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The Message:
A Prophet’s Counsel and Prayer for Youth
by President
Gordon B. Hinckley
Text of a talk given to
youth and young single adults on November 12, 2000, at
the Conference Center in Salt Lake City and broadcast by
satellite throughout the Church.
"I make you a promise that
God will not forsake you if you walk in His paths with
the guidance of His commandments."

Gordon B.
Hinckley, “A Prophet’s Counsel and Prayer for Youth,”
New Era, Jan. 2001, 4
I think there never before was a meeting anything like
this in this Church. There are so many of you here
tonight. How good you look.
Some of you have come with doubts. Some
have come with high expectations. I want you to know that
I have been on my knees asking the Lord to bless me with
the power and the capacity and the language to reach into
your hearts.
Beyond this hall are hundreds of
thousands of others who are participating with us. To
each of you I say welcome. I am glad for this tremendous
opportunity to speak to you, and I recognize how
important it is.
I am now old in years—90 plus. I have
lived a long time, and I have lived with great love for
the young men and young women of this Church. What a
truly wonderful group you are. You speak various
languages. You are all part of a great family. But you
are also individuals, each with his or her problems, each
wishing for answers to the things that perplex you and
worry you. How we love you and pray constantly for the
genius to help you. Your lives are filled with difficult
decisions and with dreams and hopes and longings to find
that which will bring you peace and happiness.
Once upon a time, a very long time ago, I
was your age. I didn’t worry about drugs or pornography
because they were not available then. I worried about
school and where it would lead. It was the season of the
terrible economic depression. I worried about how to earn
a living. I served a mission after I finished the
university. I went to England. We traveled by train to
Chicago, made a bus transfer across that city, and went
on to New York, where we caught a steamship for the
British Isles. While riding the transfer bus in Chicago,
a woman said to the driver, “What is that building
ahead?” He said, “Ma’am, that is the Chicago Board of
Trade Building. Every week some man who has lost his
fortune jumps out of one of those windows. He has nothing
else to live for.”
Such were the times. They were mean and
ugly. No one who did not live through that period will
ever understand it fully. I hope with all my heart we
never have anything like it again.
Now, here you are on the threshold of
your mature lives. You too worry about school. You worry
about marriage. You worry about many things. I make you a
promise that God will not forsake you if you will walk in
His paths with the guidance of His commandments.
This is the age of great opportunity. You
are so fortunate to be alive. Never in the history of
mankind has life been filled with so many opportunities
and challenges. When I was born, the average life
expectancy of a man or woman in the United States and
other Western countries was 50 years. Now it is more than
75 years. Can you imagine that? On average you may expect
to live at least 25 years longer than someone who lived
in 1910.
This is the season of an explosion of
knowledge. For instance, when I was your age there were
no antibiotics. All of these wonderful medicines have
been discovered and refined in more recent times. Some of
the great scourges of the earth are gone. Smallpox once
took whole populations. That is gone entirely. It is a
miracle. Polio was once the dreaded fear of every mother.
I remember going to visit a man with polio in the county
hospital. He was in a great iron lung that moved his own
lungs as it pumped up and down. There was no hope for
him; he couldn’t breathe on his own. He died, leaving his
wife and children. This terrible disease is now gone.
That too is a miracle. And so it is with other matters.
Of course you face challenges. Every
generation that has ever walked the earth has faced
challenges. We could spend the entire evening talking
about them. But of all the challenges that have been
faced in the past, the ones we have today, I believe, are
most easily handled. I say that because they are
manageable. They largely involve individual behavioral
decisions, but those decisions can be made and followed.
And when that happens, the challenge is behind us.
I suppose that most of you are in school.
I am pleased that you have that opportunity and that
desire. I hope that you are studying diligently and that
your great ambition is to get A grades in your various
courses. I hope your teachers will be generous toward you
and that your studies will yield top grades and an
excellent education. I could wish nothing better for you
in your schoolwork.
Tonight I am going to let your teachers
give you the A’s that I hope you earn. I want to talk
about some B’s. You get the A’s; I will give you the B’s.
1. Be grateful.
2. Be smart.
3. Be clean.
4. Be true.
5. Be humble.
6. Be prayerful.
Why don’t you repeat these B’s with me,
and then we will talk about each of them, all right?
1. Be grateful.
2. Be smart.
3. Be clean.
4. Be true.
5. Be humble.
6. Be prayerful.
There are two little words in the English
language that perhaps mean more than all others. They are
“thank you.” Comparable words are found in every other
language, such as gracias, merci, danke, obrigado,
domo.
The habit of saying thank you is the mark
of an educated man or woman. With whom is the Lord
displeased? He names “those who confess not his hand in
all things” (D&C
59:21). That is, those who walk without
grateful expression. Walk with gratitude in your hearts,
my dear friends. Be thankful for the wonderful blessings
which are yours. Be grateful for the tremendous
opportunities that you have. Be thankful to your parents,
who care so very much about you and who have worked so
very hard to provide for you. Let them know that you are
grateful. Say thank you to your mother and your father.
Say thank you to your friends. Say thank you to your
teachers. Express appreciation to everyone who does you a
favor or assists you in any way.
Thank the Lord for His goodness to you.
Thank the Almighty for His Beloved Son, Jesus Christ, who
has done for you what none other in all this world could
do. Thank Him for His great example, for His tremendous
teachings, for His outreaching hand to lift and help.
Think about the meaning of His Atonement. Read about Him
and read His words in the New Testament and in 3 Nephi in
the Book of Mormon. Read them quietly to yourself and
then ponder them. Pour out your heart to your Father in
Heaven in gratitude for the gift of His Beloved Son.
Thank the Lord for His marvelous Church
restored in this great season of history. Thank Him for
all that it offers you. Thank Him for friends and loved
ones, for parents and brothers and sisters, for family.
Let a spirit of thanksgiving guide and bless your days
and nights. Work at it. You will find it will yield
wonderful results.
You are moving into the most competitive
age the world has ever known. All around you is
competition. You need all the education you can get.
Sacrifice a car; sacrifice anything that is needed to be
sacrificed to qualify yourselves to do the work of the
world. That world will in large measure pay you what it
thinks you are worth, and your worth will increase as you
gain education and proficiency in your chosen field.
You belong to a church that teaches the
importance of education. You have a mandate from the Lord
to educate your minds and your hearts and your hands. The
Lord has said, “Teach ye diligently … of things both in
heaven and in the earth, and under the earth; things
which have been, things which are, things which must
shortly come to pass; things which are at home, things
which are abroad; the wars and the perplexities of the
nations, and the judgments which are on the land; and a
knowledge also of countries and of kingdoms—that ye may
be prepared in all things” (D&C
88:78-80).
Mind you, these are not my words. These
are the words of the Lord who loves you. He wants you to
train your minds and hands to become an influence for
good as you go forward with your lives. And as you do so
and as you perform honorably and with excellence, you
will bring honor to the Church, for you will be regarded
as a man or woman of integrity and ability and
conscientious workmanship. Be smart. Don’t be foolish.
You cannot bluff or cheat others without bluffing or
cheating yourselves.
Many years ago I worked for a railroad in
the central offices in Denver. I was in charge of what is
called head-end traffic. That was in the days when nearly
everyone rode passenger trains. One morning I received a
call from my counterpart in Newark, New Jersey. He said,
“Train number such-and-such has arrived, but it has no
baggage car. Somewhere, 300 passengers have lost their
baggage, and they are mad.”
I went immediately to work to find out
where it may have gone. I found it had been properly
loaded and properly trained in Oakland, California. It
had been moved to our railroad in Salt Lake City, been
carried to Denver, down to Pueblo, put on another line,
and moved to St. Louis. There it was to be handled by
another railroad which would take it to Newark, New
Jersey. But some thoughtless switchman in the St. Louis
yards moved a small piece of steel just three inches, a
switch point, then pulled the lever to uncouple the car.
We discovered that a baggage car that belonged in Newark,
New Jersey, was in fact in New Orleans, Louisiana—1,500
miles from its destination. Just the three-inch movement
of the switch in the St. Louis yard by a careless
employee had started it on the wrong track, and the
distance from its true destination increased
dramatically. That is the way it is with our lives.
Instead of following a steady course, we are pulled by
some mistaken idea in another direction. The movement
away from our original destination may be ever so small,
but, if continued, that very small movement becomes a
great gap and we find ourselves far from where we
intended to go.
Have you ever looked at one of those
16-foot farm gates? When it is opened, it swings very
wide. The end at the hinges moves ever so slightly, while
out at the perimeter the movement is great. It is the
little things upon which life turns that make the big
difference in our lives, my dear young friends.
Be smart. The Lord wants you to educate
your minds and hands, whatever your chosen field. Whether
it be repairing refrigerators, or the work of a skilled
surgeon, you must train yourselves. Seek for the best
schooling available. Become a workman of integrity in the
world that lies ahead of you. I repeat, you will bring
honor to the Church and you will be generously blessed
because of that training.
There can be no doubt, none whatever,
that education pays. Do not short-circuit your lives. If
you do so, you will pay for it over and over and over
again.
We live in a world that is filled with
filth and sleaze, a world that reeks of evil. It is all
around us. It is on the television screen. It is at the
movies. It is in the popular literature. It is on the
Internet. You can’t afford to watch it, my dear friends.
You cannot afford to let that filthy poison touch you.
Stay away from it. Avoid it. You can’t rent videos and
watch them as they portray degrading things. You young
men who hold the priesthood of God cannot mix this filth
with the holy priesthood.
Avoid evil talk. Do not take the name of
the Lord in vain. From the thunders of Sinai the finger
of the Lord wrote on tablets of stone, “Thou shalt not
take the name of the Lord thy God in vain” (Ex.
20:7).
It is not a mark of manhood to carelessly
use the name of the Almighty or His Beloved Son in a vain
and flippant way, as many are prone to do.
Choose your friends carefully. It is they
who will lead you in one direction or the other.
Everybody wants friends. Everybody needs friends. No one
wishes to be without them. But never lose sight of the
fact that it is your friends who will lead you along the
paths that you will follow.
While you should be friendly with all
people, select with great care those whom you wish to
have close to you. They will be your safeguards in
situations where you may vacillate between choices, and
you in turn may save them.
Be clean. Don’t waste your time in
destructive entertainment. There was recently held in the
Salt Lake Valley a show put on by a traveling band. I am
told that it was filthy, that it was lascivious, that it
was evil in every respect. The young people of this
community had paid $25 to $35 to get in. What did they
get for their money? Only a seductive voice urging them
to move in the direction of the slimy things of life. I
plead with you, my friends, to stay away from such. It
will not help you. It can only injure you.
I recently spoke to your mothers and your
fathers. Among other things, I talked with them about
tattoos.
What creation is more magnificent than
the human body? What a wondrous thing it is as the
crowning work of the Almighty.
Paul, in writing to the Corinthians,
said: “Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and
that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?
“If any man defile the temple of God, him
shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which
temple ye are” (1
Cor. 3:16-17).
Did you ever think that your body is
holy? You are a child of God. Your body is His creation.
Would you disfigure that creation with portrayals of
people, animals, and words painted into your skin?
I promise you that the time will come, if
you have tattoos, that you will regret your actions. They
cannot be washed off. They are permanent. Only by an
expensive and painful process can they be removed. If you
are tattooed, then probably for the remainder of your
life you will carry it with you. I believe the time will
come when it will be an embarrassment to you. Avoid it.
We, as your Brethren who love you, plead with you not to
become so disrespectful of the body which the Lord has
given you.
May I mention earrings and rings placed
in other parts of the body. These are not manly. They are
not attractive. You young men look better without them,
and I believe you will feel better without them. As for
the young women, you do not need to drape rings up and
down your ears. One modest pair of earrings is
sufficient.
I mention these things because again they
concern your bodies.
How truly beautiful is a well-groomed
young woman who is clean in body and mind. She is a
daughter of God in whom her Eternal Father can take
pride. How handsome is a young man who is well groomed.
He is a son of God, deemed worthy of holding the holy
priesthood of God. He does not need tattoos or earrings
on or in his body. The First Presidency and the Quorum of
the Twelve are all united in counseling against these
things.
And while I speak of such matters I want
to give emphasis again to the matter of pornography. It
has become a 10 billion dollar industry in the United
States, where a few men grow rich at the expense of
thousands upon thousands who are their victims. Stay away
from it. It is exciting, but it will destroy you. It will
warp your senses. It will build within you an appetite
that you will do anything to appease. And don’t try to
create associations through the Internet and chat rooms.
They can lead you down into the very abyss of sorrow and
bitterness.
I must also say a word concerning illicit
drugs. You know how I feel about them. I don’t care what
the variety may be. They will destroy you if pursued. You
will become their slave. Once in their power, you will do
anything to get money to buy more.
I was amazed while watching a television
program to learn that parents introduced drugs to their
children in 20 percent of the cases. I cannot understand
what I regard as the stupidity of these parents. What
future other than slavery for their children could they
see in them? Illegal drugs will utterly destroy those who
become addicted to them.
My advice, my pleading to you wonderful
young men and women, is to stay entirely away from them.
You don’t need to experiment with them. Look about you
and see the effects they have had on others. There is no
need for any Latter-day Saint boy or girl, young man or
young woman, to even try them. Stay clean from these
mind-altering and habit-forming addictions.
And now just a word on the most common
and most difficult of all problems for you young men and
young women to handle. It is the relationship that you
have one with another. You are dealing with the most
powerful of human instincts. Only the will to live
possibly exceeds it.
The Lord has made us attractive one to
another for a great purpose. But this very attraction
becomes as a powder keg unless it is kept under control.
It is beautiful when handled in the right way. It is
deadly if it gets out of hand.
It is for this reason that the Church
counsels against early dating. This rule is not designed
to hurt you in any way. It is designed to help you, and
it will do so if you will observe it.
Steady dating at an early age leads so
often to tragedy. Studies have shown that the longer a
boy and girl date one another, the more likely they are
to get into trouble.
It is better, my friends, to date a
variety of companions until you are ready to marry. Have
a wonderful time, but stay away from familiarity. Keep
your hands to yourself. It may not be easy, but it is
possible.
You young men who plan to go on missions
must recognize that sexual sin may keep you from that
opportunity. You may think that you can hide it. Long
experience has shown that you cannot. To serve an
effective mission you must have the Spirit of the Lord,
and truth withheld does not mix with that Spirit. Sooner
or later you will feel compelled to confess your earlier
transgressions. Well did Sir Galahad say, “My strength is
as the strength of ten, because my heart is pure”
(Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Sir Galahad [1842], st.
1).
My dear young friends, in matters of sex
you know what is right. You know when you are walking on
dangerous ground, when it is so easy to stumble and slide
into the pit of transgression. I plead with you to be
careful, to stand safely back from the cliff of sin over
which it is so easy to fall. Keep yourselves clean from
the dark and disappointing evil of sexual transgression.
Walk in the sunlight of that peace which comes from
obedience to the commandments of the Lord.
Now, if there be any who have stepped
over the line, who may already have transgressed, is
there any hope for you? Of course there is. Where there
is true repentance, there will be forgiveness. That
process begins with prayer. The Lord has said, “He who
has repented of his sins, the same is forgiven, and I,
the Lord, remember them no more” (D&C
58:42). Share your burden with your parents if
you can. And by all means, confess to your bishop, who
stands ready to help you.
Said Shakespeare, “To thine own self be
true; and it must follow, as the night the day, thou
canst not then be false to any man” (Hamlet, I,
iii, 78-81). You have a tremendous inheritance. You have
a great background of noble ancestry. Many of you are
descendants of the pioneers, who died by the hundreds and
thousands in testimony of the truth of this work. If they
were to look down upon you, they would plead with you:
“Be true. Be loyal. Be ‘true to the faith that our
parents have cherished, true to the truth for which
martyrs have perished.’ ” They would say, “Faith of our
fathers, holy faith, we will be true to thee till death”
(Hymns, nos. 254 and 84).
And those of you who may not be descended
from pioneer ancestry, you belong to a Church which has
been made strong by the loyalty and unwavering affection
of its members through the generations. What a marvelous
thing it is to belong to a society whose purposes are
noble, whose accomplishments are tremendous, whose work
is uplifting, even heroic. Be loyal to the Church under
all circumstances. I make you a promise that the
authorities of this Church will never lead you astray.
They will lead you in paths of happiness.
You who are members of this Church must
have a loyalty to it. This is your church. You have as
great a responsibility in your sphere of action as I have
in my sphere of action. It belongs to you just as it
belongs to me. You have embraced its gospel. You have
taken upon yourselves a covenant in the waters of
baptism. This you have renewed each time you have
partaken of the sacrament. These covenants will be added
to when you are married in the temple. You cannot hold
them lightly. They are too great a thing. This is the
very work of God designed to bring about the immortality
and eternal life of His sons and daughters.
Walk in faith before Him with your heads
high, proud of your membership in this great cause and
kingdom which He has restored to the earth in this, the
last dispensation of the fulness of times. Why? To bring
you happiness.
Be true to your own convictions. You know
what is right, and you know what is wrong. You know when
you are doing the proper thing. You know when you are
giving strength to the right cause. Be loyal. Be
faithful. Be true, my beloved associates in this great
kingdom.
There is no place for arrogance in our
lives. There is no place for conceit. There is no place
for egotism. We have a great work to do. We have things
to accomplish. We need direction in the pursuit of our
education. We need help in choosing an eternal companion.
The Lord has said, “Be thou humble; and
the Lord thy God shall lead thee by the hand, and give
thee answer to thy prayers” (D&C
112:10).
What a tremendous promise is given in
this statement. If we are without conceit and pride and
arrogance, if we are humble and obedient, then the Lord
will lead us by the hand and answer our prayers. What
greater thing could we ask for? There is nothing to
compare with this.
The Savior, in the great Sermon on the
Mount, declared, “Blessed are the meek: for they shall
inherit the earth” (Matt.
5:5).
I believe the meek and the humble are
those who are teachable. They are willing to learn. They
are willing to listen to the whisperings of the still,
small voice for guidance in their lives. They place the
wisdom of the Lord above their own wisdom.
And this leads to my
final B—be prayerful.
You cannot do it alone. I look at this
vast congregation, and I know that you are young people
who pray, who get on your knees and speak with the Lord.
You know that He is the source of all wisdom.
You need His help, and you know that you
need His help. You cannot do it alone. You will come to
realize that and recognize that more and more as the
years pass. So live that in good conscience you can speak
with the Lord. Get on your knees and thank Him for His
goodness to you and express to Him the righteous desires
of your hearts. The miracle of it all is that He hears.
He responds. He answers—not always as we might wish He
would answer, but there is no question in my mind that He
answers.
You have such a tremendous
responsibility, you young men and young women. You are
the products of all of the generations that have gone
before you. All that you have of body and mind has been
passed to you through your parents. Someday you will
become parents and pass on to succeeding generations the
qualities of body and mind which you have received from
the past. Do not break the chain of the generations of
your family. Keep it bright and strong. So very much
depends on you. You are so very precious. You mean so
much to this Church. It could not be the same without
you. Stand tall, proud of your inheritance as sons and
daughters of God. Look to Him for understanding and
guidance. Walk according to His precepts and
commandments.
You can have a good time. Of course you
can! We want you to have fun. We want you to enjoy life.
We do not want you to be prudes. We want you to be robust
and cheerful, to sing and dance, to laugh and be happy.
But in so doing, be humble and be
prayerful, and the smiles of heaven will fall upon you.
I could wish for you nothing better than
that your lives be fruitful, that your service be
dedicated and freely given, that you contribute to the
knowledge and the well-being of the world in which you
live, and that you do it humbly and faithfully before
your God. He loves you. We love you. We want you to be
happy and successful, to make significant contributions
to the world in which you will live and to the on-rolling
of this great and majestic work of the Lord.
Well, my brothers and sisters, those are
my B’s—be grateful, be smart, be clean, be true, be
humble, be prayerful.
Now, in conclusion, I offer a word of
prayer concerning you.
O God, our Eternal Father, as Thy servant
I bow before Thee in prayer in behalf of these young
people scattered over the earth who are gathered tonight
in assemblies everywhere. Please smile with favor upon
them. Please listen to them as they lift their voices in
prayer unto Thee. Please lead them gently by the hand in
the direction they should follow.
Please help them to walk in paths of
truth and righteousness and keep them from the evils of
the world. Bless them that they shall be happy at times
and serious at times, that they may enjoy life and drink
of its fulness. Bless them that they may walk acceptably
before Thee as Thy cherished sons and daughters. Each is
Thy child with capacity to do great and noble things.
Keep them on the high road that leads to achievement.
Save them from the mistakes that could destroy them. If
they have erred, forgive their trespasses and lead them
back to ways of peace and progress. For these blessings I
humbly pray with gratitude for them and invoke Thy
blessings upon them with love and affection, in the name
of Him who carries the burdens of our sins, even the Lord
Jesus Christ, amen.
© 2001 Intellectual Reserve,
Inc.
All rights reserved. |
BE GRATEFUL - Express
appreciation to everyone who does us a favor or assists us in
any way. Two little words - "thank you" - the mark of an
educated man or woman.BE
SMART - The Lord wants us to train our minds and hands to
become an influence for good "...that ye may be prepared in
all things" (D&C 88:78-80).
BE CLEAN - We live in a world
filled with filth and sleaze. We cannot afford to let it
touch us. We should not be disrespectful of the body which
the Lord has given us. Avoid
evil talk, choose your friends carefully. You are a child of
God.
BE TRUE - Let us be loyal to
the Church under all circumstances. The authorities of this
Church will lead us in paths of happiness.
BE HUMBLE - The meek and the
humble are those who are teachable. Be willing to listen to
the whisperings of the still, small voice.
BE PRAYERFUL - Look to the
Lord for understanding and guidance, and walk according to
His precepts and commandments. The miracle of it all is that
He hears, He responds, He answers.
|
| President Hinckley
first introduced the six B's at the Spokane Temple
dedication in August of 1999
in a talk to the youth. |
Prayer by the
Prophet on behalf of the youth of the Church
Now, in conclusion, I offer
a word of prayer concerning you.
O God, our Eternal Father,
as Thy servant I bow before Thee in prayer in
behalf of these young people scattered over the
earth who are gathered tonight in assemblies
everywhere. Please smile with favor upon them.
Please listen to them as they lift their voices
in prayer unto Thee. Please lead them gently by
the hand in the direction they should follow.
Please help them to walk in
paths of truth and righteousness and keep them
from the evils of the world. Bless them that
they shall be happy at times and serious at
times, that they may enjoy life and drink of
its fulness. Bless them that they may walk
acceptably before Thee as Thy cherished sons
and daughters. Each is Thy child with capacity
to do great and noble things. Keep them on the
high road that leads to achievement. Save them
from the mistakes that could destroy them. If
they have erred, forgive their trespasses and
lead them back to ways of peace and progress.
For these blessings I humbly pray with
gratitude for them and invoke Thy blessings
upon them with love and affection, in the name
of Him who carries the burdens of our sins,
even the Lord Jesus Christ, amen.
|
See also President Hinckley's
prayer on behalf of
parents
Scripture-based website on intercessory prayers
"Oh, that one might plead for a man with God,
as a man pleadeth for his neighbor!"
Job 16:21

When A Prophet Speaks - Music to teach the Six B's by
Janice Kapp Perry
Music / Inspirational
In a recent landmark address to the youth of the
church, President Hinckley introduced these Six B's: Be
Grateful, Be Smart, Be Clean, Be True, Be Humble, Be
Prayerful. This musical fireside presents captivatine,
memorable music to help youth internalize the messages of
the Six B's. In addition, the album includes the moving
When the Prophet Prayed For Me, and When a Prophet
Speaks. A performance script with music is also available
- a 45 to 50 minute program.
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