|

The Candle of the Lord
What Does Salt
Taste Like?

By
Elder Boyd K. Packer
Of the Quorum of
the Twelve
From
a talk given at a seminar for new mission presidents, 25
June 1982.
I have chosen, after much
thought, to speak as though your missionaries, your
elders and sisters, were here in your place, and to
present thoughts more fitted to them, the beginners, the
inexperienced, than to you. I hope that through you, I
may share with them some things I have learned about the
Spirit and how we may prepare ourselves to receive it.
We do not learn spiritual
things in exactly the same way we learn other things
that we know, even though such things as reading,
listening, and pondering may be used. I have learned
that it requires a special attitude both to teach and to
learn spiritual things. There are some things you know,
or may come to know, that you will find quite difficult
to explain to others. I am very certain that it was
meant to be that way.

What Does Salt Taste
Like?
I will tell you of an
experience I had before I was a General Authority which
affected me profoundly. I sat on a plane next to a
professed atheist who pressed his disbelief in God so
urgently that I bore my testimony to him. "You are
wrong," I said, "there is a God. I
know He lives!"
He protested, "You don’t
know. Nobody knows that! You
can’t know it!" When I would not yield, the atheist, who
was an attorney, asked perhaps the ultimate question on
the subject of testimony. "All right," he said in a
sneering, condescending way, "you say you know. Tell me
how you know."
When I attempted to answer,
even though I held advanced academic degrees, I was
helpless to communicate.
Sometimes in your youth, you
young missionaries are embarrassed when the cynic, the
skeptic, treat you with contempt because you do not have
ready answers for everything. Before such ridicule, some
turn away in shame. (Remember the iron rod, the spacious
building, and the mocking? See 1 Ne. 8:28.)
When I used the words
Spirit and witness, the atheist
responded, "I don’t know what you are talking about."
The words prayer, discernment, and faith, were equally
meaningless to him. "You see," he said, "you don’t
really know. If you did, you would be able to tell me
how you know."
I felt, perhaps, that I had
borne my testimony to him unwisely and was at a loss as
to what to do. Then came the experience! Something came
into my mind. And I mention here a statement of the
Prophet Joseph Smith: "A person may profit by noticing
the first intimation of the spirit of revelation; for
instance, when you feel pure intelligence flowing into
you, it may give you sudden strokes of ideas … and thus
by learning the Spirit of God and understanding it, you
may grow into the principle of revelation, until you
become perfect in Christ Jesus." (Teachings
of the Prophet Joseph Smith, comp. Joseph Fielding
Smith, Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1977, p. 151.)
Such an idea came into my mind
and I said to the atheist, "Let me ask if you know what
salt tastes like."
"Of course I do," was his
reply.
"When did you taste salt last?"
"I just had dinner on the
plane."
"You just think you know what
salt tastes like," I said.
He insisted,
"I know what salt tastes like as well as I know
anything."
"If I gave you a cup of salt
and a cup of sugar and let you taste them both, could
you tell the salt from the sugar?"
"Now you are getting juvenile,"
was his reply.
"Of course I could tell the difference. I know what salt
tastes like. It is an everyday experience—I know it as
well as I know anything."
"Then,"
I said,
"assuming that I have never tasted salt, explain to me
just what it tastes like."
After some thought, he
ventured, "Well-I-uh, it
is not sweet and it is not sour."
"You’ve told me what it isn’t,
not what it is."
After several attempts, of
course, he could not do it. He could not convey, in
words alone, so ordinary an experience as tasting salt.
I bore testimony to him once again and said,
"I know there is a God. You
ridiculed that testimony and said that if I did know, I
would be able to tell you exactly how I know. My friend,
spiritually speaking,
I have tasted salt.
I am no more able to convey to you in words how this
knowledge has come than you are to tell me what salt
tastes like. But I say to you again, there is a God! He
does live! And just because you don’t know, don’t try to
tell me that I don’t know, for I do!"
As we parted, I heard him
mutter, "I don’t need
your religion for a crutch! I don’t need it."
From that experience forward, I
have never been embarrassed or ashamed that I could not
explain in words alone everything I know spiritually.
The Apostle Paul said it this way:
"We speak, not in the words
which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost
teacheth; comparing spiritual things with spiritual."
"But the natural man receiveth
not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are
foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned." (1 Cor. 2:13–14.)

Not in Words Alone
We cannot express spiritual
knowledge in words alone. We can, however, with words
show another how to prepare for the reception of the
Spirit. The Spirit itself will help. "For when a man
speaketh by the power of the Holy Ghost the power of the
Holy Ghost carrieth it unto the hearts of the children
of men." (2 Ne. 33:1.)
Then when we have a spiritual
communication, we can say within ourselves, this is it!
This is what is meant by those words in the revelation.
Thereafter, if they are carefully chosen, words are
adequate for teaching about spiritual things.
We do not have the words (even
the scriptures do not have words) which perfectly
describe the Spirit. The scriptures generally use the
word voice, which does not exactly fit. These delicate,
refined spiritual communications are not seen with our
eyes, nor heard with our ears. And even though it is
described as a voice, it is a voice that one feels, more
than one hears.
Once I came to understand this,
one verse in the Book of Mormon took on a profound
meaning, and my testimony of the book increased
immeasurably. It had to do with Laman and Lemuel, who
rebelled against Nephi. Nephi rebuked them and said, "Ye
have seen an angel, and he spake unto you; yea, ye have
heard his voice from time to time; and he hath spoken
unto you in a still small voice, but ye were past
feeling, that ye could not feel his words." (1 Ne.
17:45; italics added.)
The Voice of Angels
Nephi, in a great, profound
sermon of instruction, explained that "angels speak by
the power of the Holy Ghost; wherefore, they speak the
words of Christ. Wherefore, I said unto you, feast upon
the words of Christ; for behold, the words of Christ
will tell you all things what ye should do." (2 Ne.
32:3.)
Should an angel appear and
converse with you, neither you nor he would be confined
to corporeal sight or sound in order to communicate. For
there is that spiritual process, described by the
Prophet Joseph Smith, by which pure intelligence can
flow into our minds and we can know what we need to know
without either the drudgery of study or the passage of
time, for it is revelation.
And the Prophet said further:
"All things whatsoever God in
his infinite wisdom has seen fit and proper to reveal to
us, while we are dwelling in mortality, in regard to our
mortal bodies, are revealed to us in the abstract …
revealed to our spirits precisely as though we had no
bodies at all; and those revelations which will save our
spirits will save our bodies."
(Teachings, p. 355.)
The Still, Small Voice
The voice of the Spirit is
described in the scripture as being neither "loud" nor
"harsh." It is "not a voice of thunder, neither … voice
of a great tumultuous noise." But rather, "a still voice
of perfect mildness, as if it had been a whisper," and
it can "pierce even to the very soul" and "cause [the
heart] to burn." (3 Ne. 11:3; Hel. 5:30; D&C 85:6–7.)
Remember, Elijah found the voice of the Lord was not in
the wind, nor in the earthquake, nor in the fire, but
was a "still small voice." (1 Kgs. 19:12.)
The Spirit does not get our
attention by shouting or shaking us with a heavy hand.
Rather it whispers. It caresses so gently that if we are
preoccupied we may not feel it at all. (No wonder that
the Word of Wisdom was revealed to us, for how could the
drunkard or the addict feel such a voice?)
Occasionally it will press just
firmly enough for us to pay heed. But most of the time,
if we do not heed the gentle feeling, the Spirit will
withdraw and wait until we come seeking and listening
and say in our manner and expression, like Samuel of
ancient times, "Speak [Lord], for thy servant heareth."
(1 Sam. 3:10.)
Strong Spiritual Experiences Do
Not Come Frequently
I have learned that strong,
impressive spiritual experiences do not come to us very
frequently. And when they do, they are generally for our
own edification, instruction, or correction. Unless we
are called by proper authority to do so, they do not
position us to counsel or to correct others.
Don’t Talk Lightly of
Experiences
I have come to believe also
that it is not wise to continually talk of unusual
spiritual experiences. They are to be guarded with care
and shared only when the Spirit itself prompts you to
use them to the blessing of others. I am ever mindful of
Alma’s words:
"It is given unto many to know
the mysteries of God; nevertheless they are laid under a
strict command that they shall not impart only according
to the portion of his word which he doth grant unto the
children of men, according to the heed and diligence
which they give unto him." (Alma 12:9.)
I heard President Marion G.
Romney once counsel mission presidents and their wives
in Geneva, "I do not tell all I know; I have never told
my wife all I know, for I found out that if I talked too
lightly of sacred things, thereafter the Lord would not
trust me."
We are, I believe, to keep
these things and ponder them in our hearts, as Luke said
Mary did of the supernal events that surrounded the
birth of Jesus. (See Luke 2:19.)
You Cannot Force Spiritual
Things
There is something else to
learn. A testimony is not thrust upon you; a testimony
grows. We become taller in testimony like we grow taller
in physical stature; we hardly know it happens because
it comes by growth.
It is not wise to wrestle with
the revelations with such insistence as to demand
immediate answers or blessings to your liking. You
cannot force spiritual things. Such words as compel,
coerce, constrain, pressure, demand, do not describe our
privileges with the Spirit. You can no more force the
Spirit to respond than you can force a bean to sprout,
or an egg to hatch before it’s time. You can create a
climate to foster growth, nourish, and protect; but you
cannot force or compel: you must await the growth.
Do not be impatient to gain
great spiritual knowledge. Let it grow, help it grow,
but do not force it or you will open the way to be
misled.
Use All Your Resources
We are expected to use the
light and knowledge we already possess to work out our
lives. We should not need a revelation to instruct us to
be up and about
our duty, for we have
been told to do that already in the scriptures; nor
should we expect revelation to replace the spiritual or
temporal intelligence which we have already
received—only to extend it. We must go about our life in
an ordinary, workaday way, following the routines and
rules and regulations that govern life.
Rules and regulations and
commandments are valuable protection. Should we stand in
need of revealed instruction to alter our course, it
will be waiting along the way as we arrive at the point
of need. The counsel to be "anxiously engaged" is wise
counsel indeed. (See D&C 58:27.)
A Nathaniel or a Thomas
There is a wide difference in
the spirituality of individuals. When Philip told
Nathaniel that he had "found him, of whom Moses … and
the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of
Joseph," his response was, "Can there any good thing
come out of Nazareth?"
Philip said, "Come and see."
Come he did, and he did see. What Nathaniel must have
felt! For with no further convincing, he exclaimed,
"Rabbi, thou art the Son of God."
The Lord blessed him for his
belief and said, "Verily, verily, I say unto you,
Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of
God ascending and descending upon the Son of man." (John
1:45–51.)
Thomas is another story; the
combined testimony of ten of the Apostles could not
convince him that the Lord had risen. He required
tangible evidence. "Except I shall see in his hands the
print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of
the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not
believe."
Eight days later the Lord
appeared. "Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands;
and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side:
and be not faithless, but believing." After he had seen
and felt for himself, Thomas responded, "My Lord and my
God."
Then the Lord taught a profound
lesson. "Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast
believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet
have believed." (John 20:25–29; italics added.)
And so the title "Doubting
Thomas"; different indeed than Nathaniel, whom the Lord
described as being "without guile." (See John 1:47.)
With Thomas, it was "seeing is believing"; with
Nathaniel, it was the other way around—believing, then
seeing "heaven open and angels of God descending and
ascending upon the Son of Man." (John 1:51.)
More Powerful Than You Know
Now, do not feel hesitant or
ashamed if you do not know everything. Nephi said, "I
know that he loveth his children; nevertheless, I do not
know the meaning of all things." (1 Ne. 11:17.)
There may be more power in your
testimony than even you realize. The Lord said to the
Nephites:
"Whoso cometh unto me with a
broken heart and a contrite spirit, him will I baptize
with fire and with the Holy Ghost, even as the
Lamanites, because of their faith in me at the time of
their conversion, were baptized with fire and with the
Holy Ghost, and they knew it not." (3 Ne. 9:20; italics
added.)
Several years ago I met one of
our sons in the mission field in a distant part of the
world. He had been there for a year. His first question
was this: "Dad, what can I do to grow spiritually? I
have tried so hard to grow spiritually and I just
haven’t made any progress."
That was his perception: to me
it was otherwise. I could hardly believe the maturity,
the spiritual growth that he had gained in just one
year. He "knew it not" for it had come as growth, not as
a startling spiritual experience.
Where to Start
It is not unusual to have a
missionary say, "How can I bear testimony until I get
one? How can I testify that God lives, that Jesus is the
Christ, and that the gospel is true? If I do not have
such a testimony, would that not be dishonest?"
Oh, if I could teach you this
one principle. A testimony is to be found in the bearing
of it! Somewhere in your quest for spiritual knowledge,
there is that "leap of faith," as the philosophers call
it. It is the moment when you have gone to the edge of
the light and stepped into the darkness to discover that
the way is lighted ahead for just a footstep or two.
"The spirit of man," is as the scripture says, indeed
the candle of the Lord." (Prov. 20:27.)
It is one thing to receive a
witness from what you have read or what another has
said; and that is a necessary beginning. It is quite
another to have the Spirit confirm to you in your bosom
that what you have testified is true. Can you not see
that it will be supplied as you share it? As you give
that which you have, there is a replacement, with
increase!
The prophet Ether "did prophecy
great and marvelous things unto the people, which they
did not believe, because they saw them not.
"And now, I, Moroni, … would
show unto the world that faith is things which are hoped
for and not seen; wherefore, dispute not because ye see
not, for ye receive no witness until after the trial of
your faith." (Ether 12:5–6.)
To speak out is the test of
your faith.
He Will Sustain You
If you will speak with humility
and honest intent, the Lord will not leave you alone.
The scriptures promise that. Consider this one:
"Therefore, verily I say unto
you, lift up your voices unto this people; speak the
thoughts that I shall [note that it is future tense] put
into your hearts, and you shall not be confounded before
men;
"For it shall [again note the
future tense] be given you in the very hour, yea, in the
very moment, what ye shall say.
"But a commandment I give unto
you, that ye shall declare whatsoever thing ye declare
in my name, in solemnity of heart, in the spirit of
meekness, in all things.
"And I give unto you this
promise, that inasmuch as ye do this the Holy Ghost
shall be shed forth in bearing record unto all things
whatsoever ye shall say." (D&C 100:5–8.)
The skeptic will say that to
bear testimony when you may not know you possess one is
to condition yourself; that the response is
manufactured. Well, one thing for sure, the skeptic will
never know, for he will not meet the requirement of
faith, humility, and obedience to qualify him for the
visitation of the Spirit.
Can you not see that that is
where testimony is hidden, protected perfectly from the
insincere, from the intellectual, from the mere
experimenter, the arrogant, the faithless, the proud? It
will not come to them.
Bear testimony of the things
that you hope are true, as an act of faith. It is
something of an experiment, akin to the experiment that
the prophet Alma proposed to his followers. We begin
with faith—not with a perfect knowledge of things. That
sermon in the thirty-second chapter of Alma is one of
the greatest messages in holy writ, for it is addressed
to the beginner, to the novice, to the humble seeker.
And it holds a key to a witness of the truth.
The Spirit and testimony of
Christ will come to you for the most part when, and
remain with you only if, you share it. In that process
is the very essense of the gospel.
Is not this a perfect
demonstration of Christianity? You cannot find it, nor
keep it, nor enlarge it unless and until you are willing
to share it. It is by giving it away freely that it
becomes yours.
The Spirit Will Not Always
Strive with Us
Now, once you receive it, be
obedient to the promptings you receive. I learned a
sobering lesson as a mission president. I was also a
General Authority. I had been prompted several times,
for the good of the work, to release one of my
counselors. Besides praying about it, I had reasoned
that it was the right thing to do. But I did not do it.
I feared that it would injure a man who had given long
service to the Church.
The Spirit withdrew from me. I
could get no promptings on who should be called as a
counselor should I release him. It lasted for several
weeks. My prayers seemed to be contained within the room
where I offered them. I tried a number of alternate ways
to arrange the work, but to no avail. Finally, I did as
I was bidden to do by the Spirit. Immediately, the gift
returned! Oh, the exquisite sweetness to have that gift
again. You know it, for you have it, the gift of the
Holy Ghost. And the brother was not injured, indeed he
was greatly blessed and immediately thereafter the work
prospered.
We Can Be Deceived
Be ever on guard lest you be
deceived by inspiration from an unworthy source. You can
be given false spiritual messages. There are counterfeit
spirits just as there are counterfeit angels. (See Moro.
7:17.) Be careful lest you be deceived, for the devil
may come disguised as an angel of light.
The spiritual part of us and
the emotional part of us are so closely linked that is
possible to mistake an emotional impulse for something
spiritual. We occasionally find people who receive what
they assume to be spiritual promptings from God, when
those promptings are either centered in the emotions or
are from the adversary.
Avoid like a plague those who
claim that some great spiritual experience authorizes
them to challenge the constituted priesthood authority
in the Church. Do not be unsettled if you cannot explain
every insinuation of the apostate or every challenge
from the enemies who attack the Lord’s church. And we
now face a tidal wave of that. In due time you will be
able to confound the wicked and inspire the honest in
heart.
The Benefits of a Mission
Now, as a missionary, you will
mature, develop a confidence, learn to speak up, to
organize, to set goals. You will learn about people and
places, you will learn to learn, and many other things.
These are lasting benefits that come as something of a
reward for your dedicated service.
But these things do not compare
with the most lasting reward. The choicest pearl, the
one of great price, is to learn at an early age how one
is guided by the Spirit of the Lord—a supernal gift.
Indeed, it is a guide and a protection.
"The Spirit shall be given unto
you by the prayer of faith; and if ye receive not the
Spirit, ye shall not teach." (D&C 42:14.)
You Can Do the Lord’s Work
There is great power in this
work, spiritual power. The ordinary member of the
Church, like you, having received the gift of the Holy
Ghost by confirmation, can do the work of the Lord.
Years ago a friend, who long
since is gone, told this experience. He was
seventeen-years-old and with his companion stopped at a
cottage in the southern states. It was his first day in
the mission field and was his first door. A gray-haired
woman stood inside the screen and asked what they
wanted. His companion nudged him to proceed. Frightened
and somewhat tongue-tied, he finally blurted out, "As
man is God once was, and as God is man may become."
Strangely enough, she was
interested and asked where he got that. He answered,
"It’s in the Bible." She left the door for a moment,
returned with her Bible. Commenting that she was a
minister of a congregation, she handed it to him and
said, "Here, show me."
He took the Bible and nervously
thumbed back and forth through it. Finally he handed it
back saying, "Here, I can’t find it. I’m not even sure
that it’s in there, and even if it is, I couldn’t find
it. I’m just a poor farm boy from out in Cache Valley in
Utah. I haven’t had much training. But I come from a
family where we live the gospel of Jesus Christ. And
it’s done so much for our family that I’ve accepted a
call to come on a mission for two years, at my own
expense, to tell people how I feel about it."
After half a century, he could
not hold back the tears as he told me how she pushed
open the door and said, "Come in, my boy, I’d like to
hear what you have to say."
There is great power in this
work, and the ordinary member of the Church, sustained
by the Spirit, can do the work of the Lord.
There is so much more to say. I
could speak of prayer, of fasting, of priesthood and
authority, of worthiness—all essential to revelation.
When they are understood, it all fits
together—perfectly. But some things one must learn
individually, and alone, taught by the Spirit.
Nephi interrupted that great
sermon on the Holy Ghost and on angels saying, "I …
cannot say more; the Spirit stoppeth mine utterance." (2
Ne. 32:7.) I have done the best I could with the words I
have. Perchance the Spirit has opened the veil a little
or confirmed to you a sacred principle of revelation, of
spiritual communication.
I know by experience too sacred
to touch upon that God lives, that Jesus is the Christ,
that the Gift of the Holy Ghost conferred upon us at our
confirmation is a supernal gift.
The Book of Mormon is true!
This is the Lord’s Church!
Jesus is the Christ! There presides over us a prophet of
God! The day of miracles has not ceased, neither have
angels ceased to appear and minister unto man! The
spiritual gifts are with the Church. Choice among them
is the gift of the Holy Ghost!
|