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Endure to the End in
Charity
Elder
Hartman Rector, Jr.
Emeritus Member of the First Quorum of the Seventy

Hartman
Rector Jr., “Endure to the End in Charity,”
Ensign, Nov. 1994, 25
When a Seventy of the First Quorum becomes seventy
years old, he becomes emeritus. Or you can call it “emer-itis.”
It’s in the air; all you have to do is keep breathing
and you’ll get it. It seems that just about
everything I do of late, I am doing for the last
time, and so it is with speaking in general
conference.
I can’t say that this is doing any particular
violence to my sensitivities, however, because I have
never felt particularly comfortable in this position
behind this microphone anyway.
I do appreciate the opportunity to express my love to
my Brethren, most of whom I have seen called, and to
all the many strong Saints all over the world whom I
have had the privilege to know and serve with.
Yes, the gospel of Jesus Christ does truly make us
brothers and sisters and a great family of Jesus
Christ as we seek to follow him and become his sons
and his daughters (see
John
1:12;
Ether 3:14).
As most of you are aware, I am a convert to the
Church, having been baptized in Tokyo, Japan, back in
1952 while serving in the U.S. Navy during the Korean
conflict. I was born and reared in Missouri, where
much of the early history of this church took place.
But I had never heard anything about the Mormon
church. I was looking for the truth, and although I
had read the Bible and believed that Jesus Christ had
lived on the earth and had been resurrected, yet I
had so many unanswered questions—questions such as:
Why doesn’t God speak to man today as he did
anciently when the Bible was being written? How can
Jesus be his own father and the Holy Ghost too? Why
did Jesus have to be baptized when he had no sin?
Where was I before I was born, and where do I go when
I die? How can just believing in Christ save me when
I haven’t kept God’s Ten Commandments?
I knew there must be answers that I had not heard.
The answers came when Elders Ted Raban and Ronald
Flygare knocked on my door in San Diego, California,
in July 1951. My wife, Connie, let them in and
accepted a copy of the Book of Mormon from them. I
was in Hawaii at the time, attending a fourteen-week
training course preparatory to deployment to Korea.
When I returned home, Connie gave me a copy of the
Book of Mormon, and I began to read. I knew the book
was true before I had finished 2 Nephi—Nephi had
converted one more—and began to attend church in the
old Valencia Park Ward in San Diego. Because of my
preparation for deployment, I was not able to study
and attend church as I wanted to and longed for the
time when I could. The time came aboard the aircraft
carrier Philippine Seas, where I read fourteen
of the best books that have ever been written. They
included the standard works of the Church, plus the
writings of each of the Presidents of the Church from
Joseph Smith, Jr., to David O. McKay, plus Parley P.
and Orson Pratt and a few others. I was like a
starving man who had found food and drink for the
first time. I loved it. When we arrived in Japan, the
LDS group aboard ship decided I should be baptized.
So we traveled to the Tokyo mission home, where I
requested baptism. I was informed that I had not been
an investigator for the required one-year time
period; therefore, I could not be baptized. However,
I persisted. I asked to be interviewed. The interview
took an hour and a half, but in the end I received a
recommend for baptism and confirmation. McDonald B.
Johnson, the LDS group leader on the Philippine
Seas, baptized me, and Fred Gaylord Peterson
confirmed me, and I became a member of the Church on
26 February 1952. I was ordained a deacon that day
and subsequently to another office in the priesthood
each time the ship returned to Japan, until, on 26
July 1952, I was ordained an elder and returned to
San Diego in August, where my wife had been baptized
on March 1 of that same year. We were a united family
in the gospel of Jesus Christ and were looking
forward with much anticipation to being sealed
together with our three children in the Mesa Arizona
temple, which happened in May 1953.
Sixteen years after baptism, I was called by
President David O. McKay to be a member of the First
Council of the Seventy. That was in April of 1968. I
was the first convert to be called as a General
Authority since John Morgan, a period of eighty-six
years. I have served in this capacity for twenty-six
years.
I have found the gospel to be very simple but also
very profound. Once we have sufficient faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ that we believe he has paid for our
sins, then we will repent. And no one truly repents
until they believe in Christ.
You see, there is a difference between stopping
sinning and repentance. In the first instance we are
still guilty; in the second we are free of the sin
and guilt. People stop sinning all the time because
they are afraid they will get AIDS or die of lung
cancer or some other reason, but they do not get rid
of their sins. That can happen only when a nonmember
follows Jesus Christ down into the waters of baptism,
then comes forth and receives the Holy Ghost by the
laying on of hands by priesthood authority. That’s
how we get clean before the Lord (see
D&C
84:74).
Again, in the first instance, we are still in
our sins, but in the second instance, we are free
from our sins. The word of the Father to Nephi
was “Repent ye, repent ye, and be baptized in the
name of my Beloved Son.” Then Nephi reports he heard
a voice from the Father saying, “Yea, the words of my
Beloved are true and faithful. He that endureth to
the end, the same shall be saved” ( 2
Ne. 31:11, 15).
Then after baptism by the water and the Spirit, it
appears that all the Father requires of us is that we
endure to the end. What does that mean? I believe it
means basically three things.
One: We must continue to repent for the rest of
our lives because we will still make mistakes, and we
must go home clean or we can’t dwell with the Father
and the Son (see
D&C
84:74).
Two: We must continue to forgive others. If we
do not forgive others, we cannot obtain forgiveness
ourselves (see
D&C
64:9-10). And three: Yes, we must be
nice. If we’re not nice, I don’t think we’re
going to make it. In other words, we must have
charity, which is really love plus sacrifice. We must
serve our fellowmen, women, and children, and if we
do all else but we do not serve the poor, the needy,
the downtrodden, the oppressed, the sick and
afflicted, both temporally and spiritually, according
to their wants, we cannot retain a remission of our
sins from day to day. Without serving others, we
cannot “walk guiltless before God” ( Mosiah
4:26).
It is a fact that God is no respecter of persons. He
loves all of his children, and I believe he loves
them equally. Of course, he cannot bless his children
if they do not keep his commandments, for he has
said: “There is a law, irrevocably decreed in heaven
before the foundations of this world, upon which
all blessings are predicated—
“And when we obtain any blessing from God, it
is by obedience to that law upon which it is
predicated” ( D&C
130:20-21; emphasis added).
God tells us he cannot deny his words. Quite
obviously, he is much more pleased with us when we
keep his commandments, and he delights to bless us
when we do. But if we do not keep his commandments,
he will chasten us. It does not mean that he doesn’t
love us, any more than when parents discipline
children. In fact, it is because he does love
us that he chastens us that we might learn obedience
(see
Heb.
12:6;
D&C
95:1).
Then to walk guiltless before God, we must love and
serve others. His statement through King Benjamin
that “when ye are in the service of your fellow
beings ye are only in the service of your God” ( Mosiah
2:17), I believe, can properly be turned
around to say that “unless you are in the
service of your fellow beings you are not in
the service of your God.” Mormon expressed this
thought, which was recorded by his son Moroni, when
he said:
“Wherefore, my beloved brethren, if ye have not
charity, ye are nothing, for charity never faileth. …
“And whoso is found possessed of it at the last day,
it shall be well with him. …
“Wherefore, my beloved brethren, pray unto the Father
with all the energy of heart, that ye may be filled
with this love, which he hath bestowed upon all who
are true followers of his Son, Jesus Christ; that ye
may become the sons of God; that when he shall appear
we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is;
that we may have this hope; that we may be purified
even as he is pure” ( Moro.
7:46-48).
I am persuaded that only this charity, this pure love
of Christ, this love plus sacrifice, which is
exemplified in the work that goes on in our temples,
can save this nation and the world, for that matter
when the Lord comes. The Lord was willing to spare
Sodom and Gomorrah if Abraham could find just ten
good men, which he could not do. I presume I could
not have a more important hope for you and me than
that we may be filled with this charity, this pure
love of Christ, to serve our fellowman. I express
this hope to you in the holy name of Jesus Christ,
amen.
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