My life has been an adventure full of ups and downs and
loopty loops but one swell ride. I intended to be an architect. I dreamed of
buildings that would inspire people and help them live their lives better. When
I was ten I built a suspension bridge out of legos that spanned 5 feet and held
20 lbs. But an unfortunate skiing accident involving my uncle Archie a big
cliff and a concussion derailed those plans. I remember the moment as I walked
out of the Wilkinson center my freshmen year when a still small voice whispered,
“ You will study history.” I proceeded to fully comprehend it as a revelation
from the Lord then completely ignore it. As I sat in my dorm room while I was
on a study abroad in England two summers ago. Long after my revelation was
received, tears blurred the lines of my last rejection letter for the program I
needed to pursue my dreams, the voice came again. “Would you sacrifice anything
for me?” My response of coarse! “Would you give up your dreams for me?” I was
stunned, I had heard of the martyrs of the faith laying down their lives but
that seemed easy compared to the jewel I was being asked to hand over. The
voice came again, “I need you to study History.” Don’t get me wrong, I love
history but majoring in it wasn’t something I had considered. As I wrestled
before the Lord that night where I was completely alone yet perfectly connected
I pondered the manner in which we make our priorities our realities.
Drawing from the scriptures, my assigned talk given by Elder
Nelson in Conference last October and personal experiences I will attempt to
describe the doctrines principles and practices that we need to understand in
this season of our lives to accurately make decisions both big and small.
First principle: Our Bodies.
Elder Nelson taught that rather than our bodies are a
hindrance to our spiritual growth and development it is a necessary and
beautiful addition to our lives. They are not necessary evils but gifts of
immense worth to help us progress through the plan of salvation. We are to care
and develop our bodies, including talents and abilities.
With your body being
such a vital part of God’s eternal plan, it is little wonder that the Apostle
Paul described it as a “temple of God.”14 Each time you look in the mirror, see
your body as your temple. That truth—refreshed gratefully each day—can
positively influence your decisions about how you will care for your body and
how you will use it. And those decisions will determine your destiny. How could
this be? Because your body is the temple for your spirit. And how you use your
body affects your spirit.
Our bodies are the key ingredient in our access to agency in
this life. With a body our ability to act far surpasses our status as things
that are acted upon. How well our body works is irrelevant because of its
eventual breakdown in death.
“the aging process is a gift from god.” Why so? Because the
closer we are to death the closer we are to returning home. The aches and pains
that we are feeling more and more and a gentle reminder of the gift that God as
given us in a body.
Second Principle: Understanding Addiction
It is my belief that the Word of Wisdom is generally
misunderstood and under applied. Apart from the big 5 temple recommend
questions that we need to have control over before making covenants our work is
not done. The one aspect of the Word of Wisdom is this, freeing our selves from
earthly snares will allow smoother and us to float upwards faster. What holds
us to the cares and worries of the world? Addictions. Any addiction is contrary
to the word of wisdom. Any habit, substance, sensation or activity that
repeatedly draws our time and energy from things that we actually want to be
doing is an addiction. We all have them, and we need to defeat them just as
much as the poor soul struggling with cigarettes needs to fight nicotine.
So why do we all have this universal urge to watch Netflix
when we really should be studying or going shopping when we should be saving
our money? Elder nelson explains.
It is not surprising,
then, that most temptations to stray from God’s plan of happiness come through
the misuse of those essential, God-given appetites. Controlling our appetites
is not always easy. Not one of us manages them perfectly.24 Mistakes happen. Errors are made. Sins
are committed. What can we do then? We can learn from them. And we can truly
repent.
Notice how he describes our appetites as essential and God
given.
Why the need for
self-mastery? God implanted strong appetites within us for nourishment and love,
vital for the human family to be perpetuated.22
We are given appetites, in who’s fulfillment we find joy. The
well read scripture from the book of Mormon as Alma counsels his righteous son
shiblon is so powerful in this context. “bridle your passions that ye may be
filled with love.” To bridle a horse doesn’t mean to shoot it or let it starve,
it is to tame and train. Our greatest weaknesses are our greatest strengths
that have been misdirected through temptation.
When we master our
appetites within the bounds of God’s laws, we can enjoy longer life, greater
love, and consummate joy.
If I might suggest another analogy would be to compare our
passions to a tree. A tree grows straight and healthy if propery tended to and
cared for. Watered occasionally trimmed and fertilized. It takes time but the
result of many years of patience and care is our reward
That is in my opinion the key to living a life of joy and
purpose. Break our addictions from running wild, then let our passions take us
to unimaginable vistas and far away lands. How do we break our passions?
Through the cleansing Atonement of Jesus Christ.
A pivotal spiritual
attribute is that of self-mastery—the strength to place reason over appetite.
Self-mastery builds a strong conscience. And your conscience determines your
moral responses in difficult, tempting, and trying situations.
A strong human spirit
with control over appetites of the flesh is master over emotions and passions
and not a slave to them. That kind of freedom is as vital to the spirit as
oxygen is to the body! Freedom from self-slavery is true liberation!
I too have felt the
miniature wild horses pull my hand and click “watch next episode” on a Netflix
binge despite my protesting, but when we are the servants, even in the
inconsequential things like Netflix then we are not allowing ourselves to feel
as happy as we might.
Principle number 3:
Live the law of chastity.
As bishiop so artfully
taught in our previous meeting, Chastity is not a series of rules. It is a
guiding principle designed to create the central feature of God’s plan for his
children, eternal families. From the traditional menace to society joke to the
scriptural, “It is not meet that man should be alone.” It is very clear that we
are human beings are not designed nor purposed to live single lives.
Plato envisioned the
origins of the human race as fearful creatures with 4 legs and 4 arms and two
heads that were so powerful that Zeus feared they would overpower him. So he
cut them in two and cursed them to look for their other half. When we find our
other half we have the power to dethrone the god’s of this world just as Zeus
feared.
Consider library with
no books, a chalkboard with no chalk, a guitar with no strings, a computer but no
software. These items are not broken or in disrepair, but utterly useless
because they are not “complete.” They need a partner to work in its intended
function. I have a beautiful HD pasma tv sitting on my desk which I use for
work and not netflix. But for the longest time I had no remote to change the input
to use it at all. it was stuck in a unusable mode. It wasn’t broken, it could
turn on and would show a blue screen unbelievably clear words reading NO SIGNAL
but there was so much unrealized potential with what it could do. When I
acquired the nessesary hardware now it functions as it should.
I am proposing that
none of us who are not married and progressed toward having a family have
actually realized what it is like to be alive and hold true purpose. In Plato’s
words again our function and power is like shadows on a wall in a cave.
Fleeting glimpses of what may be.
To live the law of
chastity we need to be actively looking for our other halves to gain the powers
God wishes to give to us. It may be in the next life but we are never to give
up seeking the measure of our creation.
Principle Number 4: No
Regrets
I recently felt
inspired to make a list of things that if I had the chance I would redo in my
life. It was a useful exercise as it helped me see patterns in my behavior
which then projected future problems allowing me to prepare ahead of time. As I
finished my list I was astonished, every single one started with the word Not.
Not playing for the basketball team in highschool, not dropping by my
grandmothers the day before she passed on, not inviting a friend to church. I didn’t
have a single thing that I regretted doing, only things that I didn’t do. We
must do the little things.
I also reflected on
what I never regretted.
Never regretted
following the Holy Ghost.
Never regretted being
kind to someone
Never regretted doing
something courageous
Never regretted
spending the time each day to read the scriptures and have meaningful prayers.
In short I have never
regretted keeping the commandments and living the gospel. I have regretted not
doing so.
Elder Nelson’s words are
mine at this juncture and I close with them. notice he makes no mention of
grades, social status or employment.
My dear brothers and sisters, each day is a
day of decision, and our decisions determine our destiny. One day each of us
will stand before the Lord in judgment.41 We will each have a personal interview with Jesus Christ.42 We will account for decisions that we made about our bodies, our
spiritual attributes, and how we honored God’s pattern for marriage and family.
That we may choose wisely each day’s decisions for eternity is my earnest
prayer in the sacred name of Jesus Christ, amen.
"To bridle a horse doesn’t mean to shoot it or let it starve, it is to tame and train."
ReplyDeleteI liked this a lot. Often times I wish I could just BE RID of my weaknesses. I wish I could just kill the urges I have. BUT, that is not how it works. I need to figure out how to control them. It wouldn't be worth anything if Heavenly Father just zapped my struggles away because I asked him to in my prayers.
Bridle the passions...
Sweet post! thanks for the share. I liked the part about Zeus and becoming complete with our wives... That's cool imagery.
ReplyDelete