Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
For the fruit of the gospel to blossom and bless our lives, we must be firmly attached to Him, the Savior of us all.
In earlier years the Brethren often reported their missions in general conference.
I realize this is 2004, not 1904, but I wish to invoke the spirit of that earlier
practice and reflect on some of the wonderful things Sister Holland and I are
experiencing in Latin America. In doing so I hope to make general application
to all of you, wherever you may live or serve.
First of all I would like to thank every missionary
who has ever labored in this transcendent latter-day undertaking we have
been given. The rolling forth of the restored gospel is a miracle in every
sense of the word, and not the least of the miracle is that a significant
portion of it rolls forward on the shoulders of 19-year-olds! As we have
seen your sons and daughters, grandsons and granddaughters, (and in some
cases your parents and grandparents!) faithfully laboring in Chile, I have
pictured the tens of thousands of others like them we have met all over the
world. Clean, clear, bright-eyed missionaries, laboring two-by-two, have
become a living symbol of this Church everywhere. They themselves are the
first gospel message their investigators encounterand what a message
that is. Everyone knows who they are, and those of us who know them the best,
love them the most.
I wish you could meet the sister called to serve
with us from her native Argentina. Wanting to do everything possible to
finance her own mission, she sold her violin, her most prized and nearly
sole earthly possession. She said simply, "God
will bless me with another violin after I have blessed His children with the
gospel of Jesus Christ."
I wish you could meet the Chilean elder who, living
without family in a boarding school, happened upon a Book of Mormon and started
reading it that very evening. Reminiscent of Parley P. Pratt's experience,
he read insatiablynonstop through
the night. With the breaking of day, he was overwhelmed with a profound sense
of peace and a new spirit of hope. He determined to find out where this book
had come from and who had written its marvelous pages. Thirteen months later
he was on a mission.
I wish you could meet the marvelous young man who came to us from Bolivia, arriving with no matching clothing and shoes three sizes too large for him.
He was a little older because he was the sole breadwinner in his home and it
had taken some time to earn money for his mission. He raised chickens and sold
the eggs door-to-door. Then, just as his call finally came, his widowed mother
faced an emergency appendectomy. Our young friend gave every cent of the money
he had earned for his mission to pay for his mother's surgery and postoperative
care, then quietly rounded up what used clothing he could from friends and
arrived at the MTC in Santiago on schedule. I can assure you that his clothes
now match, his shoes now fit, and both he and his mother are safe and sound,
temporally as well as spiritually.
And so they come, from your homes all over the
world. Included in such a long list of dedicated servants of the Lord is
an increasing number of senior couples who make an indispensable contribution
to the work. How we love and need couples in virtually every mission of this
Church! Those of you who can, put away your golf clubs, don't worry about
the stock market, realize that your grandchildren will still be your grandchildren
when you returnand go! We promise you the
experience of a lifetime.
Let me say something of the marvelous members of the Church themselves. In
the reorganization of a rather far-flung stake recently, I felt the Lord's
prompting to call a man to the stake presidency who, I had been told, owned
a bicycle but no automobile. Many leaders across the Church don't have cars,
but I was nevertheless worried about what that might mean for this man in this
particular stake. In my terminally-ill Spanish I pursued the interview, then
said, "Hermano, no tiene un auto?" With a smile and not
a second's hesitation he replied, "No tengo un auto; pero yo tengo
pies, yo tengo fe." ("I do not have a car, but I do have feet
and I do have faith.") He then said he could ride the bus, ride his bicycle,
or walk, "como los misioneros," he
smiled"like the missionaries." And so he does.
Just eight weeks ago I was holding a mission district
conference on the island of Chiloe, an interior location in the south of
Chile that gets few visitors. Imagine the responsibility I felt in addressing
these beautiful people when it was pointed out to me that a very elderly
man seated near the front of the chapel had set out on foot at five o'clock
that morning, walking for four hours to be in his seat by nine o'clock, for
a meeting that was not scheduled to begin until eleven o'clock. He said he
wanted to get a good seat. I looked into his eyes, thought of times in my
life when I had been either too casual or too late, and thought of Jesus'
phrase, "I have not found so great
faith, no, not in Israel."1
The Punta Arenas Chile Stake is the Church's southernmost stake anywhere on
this planet, its outermost borders stretching toward Antarctica. Any stake
farther south would have to be staffed by penguins. For the Punta Arenas Saints
it is a 4,200-mile round-trip bus ride to the Santiago temple. For a husband
and wife it can take up to 20 percent of an annual local income just for the
transportation alone. Only 50 people can be accommodated on the bus, but for
every excursion 250 others come out to hold a brief service with them the morning
of their departure.
Pause for a minute and ask yourself when was the last time you stood on a
cold, windswept parking lot adjacent to the Strait of Magellan just to sing
with, pray for, and cheer on their way those who were going to the temple,
hoping your savings would allow you to go next time? One hundred ten hours,
70 of those on dusty, bumpy, unfinished roads looping out through Argentina
's wild Patagonia. What does 110 hours on a bus feel like? I honestly don't
know, but I do know that some of us get nervous if we live more than 110 miles
from a temple or if the services there take more than 110 minutes. While we
are teaching the principle of tithing to, praying with, and building ever more
temples for just such distant Latter-day Saints, perhaps the rest of us can
do more to enjoy the blessings and wonder of the temple regularly when so many
temples are increasingly within our reach.
And that leads me to my final point. For the Church
at large, we have so many things to associate in our minds with the visionary
ministry of President Gordon B. Hinckley, including (perhaps especially)
the vast expansion of temples and temple building. But I dare say for those
of us on this rostrum, it is likely that we will remember him at least as
emphatically for his determination to retain in permanent activity the converts
who join this Church. No modern prophet has addressed this issue more directly
nor expected more from us in seeing that it happen. With a twinkle in his
eye and a hand smacking the table in front of him, he said to the Twelve
recently, "Brethren, when my life
is finished and the final services are concluding, I am going to rise up as
I go by, look each of you in the eye, and say, 'How are we doing on retention?' "
This subject brings us full circle, linking the kind of true, deep conversion
the missionaries are striving to bring with the greater commitment and devotion
being seen in wonderful members all over the Church.
Christ said, "I am the true vine, and . . . ye are the branches."2 "Abide
in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide
in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me."3
"Abide in me" is an understandable and beautiful
enough concept in the elegant English of the King James Bible, but "abide" is
not a word we use much anymore. So I gained even more appreciation for this
admonition from the Lord when I was introduced to the translation of this passage
in another language. In Spanish that familiar phrase is rendered "permaneced
en mi." Like the English verb "abide," permanecer means "to
remain, to stay," but even gringos like me can hear the root cognate there
of "permanence." The sense of this then is "staybut stay forever." That
is the call of the gospel message to Chileans and everyone else in the world.
Come, but come to remain. Come with conviction and endurance. Come permanently,
for your sake and the sake of all the generations who must follow you, and
we will help each other be strong to the very end.
"He who picks up one end of the stick, picks up the other," my
marvelous mission president taught in his very first message to us.4 And
that is the way it is supposed to be when we join this, the true and living
Church of the true and living God. When we join The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, we board the Good Ship Zion and sail with her wherever
she goes until she comes into that millennial port. We stay in the boat, through
squalls and stills, through storms and sunburn, because that is the only way
to the promised land. This Church is the Lord's vehicle for crucial doctrines,
ordinances, covenants, and keys that are essential to exaltation, and one cannot
be fully faithful to the gospel of Jesus Christ without striving to be faithful
in the Church, which is its earthly institutional manifestation. To new convert
and longtime member alike, we declare in the spirit of Nephi's powerful valedictory
exhortation: "Ye have entered in by the gate; . . . [but] now, . . . after
ye have gotten into this strait and narrow path, I would ask if all is done?
Behold, I say unto you, Nay; . . . press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, . . . and endure to the end, behold, thus . . . ye shall have eternal life."5
Jesus said, "Without me ye can do nothing."6 I testify that that
is God's truth. Christ is everything to us and we are to "abide" in
Him permanently, unyieldingly, steadfastly, forever. For the fruit of the gospel
to blossom and bless our lives, we must be firmly attached to Him, the Savior
of us all, and to this His Church, which bears His holy name. He is the vine
that is our true source of strength and the only source of eternal life. In
Him we not only will endure but also will prevail and triumph in this holy
cause that will never fail us. May we never fail it nor fail Him I pray in
the sacred and holy name of Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES
1. Matthew 8:10.
2. John 15:1, 5.
3. John 15:4.
4. Marion D. Hanks quoting Harry Emerson Fosdick, Living under Tension (1941),
111.
5. 2 Nephi
31:1820.
6. John 15:5.