Elder David B. Haight
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
If we're ever going to show gratitude properly
to our Heavenly Father, we should do it with all of our heart, might, mind,
and strength.
When President Thomas S. Monson asked those new members of the Seventy and
the Young Women general presidency to come up and take their places on the stand,
I remembered vividly April 1970, when I was called to be an Assistant to the
Quorum of the Twelvewhich was a surprise to me. I'd only known about it
for just a few hours. As I was invited to sit in one of the red chairs in the
old Tabernacle, the choir started to sing "O Divine Redeemer." As I listened
to that pleading song with that wonderful melody, I silently asked the Savior
to accept me as I am and remember not my failures, my shortcomings, and my sins
(see Psalm
25:7). What a wonderful day that was! That flashed through my mind as President
Monson made that invitation today.
I'm honored to be here this afternoon to spend a few moments with all of you
and bear to you my witness and my testimony and my feelings regarding this wonderful
work.
I told Elder Neal A. Maxwell I would come up here without my cane. He had it
ready for me, but I said, "No, I can get by without it. I'll show you I have
the faith that it will happen." As I get older and as the years roll on, I'm
honored to have this opportunity and to have the ability and the desire to stand
and witness to you of the blessings of the gospel that have come into my life
during these past many years. I don't know if I'm the oldest one in this great
hall today, but I am now in my 97th year. When it was announced this morning
that this is the 172nd semiannual conference of the Church, I thought some people
in their younger years could look upon 172 as a long, long time. I would remind
you of the 100th anniversary of the Church. At that time, Ruby and I were married.
It was 1930. This is the 172nd anniversary of the Church, and we have been married
72 years. I'm only mentioning that to you so you mathematicians can remember
172; it comes pretty easily.
I wish at this time to pay tribute and express gratitude to my Heavenly Father
for the blessings I've received all the years of my lifefor having been
born of goodly parents and raised in a goodly home. And as we have moved around
the country in all of the activities we have been involved in, I'm grateful
to have been associated with good people. Good people influence your life and
help in molding your own personality and character and help you to mingle out
in society and live the way that you should live. They help you carry on worthwhile
enterprises, and they lift you onto a higher plane. And so I'm grateful to my
Heavenly Father for the blessings that I have had. I bear witness of Him, that
I know that He is our Father and that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living
God, the Creator, and the Savior of all of mankind. I am grateful for that majestic
role He has played in the Creation and the establishing of the gospel on the
earth and for the opportunity that brings to mankind, if they will listen, to
hear and to understand and to have the blessings of heaven if they merit them
and to live in such a way that the gospel becomes a great part of their life.
I have gratitude for my ancestors who joined the Church back in the early days
of the Church, who moved from upstate New York to join with the Saints in Nauvoo
and became involved with the Nauvoo Temple and then with the exodus into the
West. For all of these blessings, I'm grateful on this day, as I pronounce them
to you.
I must mention President Gordon B. Hinckley. He gave an outstanding talk this
morninggiving us an overview of the recent years but particularly an overview
of the events of Nauvoo and of the rebuilding of that majestic temple. All that
has taken place there has been a blessing to the world and to mankind.
I want President Hinckley to know that I have watched carefully since he was
called to be an additional counselor to President Spencer W. Kimball and as
he has assumed his role in the First Presidency. How he has grown and matured
and been inspired and directed in carrying out the activities that we have been
a witness to! Many of us have played some small role in the vision that he had
of the growth that has happened in the Church recently, including the building
of the temples, where we now have 114 operating. All of these things have been
the result of the inspired direction of President Hinckley. Bless his heart
for what he has done in helping the Church to expand and our image to grow and
improve throughout the world. We're so grateful for what he has done, for the
stature that we have today in the Church, and for his leadership.
As recorded in Luke, one day the Savior entered a village where there were
10 lepers. Now, those of us who have grown up in the last few years know very
little about lepers. Leprosy was a terrible, dreaded disease anciently. These
10 lepers came to the Savior and said, "Master, have mercy upon us; have mercy
upon us who have that terrible ailment of leprosy." And He said to the 10 lepers,
"Go visit your priest, and he will take care of you"which they did. They
went to see their priests, and they were cleansed, all 10 of them. A short time
later, one of them returned to the Savior and fell on his face and his hands
and his knees, thanking the Savior for blessing him and making him well from
that terrible disease. And the Savior said to that one man: "Weren't there 10?
What has happened to the other nine? Where are they?" (See Luke
17:1119.)
As I've read that story again and again, it's made a great impression upon
me. How would you like to be part of the "nine society"? Wouldn't that be somethingto
be numbered among those who failed to return and acknowledge the Savior for
the blessings He had given them? Only one returned.
It's so easy in life for us to receive blessings, many of them almost uncounted,
and have things happen in our lives that can help change our lives, improve
our lives, and bring the Spirit into our lives. But we sometimes take them for
granted. How grateful we should be for the blessings that the gospel of Jesus
Christ brings into our hearts and souls. I would remind all of you that if we're
ever going to show gratitude properly to our Heavenly Father, we should do it
with all of our heart, might, mind, and strengthbecause it was He who
gave us life and breath. He gave us the opportunity to live as we are, to have
the gospel in our lives, to have the example of good people like President Hinckley
leading the Church throughout the world today and the opportunity for the young
people to look to him with pride and gratitude for a leader who looks and acts
the part and demonstrates what the Spirit of Christ can bring into our heart
and soul. As that gratitude is magnified and developed and expanded, it can
bless our hearts and our minds and our souls to where we'd like to continue
to carry on and do those things that we are asked to do.
We have a lot of our family scattered in at least 20 locations in the United
States and England. I have suggested to them that when they have opportunities
to sustain the General Authoritiesparticularly President Hinckley and
his counselorsif they have to stand at the radio or wherever it might
be, that with enthusiasm they raise their hands and say to themselves, "I'm
part of sustaining the leadership of the Church." I had in my mind's eye today
as we were raising our hands some little youngsterschildren whom we love
and adoreraising their hands in various parts of the world. We hope that
we will implant in them along with the Spirit of the Lord a desire to learn,
to know, to live and be part of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We hope they fully
enjoy their opportunities to develop their characters and to be able to reach
out and help change and lift the hearts of other people.
God lives. He is our Father. I testify to you that Jesus is the Christ, the
Son of the living God, and the Prophet Joseph Smith was the prophet of the Restoration.
President Hinckley is our inspired leader over this Church throughout the world
today. Bless his heart for all that he does and for the inspiration and revelation
and vision that is his as he leads the work forward. I leave this witness with
you in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.