world,
provides for children to be born to and nurtured by a father and mother who are
husband and wife, lawfully married. Parenthood is a sacred obligation and
privilege, with children welcomed as a “heritage of the Lord” (Ps. 127:3).
A worried society now begins to see that the disintegration
of the family brings upon the world the calamities foretold by the prophets.
The world’s councils and deliberations will succeed only when they define the
family as the Lord has revealed it to be. “Except the Lord build the house,
they labour in vain that build it” (Ps. 127:1).
As we become more removed from the lifestyle of the world,
the Church becomes more the welcome refuge for hundreds of thousands who come
each year and say, “Let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of
the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his
paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from
Jerusalem” (Isa. 2:3).
My brothers and sisters, I testify that the impressions of
the Spirit have weighed heavily upon me in considering these matters. Our
Eternal Heavenly Father lives. Jesus Christ, our Savior and Redeemer, guides
his church today through his prophets.
Let us, as Latter-day Saints, claim those “exceeding great
and precious promises” so that we, “Holy Father, … may grow up in thee, and
receive a fulness of the Holy Ghost, and be organized according to thy laws,
and be prepared to obtain every needful thing” (D&C 109:14–15).
I invoke his blessings upon you in your homes, in your work,
in your service in his church.
I pledge my life, my strength, and the full
measure of my soul to serving him. May we have ears to hear and hearts to feel,
and the courage to follow, I humbly pray in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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