President Thomas S. Monson
First Counselor in the First Presidency
"Brethren, the world is in need of your help. There are feet to steady, hands to grasp, minds to encourage, hearts to inspire, and souls to save."
Mine is the overwhelming and humbling responsibility tonight to address you, my dear brethren
who hold the priesthood of God and who have assembled here in the Conference Center and
throughout the world.
Some of you are deacons, perhaps newly ordained; others of you are high priests who have
served long and faithfully in sacred callings. All have assembled that we might better learn our
duty.
Brethren, the world is in need of your help. There are feet to steady, hands to grasp, minds to
encourage, hearts to inspire, and souls to save. The blessings of eternity await you. Yours is the
privilege to be not spectators but participants on the stage of priesthood service.
President Wilford Woodruff declared: "All the organizations of the Priesthood
have power. The Deacon has power, through the Priesthood which he holds. So
has the Teacher. They have power to go before the Lord and have their prayers
heard and answered, as well as the Prophet. . . . It is
by this Priesthood that men have ordinances conferred upon them, that their
sins are forgiven, and that they are redeemed. For this purpose it has been
revealed and sealed upon our heads."1
Once I heard from a newly ordained deacon soon after he had received the Aaronic Priesthood.
He said, "Today is my first day to pass the sacrament. I can't wait. I know it is a very holy
ordinance, so I'll treat it with care. I have a true testimony of the Church, and I hope to go on a
mission soon."
May I share with you tonight, brethren, a letter which I received some time ago, written by a
husband who strayed far from the priesthood path of service and duty. It typifies the plea of too
many of our brethren. He wrote:
"Dear President Monson:
"I had so much and now have so little. I am unhappy and feel as though I am failing in
everything. The gospel has never left my heart, even though it has left my life. I ask for
your prayers.
"Please don't forget those of us who are out herethe lost Latter-day Saints. I know
where the Church is, but sometimes I think I need someone else to show me the way,
encourage me, take away my fear, and bear testimony to me."
While reading this letter, I returned in my thoughts to a visit to one of the great art galleries of the
worldeven the famed Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. There, exquisitely
framed, was a masterpiece painted in 1831 by Joseph Mallord William Turner. The painting
features heavy-laden black clouds and the fury of a turbulent sea portending danger and death. A
light from a stranded vessel gleams far off. In the foreground, tossed high by incoming waves of
foaming water, is a large lifeboat. The men pull mightily on the oars as the lifeboat plunges into
the tempest. On the shore there stand a wife and two children, wet with rain and whipped by
wind. They gaze anxiously seaward. In my mind I abbreviated the name of the painting. To me, it
became To the Rescue.
Amidst the storms of life, danger lurks; and men, like boats, find themselves stranded and facing
destruction. Who will man the lifeboats, leaving behind the comforts of home and family, and go
to the rescue?
President John Taylor cautioned us, "If you do not magnify your callings, God
will hold you responsible for those whom you might have saved had you done your
duty."2
Brethren, our task is not insurmountable. We are on the Lord's errand, and therefore we are
entitled to the Lord's help. But we must try. From the stage play Shenandoah comes the spoken
line which inspires: "If we don't try, then we don't do; and if we don't do, then why are we
here?"
When the Master ministered among men, He called fishermen at Galilee to leave
their nets and follow Him, declaring, "I will make you fishers of men."3
And so He did. Tonight He issues a call to each of us to "come join the ranks."4
He provides our battle plan with His admonition, "Wherefore, now let every man
learn his duty, and to act in the office in which he is appointed, in all diligence."5
I love and cherish the noble word duty. Let us hearken to the stirring
reminder found in the epistle of James: "Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers
only, deceiving your own selves."6
There is an old song of my vintage. It's entitled "Wishing Will Make It So." It's not true.
Wishing will not make it so. The Lord expects our thinking. He expects our action. He expects
our labors. He expects our testimonies. He expects our devotion. Unfortunately, there are those
who have departed from the track of priesthood activity. Let us help them back to that path that
leads to life eternal. Let us build that strong Melchizedek Priesthood base which will be the
foundation of Church activity and growth. It will be the underpinning to strengthen every family,
every home, every quorum in every land.
Brethren, we can reach out to those for whom we are responsible and bring them
to the table of the Lord, there to feast on His word and to enjoy the companionship
of His Spirit and be "no more strangers and foreigners, but fellowcitizens with
the saints, and of the household of God."7
The passage of time has not altered the capacity of the Redeemer to change
men's livesour lives and the lives of those with whom we labor. As He
said to the dead Lazarus, so He says today: "Come forth."8
Come forth from the despair of doubt. Come forth from the sorrow of sin. Come
forth from the death of disbelief. Come forth to a newness of life. Come forth.
We will discover that those whom we serve, who have felt through our labors
the touch of the Master's hand, somehow cannot explain the change which comes
into their lives. There is a desire to serve faithfully, to walk humbly, and
to live more like the Savior. Having received their spiritual eyesight and glimpsed
the promises of eternity, they echo the words of the blind man to whom Jesus
restored sight, who said, "One thing I know, that, whereas I was blind, now
I see."9
How can we account for these miracles? Why the upsurge of activity in men long
dormant? The poet, speaking of death, wrote, "God . . . touched
him, and he slept."10 I say, speaking of this new
birth, "God touched them, and they awakened."
Two fundamental reasons largely account for these changes of attitudes, of habits, of actions.
First, men have been shown their eternal possibilities and have made the decision to achieve
them. Men cannot really long rest content with mediocrity once they see excellence is within
their reach.
Second, other men have followed the admonition of the Savior and have loved their neighbors as
themselves and helped to bring their neighbors' dreams to fulfillment and their ambitions to
realization.
The catalyst in this process has beenand will continue to bethe principle of love.
Another principle of truth which will guide us in our determination is that boys and men can
change. I'm reminded of the words of a prison warden who taught this fact. A critic who knew of
Warden Duffy's efforts to rehabilitate men said, "Don't you know that leopards can't change
their spots?"
Warden Duffy responded, "You should know I don't work with leopards. I work with men, and
men change every day."
Many years ago, before leaving to become president of the Canadian Mission, headquartered in
Toronto, Ontario, I had developed a friendship with a man by the name of Shelley, who lived in
my ward but did not embrace the gospel, irrespective of the fact that his wife and children had
done so. Shelley had been known as the toughest man in town when he was young. He was quite
a pugilist. His fights were rarely in the ring but rather elsewhere. Try as I might, I could not bring
about a change in Shelley's attitude. The task appeared hopeless. In time, Shelley and his family
moved from our ward.
After I had returned from Canada and was called to the Twelve, I received a telephone call from
Shelley. He said, "Will you seal my wife and me and our family in the Salt Lake Temple?"
I answered hesitatingly, "Shelley, you first must be a baptized member of the Church."
He laughed and responded, "Oh, I took care of that while you were in Canada. My home teacher
was a school crossing guard, and every weekday as he and I would visit at the crossing, we would
discuss the gospel."
The sealings were performed; a family was united; joy followed.
Abraham Lincoln offered this wise counsel, which surely applies to home teachers:
"If you would win a man to your cause, first convince him that you
are his sincere friend."11
A friend makes more than a dutiful visit each month. A friend is more concerned about helping
people than getting credit. A friend cares. A friend loves. A friend listens. And a friend reaches
out.
There are brethren in every ward who seem to have a special skill and aptitude to penetrate the
outer shell and reach the heart. Such was Raymond L. Egan, who served as my counselor in the
bishopric. He loved to befriend and activate in the Church the father of a family and thereby
bring into the fold a dear wife and precious children as well. This wonderful phenomenon
occurred many times right up until Brother Egan departed mortality.
There are other ways, as well, by which one might lift and serve. On one occasion,
I was speaking with a retired executive I had known for a long time. I asked
him, "Ed, what are you doing in the Church?" He replied, "I have the best assignment
in the ward. My responsibility is to help men who are unemployed find permanent
employment. This year I have helped 12 of my brethren who were out of work to
obtain good jobs. I have never been happier in my entire life." Short in stature,
"Little Ed," as we affectionately called him, stood tall that evening as his
eyes glistened and his voice quavered. He showed his love by helping those in
need. He restored human dignity. He opened doors for those who knew not how
to do so themselves.
I truly believe that those who have the ability to reach out and to lift up
have found the formula descriptive of Brother Walter Stovera man who spent
his entire life in service to others. At Brother Stover's funeral, his son-in-law
paid tribute to him in these words: "Walter Stover had the ability to see Christ
in every face he encountered, and he treated each person accordingly." Legendary
are his acts of compassionate help and his talent to lift heavenward every person
whom he met. His guiding light was the Master's voice speaking, "Inasmuch as
ye have done it unto one of the least of these . . . , ye
have done it unto me."12
Brethren, acquire the language of the Spirit. It is not learned from textbooks written by men of
letters, nor is it acquired through reading and memorization. The language of the Spirit comes to
him who seeks with all his heart to know God and keep His divine commandments. Proficiency
in this "language" permits one to breach barriers, overcome obstacles, and touch the human
heart.
In a day of danger or a time of trial, such knowledge, such hope, such understanding bring
comfort to a troubled soul and a grieving heart. Shadows of despair are dispelled by rays of hope;
sorrow yields to joy; and the feeling of being lost in the crowd of life vanishes with the certain
knowledge that our Heavenly Father is mindful of each of us.
In closing, I return to the painting by Turner. In a very real sense, those persons stranded on the
vessel which had run aground in the storm-tossed sea are like many young menand older men
as wellwho await rescue by those of us who have the priesthood responsibility to man the
lifeboats. Their hearts yearn for help. Mothers and fathers pray for their sons. Wives and children
plead to heaven that Daddy and others may be reached.
Tonight I pray that all of us who hold the priesthood may sense our responsibilities and, as one,
follow our Leadereven the Lord Jesus Christ, and His prophet, President Gordon B.
Hinckleyto the rescue.
In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES
1. In Brian H. Stuy, ed., Collected Discourses Delivered
by President Wilford Woodruff, His Two Counselors, the Twelve Apostles, and
Others, 5 vols. (198792), 2:87.
2. Deseret News Semi-weekly, 6 Aug. 1878, 1.
3. Matt. 4:19.
4. "We Are All Enlisted," Hymns, no. 250.
5. D&C
107:99.
6. James
1:22.
7. Eph. 2:19.
8. John 11:43.
9. John 9:25.
10. Alfred, Lord Tennyson, In Memoriam A. H. H.,
section 85, stanza 5, line 4; spelling modernized.
11. The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, ed. Roy
P. Basler, 8 vols. (1953), 1:273.
12. Matt.
25:40.