Trust in the Lord
I gave this talk in Church a few weeks ago.
There are things going wrong that we all know about.
-Fires breaking out around the world
-lockdowns and disease
-Massive debt and deficit
-gender issues, gender identity issues
-secret combinations, the Book of Mormon says
-BYU infected
-an aggressive China
-Coronavirus exposing how dysfunctional the US is
-all time low birthrates
-declining IQ
-trust levels in our society keep going down
-obesity is at an all time high, we are less healthy than we have ever been
-social media is more addictive and more soul-destroying than ever
-pre- Corona but death rates were going up and life expectancies were going back down
[I elaborated on some points a little but I still went through it like a list, boom, boom, boom. I had a number of people afterwards tell me it was a really disturbing list, they knew about all or most of these things but hadn’t put them together]
There are things going wrong that you know about. I know you well enough to know that some of you have been afflicted by these things, but some of these only you know
-divorce [we have a sad situation where a wife in our ward who is self-absorbed divorced her husband for histrionic reasons recently]
-addiction . . . to all sorts of things, in all sorts of ways
-lost friends
-struggles with sin
-feeling judged
-depression
-family tension
-dreams you’ve given up on
-dreams you never dared to have
-imperfect marriage
-no marriage
-ailments
-kids you couldn’t have
-straying children, straying siblings
-betrayals
-uncertainty
-job loss
-pointlessness
-poverty
[Again I went down the list, boom, boom, boom]
That is the dark. I just told you the dark.
And the light shineth in the darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not
Let’s talk about the Jesus Christ we all know
For the grieving father, he brought the father’s daughter back.
He wept when his friend died.
He fed people who were hungry.
He calmed the waves when his apostles were scared.
We all know his personal philosophy. “A certain man had 100 sheep. Ninety-nine were safe. One was lost. He went after the lost and he rejoiced when he found it.”
[I was still going down the list but slower, a little more reverently.]
That’s not all.
When a sinner was lowered down to him, he healed the man, and told him to never sin again.
In the Sermon on the Mount he taught us how to live in shining purity.
He promised Abraham, and us, land, seed, and priesthood.
He appeared to Joseph.
He gave Joseph priesthood power, and through him all of us. We have priesthood power here with us today.
We know his power. He has legions of angels, he controls the sea, he flattens mountains, he can stop the sun.
He can overcome anything. He already has. In Gethsemane he felt every pain and every consequence and he overcame them all.
He says, “I have trodden the winepress alone, yea, even the winepress of the wrath of the Almighty God.”
We know his goodness. He rather died and suffered all than do one wrong thing.
He knows you. He knows your name. Your name is written on his palms, on the hands.
He has numbered every hair of your head.
That’s the Jesus Christ we all know.
There there is the Jesus Christ that only you know. Your own personal experiences with him.
Grace
Repentance
Love
Miracles
Hope
Glory
The scriptures say we should have faith. Faith is just an old-fashioned word meaning trust. You can trust in Jesus. He cares for you. He does his best for you.
Several decades back one of the brethren told a story. We made it into a church video. It was Hugh B. Brown. He was an officer in the Canadian army and doing well. He had goals. He went in for some kind of review board to be promoted to General. But they rudely told him they would not pass him, because he was LDS. He left crushed and angry. All the way home he was shaking his fist at heaven. “Why? Why? I tried so hard to follow you and then you let them end my dreams because I do.” Awhile after he bought a farm. There was a currant bush that was wildly overgrown. It was almost a tree but it bore little fruit. He pruned it way back. After he was done, he saw a little tear of sap drip silently off one branch like the bush was crying. And he told the bush, don’t cry, I didn’t want you to be a tree, I want you to be a currant bush. In that instant the Spirit brought to his mind the wreck many years before of his career in the Canadian army. He saw that he himself had been pruned, and was now better off than before, because he had grown the way the Lord wanted, and not the way he had planned.
He, the Lord Jesus Christ, has plans for you. He will make you greener and healthier and more overflowing with fruit than you can imagine. He cares for you. He does the best for you.
A man died recently, and in an obituary I read something he wrote. He said,
I have no grounds for optimism.
I have every reason for hope.
Trust in the Lord.
JRL in AZ
October 16, 2020
Yes! What a wonderful reminder. And I love how you built your talk with that parallel structure. Very effective.
Evenstar
October 16, 2020
This brought tears to my eyes. Thank you, G.
Bookslinger
October 17, 2020
If your next talk is webcasted at the church website, pls email me the date/time/Url.
G.
October 19, 2020
Books, thanks! We don’t broadcast. Anyhow, I reckon you should know I only type up the talks that go over well. They don’t all. You might be disappointed.
Bookslinger
October 19, 2020
Up until Gen Conf, our local wards were allowed up to 25 people in attendance.
Each ward had the chapel all day, once a month, and had as many 25-person sessions as needed. So, everyone could go once a month.
But, those over 65, or with co-morbid conditions were recommended to not attend in person.
The sunday before Gen Conf was a stake devotional/presentation, broadcast through the church’s server system.
Starting the sunday after conference, the three wards in our bldg could go every sunday, and with a 100 person limit. So our ward has an “A” and a “B” group, on altering sundays. And it is broadcast through the church’s system/website. Those over 65 and with co-morbid conditions are still asked to not attend.
I missed the 11th, but was able to catch our ward broadcast on the 18th. The screen even had the chyron with unit name and speaker name.
The administration of the sacrament comes after the closing prayer and is not broadcast.
—
A friend in a nearby ward told me that 2/3rds of the pre-Covid regular attendees there fall into the over-65 or co-morbid category. So, at 1/3rd, they need only one session.
Fraggle
October 20, 2020
Is it bad that I couldn’t imagine your ‘Things going wrong that we all know about’ list being spoken aloud in a sacrament meeting local to me without a riot resulting?
G.
October 20, 2020
Yes.
E.C.
October 20, 2020
@ Books,
For our YSA stake, we’re back to regular two-hour church (masked and socially distanced), but most activities except Home Evening have been curtailed. Since one of the main purposes of a YSA ward is to meet people, and 90% of attendees (excepting the ward and stake leadership) are 18-30 years old, I guess they considered the risk to be fairly minimal.