Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Goodwill to Men

“We are all under the obligation of making this world a happier place for our having lived in it,”

 (As a warning, I'm not going to cite all of my quotes for this post, but you can assume that unless otherwise stated, they'll all be from here: Righteous Living in Perilous Times

I taught the Elder's Quorum lesson on Sunday.  It was the lesson linked to above.  I felt that I had a bit of an obligation to teach a good lesson this week, both since it's my last lesson of the year, the season, and due to the events around us. I dug in, and I think I actually learned something!

Since the Newport shooting, I've heard about an hour of news radio everyday that has focused on it. There are various things people have mentioned, but I'll point out two:

WTOP had, on Friday afternoon, a 'positive psychologist' speak, and they have been quoting here ever since.  She pointed out that trauma can be a growing experience, if you allow it to be.  I kind of laughed and said to my self, "no kidding!"  That is, in many ways, the main thrust of the Gospel plan.  We are not here to cruise through life and head back; we are here to be tried, and tried as strongly as we can be.  Growth comes through effort.  It is impossible to grow muscle without exercise.  The US tried, during World War II.  Nothing worked except exertion.  That principle applies to spiritual muscle as well.  Christ suffered so he can save us (Doc. & Cov. 19:16).  To quote a song I linked to earlier this year, "O Savior thy sure forgiveness Was born in thy pain and grief."  As we are commanded to follow Him in all things, we should consider the possibility of using our suffering to both come nearer to Him through an understanding of His efforts on our behalf and using what pain we feel to help others as He helped us.

Second, since the shootings, people have been clamoring for new efforts, new laws, to prevent this sort of thing from happening, ranging from better mental health screening and awareness to gun control and assault weapon bans.  I saw an article calling guns America's Moloch.  What nobody has echoed is the message that a Prophet, President George Albert Smith said in December of 1949:
But by following the teachings of the Lord, by turning unto him and repenting of sin, by going about doing good, we may have peace and happiness and prosperity. If mankind will love one another, the hatred and the unkindness that have existed so much in the world will pass away.
  What is this? The solution to all of the atrocities of our times is contained in four letters. L-O-V-E. People will mock this; it's the kind of thing a children's author would put in a book about teenage wizards. The more I think about this, though, there is no other solution that so gracefully and thoroughly resolves the strife of our days. Laws and governments cannot change the hearts of men; the most they can do is to attempt to take away the choice to do evil, and therefore 'create' goodness.  There is only One who can change our hearts, and His method is love. 

Those who follow Christ have been taught that they should "love their enemies and pray for them which spitefully use [them]". He commanded his disciples to follow him. Christ, though Creator of the Earth, was willing to be tried by apostates who had broken the covenant that their people had made with Him centuries before, meekly scourged, brought to trial before the 'heathen' empire that had conquered the people He was rightly the earthly ruler of.  At no point did the Savior invoke the law of the Old Testament (that He issued) and claim 'an eye for an eye'.  Instead, he prayed for the forgiveness of those involved.  We sing that "The very foes who slay thee Have access to thy grace."

Instead of going about our day striving to not upset those who we may fear, avoiding people who might hate us for who we are or what we do, we need to step forward to make a difference in this world.  We need to follow the example of Jesus Christ, and serve and love those who hate us until they become our friends.  The parable of the Good Samaritan ends with the namesake walking away from the inn where the victim is being tended for, but what happened to the Jew who he saved.  I suspect that he did not have much, if any, prejudice left against the Samaritans after that.

If "The only way to peace for this world is the pathway of the Gospel of Jesus Christ our Lord,"  we, as members of His church, are the ones who are responsible for spreading that peace to the world.
It is our duty to set the example; it is our duty to hold aloft the banner of truth. It is our duty to encourage our Father’s other children to listen to his advice and counsel and so adjust things that wherever we are we will find the spirit of God burning in our souls and our influence will be for good .
 The Savior left his Peace to His disciples.  If we want to find peace in our lives, we need to seek for that peace, and the only way is to follow the path that Jesus taught.  Men run to and fro seeking it, but the path has been in front of us ever since God first spoke to Adam.  Love God, love thy neighbor, and everything else will fall into place.

4 comments:

Margaret said...

Good post, son. I'm sure it was a good lesson. (ps. I tried to comment earlier, but I don't think it went through. If perchance it did, just delete this one.)

Joanna said...

I didn't know you taught in Elder's Quorum.

This goes right a long with yesterday's quote in the advent calendar Mom made for us.

Janet said...

Good call Jo, it does. And very true Joe, good post.
I agree.

Emily said...

Very nice, brother.