President James E. Faust
Second Counselor in the First Presidency
Please help us push back the world. We must stand against the wind. Sometimes
we must be unpopular and simply say, "This is not right."
My
dear brethren of the priesthood, tonight I address my remarks to all of you,
but in particular to the young men. My purpose is to instruct and warn you
of dangers that lie ahead, but I also want to express my love for you and
the great confidence I have in you as the rising generation.
As a young man I served a mission to Brazil.
It was a marvelous experience. One of the wonders of the world in that
great country is Iguaçu
Falls. In the flood season, the volume of water spilling over the brink is
the largest in the world. Every few minutes, millions of gallons of water
cascade into the chasm below. One part of the falls, where the deluge is
the
heaviest, is called the Devil's Throat.
There are some large rocks standing just above, before the
water rushes down into Devil's Throat. Years ago, reckless boatmen would take
passengers in canoes to stand on those rocks and look down into the Devil's
Throat. The water above the falls is usually calm and slow moving, and the
atmosphere tranquil. Only the roar of the water below forewarns of the danger
lurking just a few feet away. A sudden, unexpected current could take a canoe
into the rushing waters, over the cliff, and down into the Devil's Throat.
Those foolish enough to leave the canoes to stand on these treacherous wet
rocks could so easily lose their footing and be swept away into the swirling
currents below.
I recognize that some of you think of yourselves
as daredevils, ready to take on almost any challenge. But some of these
excursions for excitement
will inevitably take you down into the Devil's Throat. The only safe course
is to stay well away from the dangers of the Devil's Throat. President George
Albert Smith strongly cautioned, "If you cross to the devil's side of
the line one inch, you are in the tempter's power, and if he is successful,
you will not be able to think or even reason properly, because you will have
lost the spirit of the Lord."1
Some of you young men may be letting others set
your standards. You defend yourselves by saying, "Who said we shouldn't do this or we
shouldn't do that?" There are so many shades of right and wrong that
each of you has to decide where the line will be. I strongly urge you that
if there is any question in your minds or hearts about whether your personal
conduct is right or wrong, don't do it. Each of us has moral agency, and
the
gift of the Holy Ghost will sharpen our impressions of what is right and
wrong, true and false. It is the responsibility of the prophets of God to
teach the
word of God, not to spell out every jot and tittle of human conduct. If we
are conscientiously trying to avoid not only evil but the very appearance
of evil, we will act for ourselves and not be acted upon.2
Much of what comes from the devil is alluring
and enticing. It glitters and is appealing to the sensual parts of our
nature. His message
sounds so reasonable and easy to justify. His voice is usually smooth and
intriguing. If it were harsh or discordant, nobody would listen, nobody
would
be enticed. Some of Satan's most appealing messages are: Everyone does it;
if it doesn't hurt anybody else, it's all right; if you feel there is no
harm
in it, it's okay; it's the "cool" thing to do. Satan is the greatest
imitator, the master deceiver, the arch counterfeiter, and the greatest forger
ever in the history of the world. He comes into our lives as a thief in the
night. His disguise is so perfect that it is hard to recognize him or his
methods. He is a wolf in sheep's clothing.
There have always been two great competing forces in the world.
These began before the world was created. These opposing forces are the forces
of good and evil. Between these two powerful forces each of us is caught in
a tug of war. In simple terms, that which is good comes from God, and that
which is evil comes from the devil.3 You can't have it both ways
and find true happiness; some have tried, but in the long run all have failed.
If any of you young men think you can have it both ways, you are only deceiving
yourselves. It doesn't work that way. It never has. It never will.
My dear young friends, there is another great
truth that you young men must learn. It is that everything has a price.
There is a price
to pay for success, fulfillment, accomplishment, and joy. There are no freebies.
If you don't pay the price that is needed for success, you will pay the
price
of failure. Preparation, work, study, and service are required to achieve
and find happiness. Disobedience and lack of preparation carry a terrible
price tag. As priesthood holders of this Church, part of the price we need
to pay is by living differently from the world. We are the possessors and
custodians of these commanding powers which can and do roll back the power
of Satan on the earth. With all my heart I urge you to please help us push
back the world. We must stand against the wind. Sometimes we must be unpopular
and simply say, "This is not right."
All of us want to find out who we really are and what our
place is in the world. Some of you young people are trying to find your identity
by being different from your parents and families in what they stand for.
God made each of us to be different from anyone else in the world, as our
DNA and fingerprints prove. You don't have to work at having a separate identity;
you already have one.
Some young people want to rebel against restraints.
Some of you think it isn't "cool" to be obedient to your parents
or to follow the counsel of your bishop or quorum president. Bishop Richard
C. Edgley shared
an experience he had as a young boy about the consequences of being reckless
and disobedient:
"When I was a young boy, our garage and
the neighbor's garage were about five feet apart. The neighbor's garage
was very old and
dilapidated, and some of the boards were breaking. I, on occasion, would
climb onto our garage and jump from one garage to the other and play on
top of them.
My father had told me, 'Stay off the garages,' but I didn't. One time when
I was playing on them, I jumped from our garage and fell through the roof
of the neighbor's garage, scraping my back and legs badly. Because I had
been
disobedient, I foolishly decided not to tell anyone that I had hurt myself.
I went in the house and washed the scrapes and scratches as well as I could,
but I couldn't reach the ones on my back to put antiseptic on them or even
wash them clean. I bore the burden of pain, worry over infection setting
in,
and guilt for several days while the healing process took place."4
As someone once said, "One of the best things
in the world to be is a boy; it requires no experience, but needs some
practice to
be a good one."5
Some of you may have been deceived by thinking that you can
find excitement by dabbling in drugs, alcohol, pornography, and illicit sex.
I warn you that such enticements as these are slippery and dangerous like
the rocks by the Devil's Throat, and they will only lead you into Satan's
territory. The way out of that kind of danger is difficult and will leave
you with far more than a few scrapes and scratches.
You young men will be working out your eternal destiny at
an interesting time. In the future there will continue to be an increase in
scientific discoveries and inventions which will make life more comfortable
and easier for many. No doubt medical science will continue to find new treatments
and cures not available now. In contrast, the worldly influences of evil will
likely increase, and more people will become vulnerable to the deceit and
enticement of Satan. You young men will need to become stronger spiritually
and morally in order to withstand the temptations and snares of the world.
Perhaps this is why such special spirits have been reserved for this time.
I also believe that in the future the opposition from Satan
will be both more subtle and more open. While in some ways it may be more
blatant, it will be masked with greater sophistication and cunning. We will
need greater spirituality to perceive all the forms of evil and greater strength
to resist it.
Many countries now face the dangers of terrorism. War exposes
people to bodily harm, but there is also exposure to moral harm. Those of
us who have served in the military in wartime have experienced the disruption
in life that comes from being uprooted from home and family, wholesome associations,
and the influence of the organized Church. I warn those who are now serving
in the military, or who may do so, against the pitfalls of these disruptions.
They can take us into the very jaws of the Devil's Throat.
Many of the activities you will be engaged in
are group situations where you cannot always choose your own company. But
you can choose your standards.
In the military you belong to an outfit where part of its strength comes
from the unity of its members. You need to be loyal to the members of your
unit
because the fellow who is next to you may save your life tomorrow! But that
doesn't mean you have to lower your moral standards. In any association
there
needs to be one or more who stand up and say, "What we are doing is not
right." It takes moral courage to do this!
The Church recently republished the servicemen's edition of
Principles of the Gospel for members of the Church serving in the military
anywhere in the world. While it is now only available in English, it will
be translated into other languages. This excellent resource contains instructions
for Church activity and the wearing of the garment in the military, priesthood
ordinances and blessings, gospel topics, and a few selected hymns. We had
a similar resource available to those of us who served in the military in
World War II. I found it to be invaluable.
There is a continuing sifting process going on.
We are reminded of the parable of the wheat and the tares. In that parable
the Lord said, "The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in
his field," but while he slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among
the grain, so that when the blades of wheat sprouted, so did the weeds. The
man's workers did not understand how weeds got into the field and asked if
they should go and pull the weeds. The owner of the field said no, because
while you pull the weeds, you also pull up the grain. So he counseled that
the grain and the weeds grow together until the time of harvest, when the
wheat would be bundled separately from the weeds.6
The disciples of Jesus asked the Savior for an
interpretation of the parable, and the Savior answered: "He that soweth
the good seed is the Son of man;
"The field is the world; the good seed are
the children of the kingdom; but the tares are the children of the wicked
one;
"The enemy that sowed them is the devil; . . . and
the reapers are the angels.
"As therefore the tares are gathered and
burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world."7
This parable confirms the statement of Alma which
I wish to repeat, "Whatsoever is good cometh from God, and whatsoever
is evil cometh from the devil."8
Brethren, we are living in a challenging time,
and it is a time for us to stand firm and steady in meeting our family
and priesthood
responsibilities. We should not be blown "like a wave of the sea driven
with the wind and tossed."9 We should go forward in a spirit
of faith and not be fearful of anything except being too close to the Devil's
Throat. We will be strengthened and preserved if we follow the counsel and
direction of President Gordon B. Hinckley, who is at the helm. I have a
special witness that he is our prophet, seer, and revelator. He is the mouthpiece
of God on the earth today. I pray the Lord's blessings to be with us all,
in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES
1. Sharing the Gospel with Others, sel. Preston Nibley
(1948), 43.
2. See 2 Nephi 2:13, 26.
3. See Alma 5:40.
4. "Friend
to Friend," The Friend, Feb. 1995,
6.
5. Charles Dudley Warner, Thesaurus of Quotations, ed.
Edmund Fuller (1941), 115.
6. See Matthew
13:2430.
7. Matthew
13:3740.
8. Alma 5:40.
9. James 1:6.