Friday, February 20, 2009

Another late night post...

Tommy got called to go give a blessing to someone at the ER...so...I'm just kind of piddling (sp?) around the house. I decided to sit down and do something spiritually productive before I hit the pillows. My little brother emailed today from his mission...he's doing well...but he commented on how he never expected it to be as hard as it is. It made me remember a talk I read...I want to send it to him. I was grateful to be able to read it again...because in reality...being a mother is missionary work...I want so badly for them to know what I know...and truly be connected to Christ...and experience their own personal conversion. Anyway...so I'm rereading it again and applying it to being a mom and I thought I'd post the end here...cuz it's my favorite part...
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From a talk given at the Provo (Utah) Missionary Training Center on 20 June 2000.

"Anyone who does any kind of missionary work will have occasion to ask, Why is this so hard? Why doesn’t it go better? Why can’t our success be more rapid? Why aren’t there more people joining the Church? It is the truth. We believe in angels. We trust in miracles. Why don’t people just flock to the font? Why isn’t the only risk in missionary work that of pneumonia from being soaking wet all day and all night in the baptismal font?

You will have occasion to ask those questions. I have thought about this a great deal. I offer this as my personal feeling. I am convinced that missionary work is not easy because salvation is not a cheap experience. Salvation never was easy. We are The Church of Jesus Christ, this is the truth, and He is our Great Eternal Head. How could we believe it would be easy for us when it was never, ever easy for Him? It seems to me that missionaries and mission leaders have to spend at least a few moments in Gethsemane. Missionaries and mission leaders have to take at least a step or two toward the summit of Calvary.

Now, please don’t misunderstand. I’m not talking about anything anywhere near what Christ experienced. That would be presumptuous and sacrilegious. But I believe that missionaries and investigators, to come to the truth, to come to salvation, to know something of this price that has been paid, will have to pay a token of that same price.

For that reason I don’t believe missionary work has ever been easy, nor that conversion is, nor that retention is, nor that continued faithfulness is. I believe it is supposed to require some effort, something from the depths of our soul.

If He could come forward in the night, kneel down, fall on His face, bleed from every pore, and cry, “Abba, Father (Papa), if this cup can pass, let it pass,” 16 then little wonder that salvation is not a whimsical or easy thing for us. If you wonder if there isn’t an easier way, you should remember you are not the first one to ask that. Someone a lot greater and a lot grander asked a long time ago if there wasn’t an easier way.

The Atonement will carry the missionaries perhaps even more importantly than it will carry the investigators. When you struggle, when you are rejected, when you are spit upon and cast out and made a hiss and a byword, you are standing with the best life this world has ever known, the only pure and perfect life ever lived. You have reason to stand tall and be grateful that the Living Son of the Living God knows all about your sorrows and afflictions. The only way to salvation is through Gethsemane and on to Calvary. The only way to eternity is through Him—the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

I testify that the living God is our Eternal Father and that Jesus Christ is His living and Only Begotten Son in the flesh. I testify that this Jesus, who was slain and hanged on a tree, 17 was the chief Apostle then and is the chief Apostle now, the Great High Priest, the chief cornerstone of His Church in this last and greatest of all dispensations. I testify that He lives, that the whole triumph of the gospel is that He lives, and because He does, so will we.

On that first Resurrection Sunday, Mary Magdalene first thought she saw a gardener. Well, she did—the Gardener who cultivated Eden and who endured Gethsemane. The Gardener who gave us the rose of Sharon, the lily of the valley, the cedars of Lebanon, the tree of life.

I declare Him to be the Savior of the world, the Bishop and Shepherd of our souls, the Bright and Morning Star. I know that our garments can be washed white only in the blood of that Lamb, slain from the foundation of the world. I know that we are lifted up unto life because He was lifted up unto death, that He bore our griefs and carried our sorrows, and with His stripes we are healed. I bear witness that He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities, that He was a man of sorrows acquainted with grief because upon Him were laid the transgressions of us all. 18

I bear witness that He came from God as a God to bind up the brokenhearted, to dry the tears from every eye, to proclaim liberty to the captive and open the prison doors to them that are bound. 19 I promise that because of your faithful response to the call to spread the gospel, He will bind up your broken hearts, dry your tears, and set you and your families free. That is my missionary promise to you and your missionary message to the world."

Well, Keith just woke up coughing up a storm...and complaining about his knees and ankles hurting...oh well...another late night...

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Hmmm...

Well, that was pretty short lived for something that I was (am) so excited about. For most of the past month my personal/spiritual time...whatever you wanna call it...has been listening to talks I downloaded to my phone. It has satisfied some of my need for spiritual food...but not so much for the whole personal/me time. I feel like as long as I keep moving I'm OK...I get so many things done and I feel so productive...but I'm having a really hard time sitting still and being spiritually productive so to speak. I need to work on that. Somehow, as much as I love Sheri Dew and my kids...I didn't exactly have listening to her talk, washing dishes, and feeding Gage...all at the same time...as my mental picture of me filling my cup. Now that it's 11 o'clock at night...I finally feel relaxed and wound down enough to sit. I absolutely love being a mom and I really need to work on relying more on the Savior. I know I can't do it on my own. Makes me think of in the Book of Mormon...you have that part where it talks about how the wicked were boasting in their own strength...so they were left in their own strength...and then you have the stripling warriors, who had no experience to boast of...but relied on the Lord...and were incredible in battle. So...here we go again.