Saturday, April 13, 2013

The Dawning of a Brighter Day: Some thoughts on Easter and the Atonement

This is a talk that I gave in church on Easter Sunday, March 31:

It had started with the best of intentions. My dad and I were going up into the mountains near Palm Springs, California, to experience the wonders of nature. The scorching heat of the Palm Springs summer cooled as we climbed 1000 feet up the side of the mountain in a trolley. The welcome relief of the cooler air brightened our prospects for a great afternoon’s journey and night out under the stars. Equipped with a pair of sleeping bags, we set out on our journey.

After hiking down several hundred feet along mountainside trails, we left our sleeping bags in the hollow of a tree and ascended to the lodge for dinner before descending back down the then darkened path. The cheap one dollar flashlights gave out quickly, plunging us into the quiet stillness of the cooling night as we groped along our way.

We hiked back to the spot where we had placed our sleeping bags. We were eager to jump into our sleeping bags—especially since we were not appropriately dressed for temperatures in the low 50s—but could not locate the hollow of the tree. We retraced our steps over and over again, looking for signs of familiarity. With the easily-identifiable tree now bathed in blackness, we could not locate it—or the sleeping bags housed within it. Nor could we go back to the lodge, for it was now closed. We were stranded.

It was a rough night. We huddled together to keep warm. We tried to find refuge from the increasing wind. We awoke every few minutes thinking that hours had passed, only to be disappointed. We wished that daybreak would come.

In that long night, many prayers were offered that we would be kept safe and warm. We just wanted to make it through the night.

I suppose that our experience may have mirrored that of the ancient apostles on the Sea of Galilee. A storm had arisen and the apostles battled mightily against the fury of the elements. In desperation, they awakened the Master and cried, “Master, carest thou not that we perish?” He came to their rescue, calming the storms and their fears.

I testify that the Savior can do likewise in our extremities.

My purposes today are to testify of the hope and promises of the Atonement, the saving power of the Atonement, and the enabling power of the Atonement.

First, Christ’s Atonement brings us hope. President Boyd K. Packer explains:

It was understood from the beginning that in mortality we would fall short of being perfect. It was not expected that we would live without transgressing one law or another.

“For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord.”2

From the Pearl of Great Price, we understand that “no unclean thing can dwell [in the kingdom of God],”3 and so a way was provided for all who sin to repent and become worthy of the presence of our Father in Heaven once more.

A Mediator, a Redeemer, was chosen, one who would live His life perfectly, commit no sin, and offer “himself a sacrifice for sin, to answer the ends of the law, unto all those who have a broken heart and a contrite spirit; and unto none else can the ends of the law be answered.”4

I testify that Jesus Christ fulfilled that role in every respect. He lived as man, suffering pains and afflictions and temptations of every kind so that He might know how to succor His people, according to their infirmities. He took upon Himself the pains and sicknesses of His people and gave His life so that He could take it again (Alma 7:11-12). His rising from the grave brought life to the lifeless and hope to the hopeless, having forever conquered death.

Perhaps the most comforting of all words in the English language are these, “He is not here, for He is risen.” Risen to what? Risen to life. Risen to hope. Risen with healing in His wings (2 Nephi 25:13). He banished death and the sting of death forever.

The triumph of Christ over death means that we can triumph over our trials, troubles, and afflictions as well. We all have moments of darkness, uncertainty, and infirmity. Some of these afflictions may be physical, as in the darkness of the night in the mountains near Palm Springs, or spiritual, as in the anguish that Alma the Younger experienced prior to receiving a remission of his sins. Some may be self-induced through sin or poor choices, while others may be heaped upon us through circumstance or by others’ choices. Whatever the source, Christ can rescue us if we turn to Him. This is the saving power of the Atonement that I mentioned earlier.

So what do we make of the Atonement of Jesus Christ? How do we make the Atonement an active and enabling power in our lives? Here are some suggestions on things that we can do:

1.       Repent our sins
2.       Press forward in faith even with an imperfect understanding

First, we must repent of our sins. We cannot truly come unto Him unless we continually put off the natural man. “The promise of the gospel of Jesus Christ and the Atonement,” President Packer explains, is “to take anyone who comes, anyone who will join, and put them through an experience so that at the end of their life, they can go through the veil having repented of their sins and having been washed clean through the blood of Christ.”12 To become clean, we must repent.

Second, we must press forward press in faith, even when we do not have a perfect understanding of what we should do.

We all have our moments of indecision, of struggle, pain, confusion, and frustration. We may at times feel “helpless against the ferocious power of the elements.” We may struggle through terrible storms, wondering if the Master even cares if we perish (Mark 4:38). I testify that He does care and that things will work out in the end if we keep pressing forward in faith.

Sometimes we just won’t have the answers. We may struggle to understand God’s will for us or which direction we should go. We may wonder if there is a pavilion hiding God from us. If we will just keep moving forward, He will reveal Himself to us.

I had been in the mission for less than a year and was made a senior companion. Feeling the weight of this burden upon my shoulders, I hoped to see some success. I had not seen like I had with a previous companion as a new senior companion. Feeling downhearted, concerned and anxious about my worthiness before the Lord, erroneously believing that success and worthiness were inseparably connected, I pleaded for strength that I might continue my mission. I wanted some manifestation that God was aware of my circumstances and my plight. I wanted to know if I was worthy before the Lord since I had not seen any outward evidence of success. As I knelt by my bed, feeling that I was in my extremity, He did visit me with His Holy Spirit, provided assurance to me that He does care, and gave me courage to keep moving forward.

In our struggles, we have to keep pushing along, putting one step in front of another.

One of Liam’s favorite books this year is entitled Pete the Cate – I Love My White Shoes, by Eric Litwin. In the story a cat named Pete is walking along, singing his song, when he steps in a mound of strawberries, which stain his white shoes. He then steps in blueberries, then mud, and finally in a puddle. After each time he steps in something new, the narrator asks, “Did Pete cry? Goodness no! He just walking along, singing his song.”

We too have to keep moving along, singing our song—the song of redeeming love spoken of by Alma (Alma 5:26). Life is hard not because the gospel of Jesus Christ is hard. Quite the opposite. The covenants and commandments of the gospel of Jesus Christ make life much easier. It is easier because we are blessed with the Holy Spirit as we conform to the principles of the gospel of Jesus Christ. They provide direction and testify of a loving Heavenly Father.

The Atonement can be a real part of every part of our lives. In late December 2012 I was attempting to complete a project for graduate school. The work was challenging. I felt inadequate to deliver the required results. As I struggled to complete the necessary coursework, I wondered how it could all be done. In my moments of fear and anxiety, I felt that if I just continued to act, to move forward, an effectual door would be opened to me and that God would help me.

The gospel of Jesus Christ requires us to act. Elder D. Todd Christofferson explains:

At times you may not know quite what to do or what to say—just move forward. Begin to act, and the Lord assures that “an effectual door shall be opened for [you]” (D&C 118:3). Begin to speak, and He promises, “You shall not be confounded before men; for it shall be given you in the very hour, yea, in the very moment, what ye shall say” (D&C 100:5–6). It is true that we are in many ways ordinary and imperfect, but we have a perfect Master who wrought a perfect Atonement, and we have call upon His grace and His priesthood. As we repent and purge our souls, we are promised that we will be taught and endowed with power from on high (see D&C 43:16) (D. Todd Christofferson, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/brethren-we-have-work-to-do?lang=eng&query="begin+to+act"+"effectual+door")

We must act, even without having all of the answers. If we choose not to act but remain in indecision, the tender mercies of the Savior cannot reach us. Our hearts become hardened and unworthy and unable to act.

Once when traveling with Elder and Sister Russell M. Nelson, we left our hotel in Bombay, India, to catch a plane for Karachi, Pakistan, and then on to Islamabad. When we got to the chaotic airport, our flight had been canceled. Impatiently, I said to the man at the airline counter, “What do you expect us to do, just give up and go back to the hotel?” He said with great dignity, “Sir, you never go back to the hotel.” We rummaged about the airport, found a flight, kept the appointment in Islamabad, and even had a night’s sleep. Sometimes life is like that: we are left to press forward and endure frustrated expectations—refusing to “go back to the hotel”! Otherwise, such “give-up-itis” will affect all seasons of life. Besides, the Lord knows how many miles we have to go “before [we] sleep”! (“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”) (Elder Maxwell, http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2004/04/remember-how-merciful-the-lord-hath-been?lang=eng&query="sometimes+life+is+like+that")

Why do I mention these items in connection with Easter Sunday? Because they witness that Christ is the God of the empty tomb. Because He came to Earth, He knows our every heartache, trial, trouble, tribulation, and affliction. He came not only to save us from death, but to enable us to live again with our Father in Heaven, having life everlasting.

The Atonement is not a single event in our lives. It is the great enabling power that sustains us through our mortal journey. It is the light that lights our way. It provides meaning and hope to an otherwise treacherous and difficulty journey.

Further, the hope and glory of the Resurrection mean that we can trust in God, that He will deliver us from all sorrow, pain, hopelessness, and death. Being thus promised, we can go forward in faith, trusting that all good things will eventually come to those who believe. It will all be worth it in the end.

 

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