| By Shaun D.
Stahle Church News staff writer
The world in which students of today choose spiritual
life or death is changing, said Elder Henry B. Eyring of
the Quorum of the Twelve and Commissioner of Church
Education.
Schools and campuses have radically different moral
climates than a few years ago. Language in the hallways and
locker rooms has coarsened. Clothing is less modest.
Pornography has moved into the open, Elder Eyring said Aug.
14 to an estimated 11,000 seminary and institute teachers
in the Marriott Center on the BYU campus.
"We must raise our sights," he said. "Our
aim must be for them to become truly converted to the
gospel of Jesus Christ while they are with us."
Addressing the volunteer and staff instructors of the
Church Educational System as part of a weeklong conference,
Elder Eyring painted the picture of a world becoming
increasingly tolerant of wickedness and said, "The
spiritual strength sufficient for our youth to stand firm
just a few years ago will soon not be enough."
"Many of [the youth] are remarkable in their
spiritual maturity and in their faith. But even the best of
them are sorely tested. And testing will become more
severe."
Elder Eyring explained how the seminary and institute
curriculum has changed over the years as the world has
changed. "Where once there was a wealth of material
calculated to hold the wandering interest of young people
and even entertain them, the words of the scriptures are
now doing the holding. . . . You have made the scriptures
live for them.
"But they need more," he said, noting that too
many graduates of seminary fail to qualify for the mission
field and temple ordinances. "To them, missions and
the temple are far distant, in some time when the joys of
youth have flown away. Those goals are distant enough that
too many, way too many, say to themselves: 'Well, I know I
may have to repent some day . . . but I can always take
care of that when the time comes. . . . I'll see the bishop
when it's time and I'll make the changes later. I'm only
young once. For now, I'll go with the flow."
"Well, the flow," said Elder Eyring, "has
become a flood and soon will be a torrent. It will become a
torrent of sounds and sights and sensations which invite
temptation and offend the Spirit. Swimming back upstream to
purity against the tides of the world was never easy. It is
getting harder and may soon be frighteningly
difficult."
Students need to derive more from seminary and institute
during their time in class, Elder Eyring said. "That
is when they make the daily choices which will bless or mar
their lives.
"The pure gospel of Jesus Christ must go down into
the hearts of students by the power of the Holy Ghost. It
will not be enough for them to have had a spiritual witness
of the truth and to want good things later. It will not be
enough for them to hope for some future cleansing and
strengthening. Our aim must be for them to become truly
converted to the restored gospel of Jesus Christ while they
are with us," he said.
"Then they will have gained a strength from what
they are, not only from what they know. They will become
disciples of Christ. They will be His spiritual children
who always remember Him with gratitude and in faith. They
will have the Holy Ghost as a constant companion. Their
hearts will be turned outward, concerned for the temporal
and the spiritual welfare of others. They will walk humbly.
They will feel cleansed and they will look on evil with
abhorrence."
Though he could have recounted personal experiences to
emphasize his teachings, Elder Eyring said he chose to
quote extensively from the Book of Mormon to prove that
change is possible, and that "the way change is
brought about and what the person becomes is always the
same."
"The words of God in pure doctrine go down deep
into the heart by the power of the Holy Ghost. The person
pleads with God in faith. The repentant heart is broken and
the spirit contrite. Sacred covenants have been made. And
then God keeps His covenant to grant a new heart and a new
life, in His time.
"Whether the miracle comes in a moment or over
years, as is far more common, it is the doctrine of Jesus
Christ that drives the change. We sometimes underestimate
the power that pure doctrine has to penetrate the hearts of
people."
Why did so many respond to the missionaries when the
Church was so young, so small and seemingly so strange, he
asked? What did Brigham Young and John Taylor and Heber C.
Kimball preach in the streets and on the hills of England?
"They taught that the pure gospel of Jesus Christ had
been restored," he said.
"That pure doctrine went down into the hearts then,
as it will now, because the people were starved and the
doctrine was taught simply.
"Our students may not know that they are fainting
from famine, but the words of God will slake a thirst they
did not know they had, and the Holy Ghost will take it down
into their hearts. If we make the doctrine simple and
clear, and if we teach out of our own changed hearts, the
change for them will come as surely as it did for Enos,"
he said, quoting from Enos 1:1-4, noting the change that
came as Enos remembered the words of his father.
"What we seek for our students is that change. We
must be humble about our part in it. True conversion
depends on a student seeking freely in faith, with great
effort and some pain. Then it is the Lord who can grant, in
His time, the miracle of cleansing and change. Each person
starts from a different place, with a different set of
experiences and so a different need for cleansing and for
change. The Lord knows the place and so only He can set the
course," he said.
"But for all of our students, we can play a vital
part. Enos remembered the words of eternal life which he
had been taught. So did Nephi, and so did the people of
King Benjamin. The words had been placed in memory in such
a way that the Holy Ghost could take them deep into the
heart. We are teachers whose charge is to place those words
so that when the student chooses and pleads, the Holy Ghost
can confirm them in the heart and the miracle can
begin."
© 2001 LDS church News and Deseret News Publishing Co.
[NOTE: In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in
these messages is distributed under fair use
without profit or payment for non-profit research
and educational purposes only. Ref. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml]
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