President Thomas S. Monson
First Counselor in the First Presidency
We can, with the Lord's help, reach out and rescue those for whom
we have responsibility.
My dear brethren, it is a humbling experience to stand before
you this evening and to realize that beyond the imposing audience
in this, the Conference Center, many hundreds of thousands of
priesthood bearers are similarly assembled throughout the world.
While contemplating the responsibility to speak
to you, I recalled a definition of priesthood authority declared by President
Stephen L
Richards. Said he: "The Priesthood is usually simply defined as
'the power of God delegated to man.' This definition, I think, is
accurate. But for practical purposes I like to define the Priesthood
in terms of service and I frequently call it 'the perfect plan of
service.' "1
Whether we hold the office of a deacon in the Aaronic
Priesthood
or that of an elder in the Melchizedek Priesthood, we are duty
bound by the Lord's revelation found in the 107th section of the
Doctrine and Covenants, verse 99: "Wherefore, now let every man
learn his duty, and to act in the office in which he is appointed, in
all diligence."
As our youngest son, Clark, was approaching his
12th birthday, he
and I were leaving the Church Administration Building when
President Harold B. Lee approached and greeted us. I mentioned
that Clark would soon be 12, whereupon President Lee turned to
him and asked, "What happens to you when you turn 12?"
This was one of those times when a father prays
that a son will be inspired to give a proper response. Clark, without hesitation,
said
to President Lee, "I will be ordained a deacon!"
The answer was the one President Lee had sought.
He then
counseled our son, "Remember, it is a great blessing to hold the
priesthood."
When I was a boy, I looked forward to passing the
sacrament to the ward members. We deacons were trained as to our duties.
One of
the men in our ward, Louis, suffered from palsy. His head and
hands shook so violently that he could not, by himself, partake of
the sacrament. Each deacon knew that his duty in serving Louis
was to hold the bread to his lips so that he might partake and to
similarly place the cup of water to his mouth with one hand, while
steadying his head with the other, the tray being held by another
deacon while doing so. Always Louis would say, "Thank you."
It was 40 years ago this conference time when President
David O.
McKay called me to serve as a member of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles. At the first meeting of the Presidency and
Twelve which I attended where the sacrament was served,
President McKay announced, "Before we partake of the sacrament,
I would like to ask our newest member of this body, Brother
Monson, if he would instruct the First Presidency and Twelve on
the atoning sacrifice of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." It was
then that I gained a true understanding of the old adage: "When the
time for decision arrives, the time for preparation is past." It was
also the time to remember the counsel found in 1 Peter: "Be ready
always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of
the hope that is in you."2
I began my remarks by referring to a letter which I had received
from one of the servicemen from our ward who was serving on the
front lines in Korea during that sometimes forgotten war. The
writer told how, amidst the shelling on Sunday morning, several in
his platoon partook of the bread and then the water, both served
from a helmet. Each remembered the significance of the blessing
pronounced on the sacred emblems and his individual
responsibility to keep the commandments of the Lord and to follow
the Lord's example of service to others.
The memory of that particular experience with the First Presidency
and Quorum of the Twelve has not dimmed in the intervening 40
years.
To those who have been absent from home and family,
whether in the military, on missions, or for other purposes, the holiday
season
brings forth a yearningeven a longingto be together with
loved ones. To hear the laughter of children, to witness the
expression of love by parents, and to feel the embrace of brothers
and sisters provide a preview of heaven and the eternal joy to be
found there.
One December evening, while waiting to board a plane en route to
the United States, Sister Monson and I were standing in the stifling
heat and humidity of Singapore, when over the airport loudspeaker
system came a familiar, lilting melody, with Bing Crosby singing
the words:
I'll be home for Christmas;
You can plan on me.
Please have snow and mistletoe
And presents on the tree.
Christmas Eve will find me
Where the love-light gleams.
I'll be home for Christmas
If only in my dreams.3
The First Presidency has long emphasized the statement, "The
home is the basis of a righteous life and no other instrumentality
can take its place nor fulfill its essential functions."4
There are those families comprised of mothers and fathers, sons
and daughters who have, through thoughtless comment, isolated
themselves from one another. An account of how such a tragedy
was narrowly averted occurred many years ago in the life of a
young man who, for purposes of privacy, I shall call Jack.
Throughout Jack's life, he and his father had many
serious
arguments. One day, when he was 17, they had a particularly
violent one. Jack said to his father, "This is the straw that breaks
the camel's back. I'm leaving home, and I shall never return." So
saying, he went to the house and packed his bag. His mother
begged him to stay; he was too angry to listen. He left her crying at
the doorway.
Leaving the yard, he was about to pass through
the gate when he
heard his father call to him, "Jack, I know that a large share of the
blame for your leaving rests with me. For this I am truly sorry. I
want you to know that if you should ever wish to return home,
you'll always be welcome. And I'll try to be a better father to you. I
want you to know that I'll always love you."
Jack said nothing but went to the bus station and
bought a ticket to a distant point. As he sat on the bus, watching the miles
go by, he
commenced to think about the words of his father. He began to
realize how much love it had required for him to do what he had
done. Dad had apologized. He had invited him back and left the
words ringing in the summer air: "I love you."
It was then that Jack realized that the next move was up to him. He
knew the only way he could ever find peace with himself was to
demonstrate to his father the same kind of maturity, goodness, and
love that Dad had shown toward him. Jack got off the bus. He
bought a return ticket and went back.
He arrived shortly after midnight, entered the
house, turned on the light. There in the rocking chair sat his father, his
head in his
hands. As he looked up and saw Jack, he arose from the chair and
they rushed into each other's arms. Jack often said, "Those last
years that I was home were among the happiest of my life."
We could say that here was a boy who overnight
became a man.
Here was a father who, suppressing passion and bridling pride,
rescued his son before he became one of that vast, "lost battalion" resulting
from fractured families and shattered homes. Love was the binding band, the healing
balm. Love so often felt, so seldom
expressed.
From Mount Sinai there thunders in our ears, "Honour
thy father
and thy mother."5 And later from the Lord the injunction, "Live
together in love."6
Brethren, ours is the responsibility, yes, even the solemn duty, to
reach out to those who have slipped into inactivity or strayed from
the family circle.
Recall with me the beautiful words of the Lord's
revelation from
section 18 of the Doctrine and Covenants: "Remember the worth of
souls is great in the sight of God. . . .
"And if it so be that you should labor all your
days in crying repentance unto this people, and bring, save it be one soul
unto me,
how great shall be your joy with him in the kingdom of my Father!
"And now, if your joy will be great with one soul
that you have brought unto me into the kingdom of my Father, how great will
be
your joy if you should bring many souls unto me!"7
As presidencies of Aaronic Priesthood quorums,
as advisers to these quorums, we can, with the Lord's help, reach out and
rescue
those for whom we have responsibility. Young men, with a smile
on your face and determination in your heart, you can take, arm in
arm, a less-active boy and together come to priesthood meeting and
learn of the Lord and what He has prepared for you to do. You are
entitled to His divine help, for He has promised you: "I will go
before your face. I will be on your right hand and on your left, and
my Spirit shall be in your hearts, and mine angels round about you,
to bear you up."8
Brethren of the Melchizedek Priesthood, you have the same sacred
charge and obligation as pertains to your duties to other men and to
their families. And you have the same promise of the Lord to
attend your efforts.
As you succeed, you will be answering a mother's prayer, the
tender though unexpressed feelings of children's hearts; and your
names will forever be honored by those whom you reach out and
help.
Let me share with you a rather private but joyful example from my
own experience.
As a bishop, I worried about any members who were
inactive, not
attending, not serving. Such was my thought one day as I drove
down the street where Ben and Emily Fullmer lived. Aches and
pains of advancing years caused them to withdraw from activity to
the shelter of their homeisolated, detached, shut out from the
mainstream of daily life and association. Ben and Emily had not
been in our sacrament meeting for many years. Ben, a former
bishop, would sit constantly in his front room reading and
memorizing the New Testament.
I was en route from my uptown sales office to our plant on
Industrial Road. For some reason I had driven down First West, a
street which I never had traveled before to reach the destination of
our plant. Then I felt the unmistakable prompting to park my car
and visit Ben and Emily, even though I was on my way to a
meeting. I did not heed the impression at first but drove on for two
more blocks; however, when the impression came again, I returned
to their home.
It was a sunny weekday afternoon. I approached
the door to their home and knocked. I heard the tiny fox terrier dog bark
at my
approach. Emily welcomed me in. Upon seeing me, she exclaimed, "All day long
I have waited for my phone to ring. It has been silent. I hoped the postman would
deliver a letter. He brought only
bills. Bishop, how did you know today is my birthday?"
I answered, "God knows, Emily, for He loves you."
In the quiet of their living room, I said to Ben
and Emily, "I really
don't know why I was directed here today, but I was. Our Heavenly
Father knows. Let's kneel in prayer and ask Him why." This we
did, and the answer came. As we arose from our knees, I said to
Brother Fullmer, "Ben, would you come to priesthood meeting
when we meet with all the priesthood and relate to our Aaronic
Priesthood boys the story you once told me when I was a boy, how
you and a group of boys were en route to the Jordan River to swim
one Sunday, but you felt the Spirit direct you to attend Sunday
School. And you did. One of the boys who failed to respond to that
Spirit drowned that Sunday. Our boys would like to hear your
testimony."
"I'll do it," he responded.
I then said to Sister Fullmer, "Emily, I know you
have a beautiful voice. My mother has told me so. Our ward conference is
a few
weeks away, and our choir will sing. Would you join the choir and
attend our ward conference and perhaps sing a solo?"
"What will the number be?" she inquired.
"I don't know," I said, "but I'd like you to sing
it."
She sang. He spoke to the Aaronic Priesthood. Hearts were
gladdened by the return to activity of Ben and Emily. They rarely
missed a sacrament meeting from that day forward. The language
of the Spirit had been spoken. It had been heard. It had been
understood. Hearts were touched and souls saved. Ben and Emily
Fullmer had come home.
One of the longest-running musicals in history is Les Miserables.
The story is set in the period of the French Revolution. The
principal character in the musical is Jean Valjean. In his heartfelt
concern for the young man, Marius, who is going off to battle, he
expresses in song a sincere prayer:
God on high,
Hear my prayer;
In my need
You have always been there.
He is young,
He's afraid;
Let him rest,
Heaven blessed.
Bring him home. . . .
Bring him peace,
Bring him joy.
He is young;
He is only a boy.
You can take,
You can give;
Let him be,
Let him live.
If I die, let me die,
Let him live.
Bring him home.9
Brethren, as we go forward as bearers of the priesthood
of God,
learning our duty and then reaching out to our brethren who stand
in need of our help, let us look upward to our Heavenly Father,
who is the Father of us all. We may not hear His voice, but we will
remember His salutation, "Well done, thou good and faithful
servant."10
And within our hearts we will recognize His unspoken plea: Bring
him home. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES
1. In Conference Report, Apr. 1937, 46.
2. 1 Peter 3:15.
3. Kim Gannon and Walter Kent, "I'll Be Home for
Christmas," 1943.
4. J. Reuben Clark Jr., meeting of general Church
auxiliary executives, 29 Mar. 1940; see also "Letter
from the First
Presidency," Liahona, Dec. 1999, 1; "Policies,
Announcements,
and Appointments," Ensign, June 1999, 80.
5. Exodus 20:12.
6. D&C 42:45.
7. D&C 18:10, 1516.
8. D&C 84:88.
9. Herbert Kretzmer, "Bring Him Home."
10. Matthew 25:21.