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“For I Will Lead You Along” |
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by Elder Neal A. Maxwell Ensign, May 1988, 7 |
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Summary (full text follows): "Our time already reflects yet another prophecy: 'Distress of nations, with perplexity' (Luke 21:25). Before modern times, global perplexity simply was not possible. Now, there is a quick transmission of some crises and problems from one nation to others--the consequences of debt-ridden economies, the spreading of diseases, the abuse of narcotics, and, perhaps most of all, a shared sense of near-helplessness in the face of such perplexities. Today, the assembled agonies of the world pass in reminding review on the nightly news. "In the last days, happily, the Church will grow extensively, with its membership being 'scattered upon all the face of the earth' (1 Ne. 14:14). Nevertheless, its dominions will still be comparatively 'small' because of 'wickedness,' which will close the ears of many to the gospel message (see 1 Ne. 14:12). "There will also be 'a great division among the people' (2 Ne. 30:10; see also D&C 63:54). This stressful polarization will, ironically, help in the final shaking of that strange confederacy, the 'kingdom of the devil,' in order that the honest in heart, even therein, may receive the truth (2 Ne. 28:19). "This 'great division' is what President Brigham Young also saw, saying: 'It was revealed to me in the commencement of this Church, that the Church would spread, prosper, grow and extend, and that in proportion to the spread of the Gospel among the nations of the earth, so would the power of Satan rise' (in Journal of Discourses, 13:280). "Happily, even though the world worsens around us, there will be many, many fine and wonderful men and women of all races and creeds--and of no religious creeds at all--who will continue to lead decent and useful lives. Besides, as Mormon said, scriptural commentary on declining conditions is not communicated 'to weigh thee down,' but, instead, to help us live so that Christ may 'lift thee up' (Moro. 9:25). "Thus, what I have said is not said in alarm at all, but, rather, so that we might be noticing and preparing. Prophecies are given, in part, that we 'might know and remember' that these things 'had been made known . . . beforehand, to the intent that [we] might believe' (Hel. 16:5). Today's inattentive people will be like an earlier, desensitized people who 'began to forget those signs and wonders which they had heard, and began to be less and less astonished, . . . and began to disbelieve all which they had heard and seen' (3 Ne. 2:1; see also 1 Pet. 3:17). If faithful, brothers and sisters, we lose nothing, even if, happily, like the ancient Ninevites, today's mortals were to repent. "So let us look at ourselves. For the Church, the scriptures suggest both an accelerated sifting and accelerated spiritual and numerical growth--with all this preceding the time when the people of God will be 'armed with righteousness'--not weapons--and when the Lord's glory will be poured out upon them (1 Ne. 14:14; see also 1 Pet. 4:17; D&C 112:25). The Lord is determined to have a tried, pure, and proven people (see D&C 100:16; D&C 101:4; D&C 136:31), and 'there is nothing that the Lord thy God shall take in his heart to do but what he will do it' (Abr. 3:17)." (Neal A. Maxwell, "For I Will Lead You Along," Ensign, May 1988, 7)
Full text: Thank you, President Benson, for that sermon on the first commandment, and even more, for the way in which you implement it by your expressions of your love for all of us.
Brothers and sisters, over the sweep of Christian
history, some believers have, by focusing on a few
prophecies while neglecting others, prematurely
expected the Second Coming. Today, while we are
obviously closer to that great moment, we are in the
same danger.
On the other hand, smugness is also a real danger. Of
Jesus’ first advent, the smug said, “It is not
reasonable that such a being as a Christ shall come” (Hel.
16:18). Declared Jesus of His second coming,
“Take heed … lest … that day come upon you unawares” (Luke
21:34-35; see also
Matt. 24:37-38;
Rev. 3:3;
D&C
45:26).
Peter wrote of the smug skeptics who would say, “Where
is the promise of his coming,” for do not “all things
continue as they were from the beginning”? (2
Pet. 3:4).
Some prophecies, such as the return of Jewish people to
Israel, were decades in their fulfillment (see
Ezek.
39:27). Other prophecies can be fulfilled in
a compressed period of time. Taking the restored gospel
“for a witness” to all the nations of the world
involves generations (Matt.
24:14), but a “desolating scourge” can cover
the land quickly (see
D&C 5:19).
Sadly, more than one qualifying possibility already
exists for such scourges (see
Mark
13:10,
D&C 5:19).
The blossoming of the desert “as the rose” involved
substantial time, yet significant moral decay can
happen within a single generation—whether in a nation
or in a family (see
Isa.
35:1;
Hel.
6:32;
Hel.
11:36;
Hel.
12:4).
The Middle East has been at the intersection of human
history so many times! Yet in our time the words of
Zechariah are especially descriptive, saying that
Jerusalem is to be “a cup of trembling” for “all the
people round about” and “a burdensome stone for all
people” (Zech.
12:2-3).
Hence, the need to keep our eyes on more than a few
leaves of the fig tree in order to know when summer is
nigh (see
Matt.
24:32). By analogy, it is one thing to
notice strong ocean breakers crashing against the
shore, heralding another oncoming storm, and quite
another to discern the powerful movements on the
ocean’s quake-jarred floor foretelling a terrible tidal
wave.
In the context of such cautions, I have no hesitancy in
saying that there are some signs—but certainly not
all—suggesting that “summer is nigh” (Matt.
24:32). We would do well to notice and to
ponder, but without either becoming preoccupied or
ignoring any sprouting leaves because of being
“overcharged” with the “cares of this life” (Luke
21:34).
We are told, by way of example, that some conditions
preceding the second coming of the Savior will be as in
the days of Noah (see
Matt. 24:37-39) and “also as it was in the
days of Lot” (Luke
17:28). Noah’s time was one of disobedience
and wickedness. People were uncomprehending and “knew
not until the flood came” (Matt.
24:39; see also
Gen. 6:5;
1
Pet. 3:20). The choking cares and pleasures
of this life led to the general rejection of Noah’s
prophetic message. Two especially interesting words are
used in the Bible to describe Noah’s time: violence
and corruption (Gen.
6:11). Violence and corruption, seldom
strangers to the human scene, appear to be increasing
today.
Some of the coarseness and cruelty present at the time
of Noah will be replicated, for “the love of many shall
wax cold” (Matt.
24:12). Also, peace will have been “taken
from the earth” (D&C
1:35).
Peter wrote of how “the longsuffering of God waited in
the days of Noah” until, as other scriptures advise,
the wickedness exceeded that among all God’s creations
(1
Pet. 3:20; see also
Moses
7:36). A very cruel society existed, one
“without affection” in which people hated “their own
blood” (Moses
7:33). Given the abuses by humans of other
humans, in His longsuffering, God waited as long as
even He could.
Those in Lot’s day ate, drank, bought, sold, planted,
and builded amid gross wickedness (Luke
17:28), vexing Lot with their “filthy
conversation,” or, as it says in the Greek, they
“oppressed [him] by [their] outrageous behavior” (2
Pet. 2:7b). In their grossness, there was
also gross neglect of the poor (see
Ezek.
16:49).
Our time already reflects yet another prophecy:
“Distress of nations, with perplexity” (Luke
21:25). Before modern times, global
perplexity simply was not possible. Now, there is a
quick transmission of some crises and problems from one
nation to others—the consequences of debt-ridden
economies, the spreading of diseases, the abuse of
narcotics, and, perhaps most of all, a shared sense of
near-helplessness in the face of such perplexities.
Today, the assembled agonies of the world pass in
reminding review on the nightly news.
In the last days, happily, the Church will grow
extensively, with its membership being “scattered upon
all the face of the earth” (1
Ne. 14:14). Nevertheless, its dominions will
still be comparatively “small” because of “wickedness,”
which will close the ears of many to the gospel message
(see
1 Ne.
14:12).
There will also be “a great division among the people”
(2
Ne. 30:10; see also
D&C
63:54). This stressful polarization will,
ironically, help in the final shaking of that strange
confederacy, the “kingdom of the devil,” in order that
the honest in heart, even therein, may receive the
truth (2
Ne. 28:19).
This “great division” is what President Brigham Young
also saw, saying: “It was revealed to me in the
commencement of this Church, that the Church would
spread, prosper, grow and extend, and that in
proportion to the spread of the Gospel among the
nations of the earth, so would the power of Satan rise”
(in Journal of Discourses, 13:280).
Happily, even though the world worsens around us, there
will be many, many fine and wonderful men and women of
all races and creeds—and of no religious creeds at
all—who will continue to lead decent and useful lives.
Besides, as Mormon said, scriptural commentary on
declining conditions is not communicated “to weigh thee
down,” but, instead, to help us live so that Christ may
“lift thee up” (Moro.
9:25).
Thus, what I have said is not said in alarm at all,
but, rather, so that we might be noticing and
preparing. Prophecies are given, in part, that we
“might know and remember” that these things “had been
made known … beforehand, to the intent that [we] might
believe” (Hel.
16:5). Today’s inattentive people will be
like an earlier, desensitized people who “began to
forget those signs and wonders which they had heard,
and began to be less and less astonished, … and began
to disbelieve all which they had heard and seen” (3
Ne. 2:1; see also
1
Pet. 3:17). If faithful, brothers and
sisters, we lose nothing, even if, happily, like the
ancient Ninevites, today’s mortals were to repent.
So let us look at ourselves. For the Church, the
scriptures suggest both an accelerated sifting and
accelerated spiritual and numerical growth—with all
this preceding the time when the people of God will be
“armed with righteousness”—not weapons—and when the
Lord’s glory will be poured out upon them (1
Ne. 14:14; see also
1
Pet. 4:17;
D&C
112:25). The Lord is determined to have a
tried, pure, and proven people (see
D&C
100:16;
D&C
101:4;
D&C
136:31), and “there is nothing that the Lord
thy God shall take in his heart to do but what he will
do it” (Abr.
3:17).
How can we, as individual members of the Church,
survive spiritually if we do not honor our covenants?
How can we survive spiritually if we break outright the
covenants made at the time of baptism or in the holy
temples? How can we be on the Lord’s side during the
“great division” if we mirror the world’s materialism
and selfishness (see
2 Ne.
30:10)?
Members of the Church need not and should not be
alarmists. They need not be deflected from quietly and
righteously pursuing their daily lives, “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).
In 1836, the Prophet Joseph pled with the Lord “to
confound, and astonish, and to bring to shame and
confusion, all those who have spread lying reports
abroad, over the world” (D&C
109:29). As a people, we were so blessed
recently, and we will be again.
True, the enemies and the critics of the Lord’s work
will not relent; they only regroup. Even among the
flock, here and there and from time to time, are a few
wolves, wearing various styles of sheep’s
clothing—ironically, just before the shearing season! A
few defectors and “highminded” traitors (2
Tim. 3:4) even go directly to the “great and
spacious building” to hire on (1
Ne. 8:26). There recruits are celebrated and
feted until—like their predecessors—they have faded
into the dark swamps of history. As President Heber C.
Kimball said, divine justice will eventually require
that they “pay all the debt of [all] the trouble that
they have brought upon the innocent” (in Journal of
Discourses, 5:94).
Thus, there is no need to be surprised, nor to fear,
when certain conditions come upon mankind. Furthermore,
the Lord has given to us some remarkable assurances
about the Restoration’s lead Prophet and the restored
Church:
“Behold, that seer will the Lord bless; and they that
seek to destroy him shall be confounded” (2
Ne. 3:14) “in mine own due time” (D&C
71:10).
“And the righteous need not fear, for they are those
who shall not be confounded. But it is the kingdom of
the devil … who need fear, and tremble, and quake” (1
Ne. 22:22-23).
If we are faithful and obedient while in this good and
beautiful world, we will later inherit “a far better
land of promise” (Alma
37:45), “a city … whose builder and maker is
God” (Heb.
11:10), a city within which are “many
mansions” (John
14:2-3).
Paul wrote, “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither
have entered into the heart of man [meaning we cannot
even imagine] the things which God hath prepared for
them that love him” (1
Cor. 2:9).
The spiritually submissive will make it through. The
word of God will lead the man and the woman of Christ
“in a strait and narrow course across that everlasting
gulf of misery” (Hel.
3:29) and land their souls at the right hand
of God in the kingdom of heaven, “to sit down with
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the holy prophets who
have been ever since the world began” (Alma
7:25; see also
Ether
12:4).
Those who have overcome the world will themselves then
be overcome by the generosity of the Father, as the
Father shares “all that [the] Father hath” (D&C
84:38). The faithful will hear those special
words, “Enter into the joy of [your] Lord” (D&C
51:19), for “they who have endured the
crosses of the world, and despised the shame of it,
they shall inherit the kingdom of God, … and their joy
shall be full forever” (2
Ne. 9:18).
The light that Lamoni received “infused such joy into
his soul” (Alma
19:6). Yet, incomparable incandescence lies
ahead, for “the day cometh … [when] all things shall be
revealed … which ever have been … and which ever will
be” (2
Ne. 27:11).
Here in mortality, we already know moments when,
“because of the great goodness of God,” there is a
“gushing out of many tears” (3
Ne. 4:33). Our joy is brim (see
Alma
26:11). Yet this is but a foretaste of the
ultimate homecoming, when our cups will not only be
brim, but will run over without ceasing!
The gospel’s sure samplings tell us even now, in
Jacob’s words, of “things as they really will be” (Jacob
4:13), like beautiful, beckoning postcards
from that “far better land”! (Alma
37:45).
Meanwhile, perhaps “summer is nigh” (Matt.
24:32;
D&C
35:16;
D&C
45:37). We are here in mortality, and the
only way to go is through; there isn’t any around! Yet
our Deliverer assures us: “be of good cheer, for I will
lead you along. The kingdom is yours and the blessings
thereof are yours, and the riches of eternity are
yours” (D&C
78:18).
Brothers and sisters, it is my testimony to the Church
that the Lord will lead us along, just as promised. He
balances giving to the Church and its people the
needed, specific directions, with providing the
relevant learning experiences, including having our
faith and patience tried in order to be strengthened.
Thus He leads us along, but He desires that during that
process we take His yoke upon us in order to learn of
Him by our personal experiences. We surely feel the
weight of that yoke at times, but the path is clear.
Jesus, our Shepherd, has “marked the path and led the
way, And ev’ry point defines” (Hymns, 1985, no.
195). His clearly defined footprints are easy to see.
They are pressed distinctly and deeply into the soil of
the second estate, deeply and distinctly because of the
enormous weight which pressed down upon Him, including
the awful burden of all of our individual sins.
Only He could have carried it all.
I thank the Savior personally for bearing all which I
added to his hemorrhaging at every pore for all of
humanity in Gethsemane. I thank Him for bearing what I
added to the decibels of His piercing soul-cry atop
Calvary, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
© 2002 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. |