I love the scripture I just read in the Book of Mormon and wanted to share:
And the Lord would not suffer that they should stop beyond the sea in the wilderness, but he would that they should come forth even unto the land of promise, which was choice above all other lands. (Ether 2:7)Sometimes the Lord doesn't let us stop because He knows there are incredible vistas ahead. Keep building those barges. Don't give up.
And here is an amazing follow-up quote I read soon after that scripture:
"With
mortal eyes, we might be tempted to envision that a more fitting path
for such a man and such a moment would be a path of greater ease,
efficiency, and acclaim. In recognition of the earth-shattering events
about to happen as a consequence of this boy entering this town at this
time, could not the Lord, who so carefully orchestrated the placement of
the golden plates over a millennia earlier, have provided a straighter,
more comfortable and heralded path of arrival?
Yes, He surely could have, but He did not.
There was no prominent, prophetic anointing of Joseph in his childhood (see 1 Samuel 16:11–13). There was no directive dream pointing him to a promised land (see 1 Nephi 5:4–5). There was no curious Liahona to help his family avoid missteps along the way (see 1 Nephi 16:10; Alma 37:38).
And there certainly was no open-air limousine traveling along a sunny,
streamlined parade route with cheering masses providing a triumphant
welcome.
Rather,
for Joseph and his family, there was a wildly meandering trail of
sorrow marked with bad luck, ill health, poor judgment, natural
disaster, crushing pain, callous injustice, continuing obscurity, and
unrelenting poverty. This is not to suggest that the Smith family lived
in one continual round of abject misery; they did not. But the path to
Palmyra was anything other than direct, prosperous, and publicly
notable. Lame, limp, and bloodied, the Prophet literally had to be
carried to his unparalleled rendezvous with destiny by a nameless
stranger.
Remember this as perhaps the first lesson of Joseph’s life and the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. In spite of failure, mishap, and bitter opposition—and in many cases precisely because
of those things—Joseph Smith got exactly where he needed to be to
fulfill his mission. So, if now or on some future day, you look around
and see that other perhaps less-devoted acquaintances are succeeding in
their jobs when you just lost yours; if major illness puts you on your
back just at the moment critical tasks of service seem to come calling;
if a call to a prominent position goes to someone else; if a missionary
companion seems to learn the language faster; if well-meaning efforts
still somehow lead to disaster with a fellow ward member, a neighbor, or
an investigator; if news from home brings word of financial setback or
mortal tragedy you can do nothing about; or if, day after day, you
simply feel like a bland and beaten background player in a gospel drama
that really seems made for the happiness of others, just know this:
many such things were the lot of Joseph Smith himself at the very
moment he was being led to the stage of the single most transcendent
thing to happen on this earth since the events of Golgotha and the
Garden Tomb nearly 2,000 years earlier.
“But,” you may say, “my life and earthly destiny will never be like that of the Prophet Joseph.”
That
probably is true. But it is also true that your lives do matter to God,
and your eternal potential and that of every soul you will meet is no
less grand and significant than that of the Prophet Joseph himself.
Thus, just like our beloved Joseph, you must never give up, give in, or
give out when life in general, or missionary work in particular, gets utterly painful, confusing, or dull. Rather, as Paul teaches, you must see that “all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose” (Romans 8:28; emphasis added).
Just
as He did with young Joseph Smith, God is shaping and directing you
every single day to ends more glorious than you can know!"
No comments:
Post a Comment