“Be of
Good Cheer”
General Relief Society Meeting
Jeanne
Inouye
Provo Sixteenth Ward, Provo Utah Edgemont Stake
“Be
of Good Cheer,” Ensign, Nov. 1993, 96
When I was seventeen years old, I received a
patriarchal blessing. I was admonished to seek a
companion who could take me to the temple and
blessed that I would become a mother in Israel. I
subsequently took it for granted that I would
finish high school, continue my studies for some
time, and then marry and begin a family.
But I was still unmarried in my thirties. By
then I had come to understand that the promises
of my patriarchal blessing might not be realized
during my mortal life. Although I understood that
if worthy and faithful, I would eventually enjoy
every blessing, I was still troubled. I wondered
whether I could be happy if marriage and family
did not come in the ways I had desired. During
one difficult period, I went often to the temple.
On one occasion, I was given a clear message from
God. I was told that I did not need to be afraid.
As I pondered that experience, I understood
that my happiness did not depend on the timing of
marriage and family blessings nor on the other
conditions of my life but upon trust in God and
obedience to him. Our Heavenly Father knows and
loves each of us; he knows the circumstances and
challenges of our lives, and he will help us. The
scriptures teach, “Wherefore, be of good cheer,
and do not fear, for I the Lord am with you, and
will stand by you” (D&C
68:6).
As it turned out, I did marry. I was
thirty-four, and my husband was thirty-seven. We
wanted to begin our family quickly, but children
did not come easily. We told Heavenly Father that
if he would give us a child, we would dedicate
that child to his service. When I was
thirty-seven, our first child, a daughter, was
born. We asked our Heavenly Father for another
child and again promised that we would consecrate
this child to his will. When I was almost forty,
we had a son. We asked for more children but did
not receive them.
Emily is now almost ten and Danny is seven,
and we are trying to raise them in fulfillment of
the promises that we have made. Like Latter-day
Saint parents everywhere, we acknowledge that God
has given us our children, and we are trying to
help them learn to love and serve him.
I still have much to learn about raising
children, but the Relief Society has given me the
opportunity to share some ideas that have come
from my own experiences and from my conversations
with friends and family members. They are related
to the conviction that we may indeed be of good
cheer, for the Lord will be with us and will help
us with the varying but inevitable challenges
that will come to us all.
One thing I have learned is that motherhood
entails difficult decisions. When our first child
was born, I had been working for about twelve
years, first as a teacher and later as a lawyer.
I wondered whether to continue working. My
husband’s income was sufficient to meet our
needs, but we were about twenty years older than
most new parents. I wondered whether we would
both survive to raise our children and, if I were
widowed, how I would provide for them. I wondered
how difficult it would be to find a job at the
age of sixty should a need arise as our children
entered college or received mission calls.
President Kimball, who was then the prophet,
had counseled the sisters of the Church: “Some
women, because of circumstances beyond their
control, must work. We understand that. … Do
not, however, make the mistake of being drawn off
into secondary tasks which will cause the neglect
of your eternal assignments such as giving birth
to and rearing the spirit children of our Father
in Heaven. Pray carefully over all your
decisions” (Spencer W. Kimball, Ensign,
Nov. 1979, p. 103; see also My Beloved
Sisters, Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co.,
1979, p. 41).
I took this counsel seriously. I knew that I
had to decide whether I was among those who must
work. After praying earnestly about the matter, I
sought a priesthood blessing from my husband. The
blessing promised that I would be able to make a
decision that would be good for our family but
did not indicate what the decision should be. I
tried to foresee the effect my decision would
have on my husband, my children, and me and to
listen for inspiration. My choice was to become a
full-time homemaker.
I have not regretted that decision. I have
loved being home with the children, watching them
grow, and helping them learn. But I remain aware
that a time may come when I must provide for my
family. Having tried to make a wise decision and
to do those things I can to maintain employable
skills, I feel I must and can trust the Lord to
help me should such a need arise.
Formulating priorities is an ongoing process
for us all. Sisters throughout the Church, many
in circumstances far more difficult than mine,
have prayerfully considered the counsel of the
prophets and sought the guidance of the Holy
Ghost as they too have endeavored to make wise
decisions regarding the well-being of their
families. And though their decisions have been
inevitably varied and diverse, and sometimes
misunderstood by others, I believe that they too
must and can trust the Lord to help them fulfill
their responsibilities.
When we have been honest with ourselves and
humble before the Lord in decisions about work
and in the myriad decisions involved in
mothering, we can go forward with courage. “For
God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of
power, and of love, and of a sound mind” (2
Tim. 1:7).
As I have attempted to establish priorities, I
have learned that we may almost always have too
much to do. As a mother at home with only two
children, I have too much to do. How much greater
the demands are for women who work outside the
home or whose families are large or who are
parenting their children alone! As I think about
our time constraints, I conclude that God has not
intended that we should be able to do everything
we would like to do. If there were not more to do
than we are individually capable of doing, we
wouldn’t have to make choices and we would
never realize what we value most.
It is often difficult to know what the most
important things are. We are blessed to raise our
children in a time when the gospel has been
restored and when God has called prophets to help
us with decision making. I am grateful for the
direction given us by President Ezra Taft Benson.
In preparing for this talk,I have studied again
his counsel regarding the ways that mothers can
bless the lives of their children. I would like
to share my experience in implementing one of his
suggestions.
President Benson counseled us, as have other
prophets, to read the scriptures as a family each
day. For the past several years, our family has
been trying to do that. Last year, however, I
noticed a problem developing. Our children
practice musical instruments, and I encourage
them to do this in the morning when there are
fewer distractions. But sometimes they would go
to bed late and get up late. On those days they
would not have enough time to finish practicing,
dress, eat, and read the scriptures before going
out the door. The activity usually slighted was
scripture study. Sometimes we would read a verse
or two, and sometimes we’d say we’d get to it
after school, but our efforts were inconsistent.
This year I realized that my priorities were
wrong. It occurred to me that I might be
conveying to the children that the study of music
was more important than the study of the gospel.
I decided that on those mornings when time was
short, we would study the scriptures and postpone
music practice. I want to bear you my testimony
that I have felt a great peace as we have
followed the counsel of the prophet in this
matter.
To accept the guidance of our Heavenly Father,
through the scriptures and through his prophets,
is a source of much strength and courage. We may
not be able to do everything, but he will bless
us in our efforts to do those things that he has
asked us to do. Like Nephi, we can do the things
the Lord has commanded, for he “giveth no
commandments unto the children of men, save he
shall prepare a way for them that they may
accomplish the thing which he commandeth them”
(1
Ne. 3:7).
Another source of courage has been the
experiences that have taught me that God will
give mothers guidance concerning the individual
needs of their children. Some of my most fervent
prayers have been for blessings for my children
and for guidance in directing them. While answers
have most often come in the peaceful confirmation
of a planned course of action, I have sometimes
been surprised with the clarity of new ideas
presented to my mind.
God will do much more. Every woman who has
raised children worries about the mistakes she
has made. I feel deep sorrow when I realize that
I have hurt my children’s feelings, been
impatient, or let opportunities to bless them
slip by. But each of us may have hope in the
atonement of Christ, not only that we may repent
and be forgiven but that through his grace our
children can be healed of the emotional wounds we
may have inflicted and compensated for the errors
we may have made. Christ has said, “Peace I
leave with you, my peace I give unto you. … Let
not your heart be troubled, neither let it be
afraid” (John
14:27).
I am grateful to be a mother. I bear testimony
that mothering is, in the words of my patriarchal
blessing, “a great and important work given to
women of the Church.” I thank Heavenly Father
for this privilege to assist in his work—“to
bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of
man” (Moses
1:39).
I bear testimony of his love and interest in
helping us, of the accessibility of his guidance
through prophets and prayer, and of his kindness
and forgiveness for the errors we may make. As
mothers in Zion and as sisters in the gospel of
Jesus Christ, we are on the Lord’s errand. We
may “be of good cheer,” for he will be with
us and stand by us. In the name of Jesus Christ,
amen.
© 2001 Intellectual Reserve, Inc.
All rights reserved.
|