Source My desire today is for all of us... to have more straightforward personal experience with the Savior’s example. Sometimes we seek heaven too obliquely, focusing on programs or history or the experience of others. Those are important but not as important as personal experience, true discipleship, and the strength that comes from experiencing firsthand the majesty of His touch.... When He says to the poor in spirit, “Come unto me,” He means He knows the way out and He knows the way up. |
The first words Jesus spoke in His majestic Sermon on the
Mount were to the troubled, the discouraged and downhearted. “Blessed are the
poor in spirit,” He said, “for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”1 Whether you
are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or among the
tens of thousands listening this morning who are not of our faith, I speak to
those who are facing personal trials and family struggles, those who endure
conflicts fought in the lonely foxholes of the heart, those trying to hold back
floodwaters of despair that sometimes wash over us like a tsunami of the soul.
I wish to speak particularly to you who feel your lives are broken, seemingly
beyond repair.
To all such I offer the surest and sweetest remedy that I
know. It is found in the clarion call the Savior of the world Himself gave. He
said it in the beginning of His ministry, and He said it in the end. He said it
to believers, and He said it to those who were not so sure. He said to
everyone, whatever their personal problems might be:
“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest.
“Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek
and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.”2
In this promise, that introductory phrase, “come unto me,”
is crucial. It is the key to the peace and rest we seek. Indeed, when the
resurrected Savior gave His sermon at the temple to the Nephites in the New
World, He began, “Blessed are the poor in spirit who come unto me, for theirs
is the kingdom of heaven.”3
When Andrew and John first heard Christ speak, they were
so moved they followed Him as He walked away from the crowd. Sensing He was
being pursued, Jesus turned and asked the two men, “What seek ye?” They
answered, “Where dwellest thou?” And Christ said, “Come and see.” The next day
He found another disciple, Philip, and said to him, “Follow me.”4 Just a short
time later He formally called Peter and others of the new Apostles with the
same spirit of invitation. Come, “follow me,”5 He said.
It seems clear that the essence of our duty and the
fundamental requirement of our mortal life is captured in these brief phrases
from any number of scenes in the Savior’s mortal ministry. He is saying to us,
“Trust me, learn of me, do what I do. Then, when you walk where I am going,” He
says, “we can talk about where you are going, and the problems you face and the
troubles you have. If you will follow me, I will lead you out of darkness,” He
promises. “I will give you answers to your prayers. I will give you rest to your
souls.”
My beloved friends, I know of no other way for us to
succeed or to be safe amid life’s many pitfalls and problems. I know of no
other way for us to carry our burdens or find what Jacob in the Book of Mormon
called “that happiness which is prepared for the saints.”6
So how does one “come unto Christ” in response to this
constant invitation? The scriptures give scores of examples and avenues. You
are well acquainted with the most basic ones. The easiest and the earliest
comes simply with the desire of our heart, the most basic form of faith that we
know. “If ye can no more than desire to believe,” Alma says, exercising just “a
particle of faith,” giving even a small place for the promises of God to find a
home—that is enough to begin.7 Just believing, just having a “molecule” of
faith—simply hoping for things which are not yet seen in our lives, but which
are nevertheless truly there to be bestowed8—that simple step, when focused on
the Lord Jesus Christ, has ever been and always will be the first principle of
His eternal gospel, the first step out of despair.
Second, we must change anything we can change that may be
part of the problem. In short we must repent, perhaps the most hopeful and
encouraging word in the Christian vocabulary. We thank our Father in Heaven we
are allowed to change, we thank Jesus we can change, and ultimately we do so
only with Their divine assistance. Certainly not everything we struggle with is
a result of our actions. Often it is the result of the actions of others or just
the mortal events of life. But anything we can change we should change, and we
must forgive the rest. In this way our access to the Savior’s Atonement becomes
as unimpeded as we, with our imperfections, can make it. He will take it from
there.
Third, in as many ways as possible we try to take upon us
His identity, and we begin by taking upon us His name. That name is formally
bestowed by covenant in the saving ordinances of the gospel. These start with
baptism and conclude with temple covenants, with many others, such as partaking
of the sacrament, laced throughout our lives as additional blessings and
reminders. Teaching the people of his day the message we give this morning,
Nephi said: “Follow the Son, with full purpose of heart, … with real intent, …
take upon you the name of Christ. … Do the things which I have told you I have
seen that your Lord and your Redeemer [will] do.”9
Following these most basic teachings, a splendor of
connections to Christ opens up to us in multitudinous ways: prayer and fasting
and meditation upon His purposes, savoring the scriptures, giving service to
others, “succor[ing] the weak, lift[ing] up the hands which hang down, …
strengthen[ing] the feeble knees.”10 Above all else, loving with “the pure love
of Christ,” that gift that “never faileth,” that gift that “beareth all things,
believeth all things, hopeth all things, [and] endureth all things.”11 Soon,
with that kind of love, we realize our days hold scores of thoroughfares
leading to the Master and that every time we reach out, however feebly, for
Him, we discover He has been anxiously trying to reach us. So we step, we
strive, we seek, and we never yield.12
My desire today is for all of us—not just those who are
“poor in spirit” but all of us—to have more straightforward personal experience
with the Savior’s example. Sometimes we seek heaven too obliquely, focusing on
programs or history or the experience of others. Those are important but not as
important as personal experience, true discipleship, and the strength that
comes from experiencing firsthand the majesty of His touch.
Are you battling a demon of addiction—tobacco or drugs or
gambling, or the pernicious contemporary plague of pornography? Is your
marriage in trouble or your child in danger? Are you confused with gender
identity or searching for self-esteem? Do you—or someone you love—face disease
or depression or death? Whatever other steps you may need to take to resolve
these concerns, come first to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Trust in heaven’s
promises. In that regard Alma’s testimony is my testimony: “I do know,” he
says, “that whosoever shall put their trust in God shall be supported in their
trials, and their troubles, and their afflictions.”13
This reliance upon the merciful nature of God is at the very
center of the gospel Christ taught. I testify that the Savior’s Atonement lifts
from us not only the burden of our sins but also the burden of our
disappointments and sorrows, our heartaches and our despair.14 From the
beginning, trust in such help was to give us both a reason and a way to
improve, an incentive to lay down our burdens and take up our salvation. There
can and will be plenty of difficulties in life. Nevertheless, the soul that
comes unto Christ, who knows His voice and strives to do as He did, finds a
strength, as the hymn says, “beyond [his] own.”15 The Savior reminds us that He
has “graven [us] upon the palms of [His] hands.”16 Considering the
incomprehensible cost of the Crucifixion and Atonement, I promise you He is not
going to turn His back on us now. When He says to the poor in spirit, “Come
unto me,” He means He knows the way out and He knows the way up. He knows it
because He has walked it. He knows the way because He is the way.
Brothers and sisters, whatever your distress, please
don’t give up and please don’t yield to fear. I have always been touched that
as his son was departing for his mission to England, Brother Bryant S. Hinckley
gave young Gordon a farewell embrace and then slipped him a handwritten note
with just five words taken from the fifth chapter of Mark: “Be not afraid, only
believe.”17 I think also of that night when Christ rushed to the aid of His
frightened disciples, walking as He did on the water to get to them, calling
out, “It is I; be not afraid.” Peter exclaimed, “Lord, if it be thou, bid me
come unto thee on the water.” Christ’s answer to him was as it always is every
time: “Come,” He said. Instantly, as was his nature, Peter sprang over the
vessel’s side and into the troubled waters. While his eyes were fixed upon the
Lord, the wind could toss his hair and the spray could drench his robes, but
all was well—he was coming to Christ. It was only when his faith wavered and
fear took control, only when he removed his glance from the Master to look at
the furious waves and the ominous black gulf beneath, only then did he begin to
sink into the sea. In newer terror he cried out, “Lord, save me.”
Undoubtedly with some sadness, the Master over every
problem and fear, He who is the solution to every discouragement and
disappointment, stretched out His hand and grasped the drowning disciple with
the gentle rebuke, “O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?”18
If you are lonely, please know you can find comfort. If
you are discouraged, please know you can find hope. If you are poor in spirit,
please know you can be strengthened. If you feel you are broken, please know
you can be mended.
In Nazareth, the narrow road,
That tires the feet and steals the breath,
Passes the place where once abode
The Carpenter of Nazareth.
And up and down the dusty way
The village folk would often wend;
And on the bench, beside Him, lay
Their broken things for Him to mend.
The maiden with the doll she broke,
The woman with the broken chair,
The man with broken plough, or yoke,
Said, “Can you mend it, Carpenter?”
And each received the thing he sought,
In yoke, or plough, or chair, or doll;
The broken thing which each had brought
Returned again a perfect whole.
So, up the hill the long years through,
With heavy step and wistful eye,
The burdened souls their way pursue,
Uttering each the plaintive cry:
“O Carpenter of Nazareth,
This heart, that’s broken past repair,
This life, that’s shattered nigh to death,
Oh, can You mend them, Carpenter?”
And by His kind and ready hand,
His own sweet life is woven through
Our broken lives, until they stand
A New Creation—“all things new.”
“The shattered [substance] of [the] heart,
Desire, ambition, hope, and faith,
Mould Thou into the perfect part,
O, Carpenter of Nazareth!” 19
May we all, especially the poor in spirit, come unto Him
and be made whole, I pray, in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, amen.
References:
1. Matt. 5:3.
2. Matt. 11:28–29.
3. 3 Ne. 12:3;
emphasis added.
4. John 1:35–39,
43.
5. See Matt. 4:19.
6. See 2 Ne. 9:43.
7. See Alma 32:27; emphasis added.
8. See Alma 32:21.
9. 2 Ne. 31:13,
17.
10. D&C 81:5.
11. Moro. 7:47,
46, 45.
12. See Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “Ulysses,” in The Complete
Poetical Works of Tennyson (1898), 89.
13. Alma 36:3.
14. See Alma 7:11–12.
15. “Lord, I Would Follow Thee,” Hymns, no. 220.
16. 1 Ne. 21:16.
17. Mark 5:36.
18. Matt.
14:27–31; emphasis added.
19. George Blair, “The Carpenter of Nazareth,”
in Obert C. Tanner, Christ’s Ideals for Living (Sunday School manual, 1955),
22.
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