My sister, Lisa, told me about a quote from this talk, which
I really like. So, I decided to look up
and read the entire talk. In doing so, I
found many other great quotes, which I loved.
So I decided to copy and paste some of my favorites here. You can read the entire talk at this link:
I love President Benson!
He is the prophet who signed my mission call! These are some really awesome quotes! Enjoy!
Top of FormBottom of For
December 10,
1974
BYU Devotional
Jesus
Christ--Gifts
and Expectations
Ezra Taft Benson
Top of FormBottom of ForTop of FormBottom of FormTop of FoBottom of Fo
Ezra Taft
Benson was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints when this devotional address was given at Brigham
Young University on 10 December 1974.
Some men are willing to die for their faith but will not
fully live for it.
The only true
test of greatness, blessedness, joyfulness is how close a life can come to
being like the Master, Jesus Christ.
The constant and
most recurring question in our minds, touching every thought and deed of our
lives, should be “Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?” (Acts 9:6).
A good way to
measure your standing with the Lord is to see how you feel about, and act upon,
the inspired words of his earthly representative, the Prophet-President. The
inspired words of the President are not to be trifled with.
Although his
prophet is mortal, God will not let him lead his Church astray. God knows all
things, the end from the beginning, and no man becomes President of the church
of Jesus Christ by accident, nor remains there by chance, nor is called home by
happenstance.
The most
important prophet, so far as we are concerned, is the one who is living in our
day and age. This is the prophet who has today’s instructions from God to us.
No matter what
happens to the world, the Church will grow in strength and will be intact when
the Lord comes again.
God has assured
us that the Church will never again be taken from the earth because of
apostasy.
This means that
certain individuals within the Church may go astray and even fall away. This
may happen even to a person in the Church who is in a position of some
influence and authority. It has happened in the past. It will happen in the
future.
Sometimes in our
attempts to mimic the world, contrary to the prophet’s counsel, we run after
the world’s false educational, political, musical, and dress ideas. New worldly
standards take over, a gradual breakdown occurs, and finally, after much
suffering, a humble people are ready to be taught once again a higher law.
When individual
actions of some Church members disturb you, here’s another principle to
consider. This is the principle of stewardship. As the kingdom grows larger,
more and more responsibilities have to be delegated and stewardships handed
out. Men respond in different degrees of valiancy to their stewardships. God is
very patient and long-suffering as he waits for some of us to rise to our
responsibilities. He usually gives a man a long enough rope and a long enough
time either to pull himself up to the presence of God or to drop off somewhere
below. But while God is patient, no puny arm of man in his stewardship can long
impede or pervert the work of the Lord. The mills of God grind slowly, but they
grind ever so finely.
Because God has
given men their agency, there will always be those who will misuse it. The
gospel net draws in the good and the bad, the best and the worst—the worst
because the devil, before the final cleansing, puts some of his followers
within the kingdom in order to try and destroy it. We have some of them within
the kingdom today, and in due course their number shall be known. Time has a
way of taking care of all things, of elevating the good and bringing down the
bad.
The Church is
true. Keep its laws; attend its meetings; sustain its leaders; accept its
callings; get its recommend; enjoy its blessings.
If we really did
our homework and approached the Book of Mormon doctrinally, we could expose the
errors and find the truths to combat many of the current false theories and
philosophies of men, including socialism, humanism, organic evolution, and
others.
I have noted
within the Church the difference in discernment, in insight, in conviction, and
in spirit between those who know and love the Book of Mormon and those who do
not. That book is a great sifter.
The Lord said, “I
established the Constitution of this land, by the hands of wise men whom I
raised up” (D&C 101:80).
The elders of
this Church have a prophetic mission yet to perform so far as the Constitution
is concerned. In a discourse on July 19, 1840, Joseph Smith said, “Even this
nation will be on the very verge of crumbling to pieces and tumbling to the
ground, and when the Constitution is upon the brink of ruin, this people will
be the staff upon which the nation shall lean, and they shall bear the
Constitution away from the very verge of destruction” (M8d 155, Bx4, Joseph
Smith, Church Historian’s Library).
Now, how are the
elders going to prepare for that mission? How are they going to know what the
Constitution is, so they will know when it is on the brink of ruin? In many of
the law schools of today you will hear that the Constitution is whatever the
Supreme Court says it is. Could it be that the Supreme Court, which President
McKay said is leading this nation down the road to atheism, is the agency to
tell us what this divine document is (David O. McKay, Church News, 22 June
1963; Jerreld Newquist, comp., Prophets, Principles, and National Survival,
pp. 187–88)? Can we learn best how to preserve it by studying what it is at the
hands of some of those who are seeking to destroy it?
But President
McKay had a better approach when he encouraged us to support good and
conscientious candidates who are truly dedicated to the Constitution in the
tradition of our founding fathers. They are the ones the Lord referred to
as wise men. It is to them, the Lord, and his prophets that we should go to
determine what the Constitution is.
Thank God for the
Constitution, which made it possible for the Lord to establish his church and
base of operations here in the United States for these last days. And may God bless
the elders of Israel so that when, as President John Taylor said, “the people
shall have torn to shreds the Constitution of the United States the Elders of
Israel will be found holding it up to the nations of earth and proclaiming
liberty” (Journal of Discourses, 21:8).
Yes, men and
women who turn their lives over to God will find out that he can make a lot
more out of their lives than they can. He will deepen their joys, expand their
vision, quicken their minds, strengthen their muscles, lift their spirits,
multiply their blessings, increase their opportunities, comfort their souls, raise
up friends, and pour out peace. Whoever will lose his life to God will find he
has eternal life.
Elder Bruce
McConkie said, “Sacrifice pertains to mortality; in the eternal sense there is
none. Sacrifice involves giving up the things of this world because of the
promises of blessings to be gained in a better world.
But just as when
one loses his life to God he really finds the abundant life; so also, when one
sacrifices all to God, then God in return shares all that he has with him. Try
as you may, you cannot put the Lord in your debt—for every time you try to do
his will he simply pours out more blessings upon you. Sometimes the blessings
may seem to you to be a little slow in coming; perhaps this tests your faith,
but come they will and abundantly.
Do you know one
reason why righteous mothers love their children so much? It’s because they
sacrifice so much for them. We love what we sacrifice for, and we sacrifice for
what we love.
A few years ago,
we knew our Elder Brother and his and our Father in heaven well. We rejoiced at
the upcoming opportunity for earthly life that could make it possible for us to
have a fullness of joy as they had. We could hardly wait to demonstrate to our
Father and our Brother, the Lord, how much we loved them and how we would be
obedient to them in spite of the earthly opposition of the evil one. And now
we’re here—our memories are veiled—and we’re showing God and ourselves what we
can do. Nothing is going to startle us more when we pass through the veil to
the other side than to realize how well we know our Father and how familiar his
face is to us. And then, President Young said, we’re going to wonder why we
were so stupid in the flesh.
God loves us,
he’s watching us, he wants us to succeed, and we’ll know someday that he has
not left one thing undone for the eternal welfare of each of us. If we only
knew that there are heavenly hosts pulling for us—friends in heaven, whom we
can’t remember now, who yearn for our victory. This is our day to show what we
can do—what life and sacrifice we can daily, hourly, instantly bring to God. If
we give our all, we will get his all from the greatest of all.