First Presidency Message
Patience, a Heavenly Virtue
Ensign, September
2002
By President Thomas S. Monson
First Counselor in the First Presidency
Several years ago I met an old friend I had not seen for some time. He greeted
me with the salutation, "How is the world treating you?" I don't
recall the specifics of my reply, but his provocative question caused me
to reflect on my many blessings and my gratitude for life itself and the
privilege and opportunity to serve.
At times the response to this same question brings
an unanticipated answer. Some years ago I attended a stake conference
in Texas. I was met at the airport by the stake president, and while we
were driving to the stake center, I said, "President, how is everything
going for you?"
He responded: "I wish you had asked me that
question a week earlier, for this week has been rather eventful. On Friday
I was terminated from my employment, this morning my wife came down with
bronchitis, and this afternoon the family dog was struck and killed by
a passing car. Other than these things, I guess everything is all right."
Apply the Virtue of Patience
Life is full of difficulties, some minor and others
of a more serious nature. There seems to be an unending supply of challenges
for one and all. Our problem is that we often expect instantaneous solutions
to such challenges, forgetting that frequently the heavenly virtue of
patience is required.
The counsel heard in our youth is still applicable
today and should be heeded. "Hold your horses," "Keep your
shirt on," "Slow down," "Don't be in such a hurry,"
"Follow the rules," "Be careful" are more than trite
expressions. They describe sincere counsel and speak the wisdom of experience.
The mindless and reckless speeding of a youth-filled
car down a winding and hazardous canyon road can bring a sudden loss of
control, the careening of the car with its precious cargo over the precipice,
and the downward plunge that ofttimes brings permanent incapacity, perhaps
premature death, and grieving hearts of loved ones. The glee-filled moment
can turn in an instant to a lifetime of regret.
Oh, precious youth, please give life a chance. Apply
the virtue of patience.
Patience in Adversity
In sickness, with its attendant pain, patience is
required. If the only perfect man who ever livedeven Jesus of Nazarethwas
called upon to endure great suffering, how can we, who are less than perfect,
expect to be free of such challenges?
Who can count the vast throngs of the lonely, the
aged, the helplessthose who feel abandoned by the caravan of life
as it moves relentlessly onward and then disappears beyond the sight of
those who ponder, who wonder, and who sometimes question as they are left
alone with their thoughts. Patience can be a helpful companion during
such stressful times.
Occasionally I visit nursing homes, where long-suffering
is found. While attending Sunday services at one facility, I noticed a
young girl who was to play her violin for the comfort of those assembled.
She told me she was nervous and hoped she could do her best. As she played,
one called out, "Oh, you are so pretty, and you play so beautifully."
The strains of the moving bow across the taut strings and the elegant
movement of the young girl's fingers seemed inspired by the impromptu
comment. She played magnificently.
Afterward, I congratulated her and her gifted accompanist.
They responded, "We came to cheer the frail, the sick, and the elderly.
Our fears vanished as we played. We forgot our own cares and concerns.
We may have cheered them, but they truly did inspire us."
Sometimes the tables are reversed. A dear and cherished
young friend, Wendy Bennion of Salt Lake City, was such an example. Almost
seven years ago, she quietly departed mortality and returned "to
that God who gave [her] life."1
She had struggled for over five long years in her battle with cancer.
Ever cheerful, always reaching out to help others, never losing faith,
she attracted others to her as a magnet attracts metal shavings. While
ill and in pain, a friend of hers, feeling downcast with her own situation,
visited Wendy. Nancy, Wendy's mother, knowing Wendy was in extreme pain,
felt that perhaps the friend had stayed too long. She asked Wendy, after
the friend had left, why she had allowed her to stay so long when she
herself was in so much pain. Wendy's response: "What I was doing
for my friend was a lot more important than the pain I was having. If
I can help her, then the pain is worth it."
The Savior's Patience
Wendy's attitude was reminiscent of Him who bore
the sorrows of the world, who patiently suffered excruciating pain and
disappointment, but who, with silent step of His sandaled feet, passed
by a man who was blind from birth, restoring his sight. He approached
the grieving widow of Nain and raised her son from the dead. He trudged
up Calvary's steep slope, carrying His own cruel cross, undistracted by
the constant jeers and taunting that accompanied His every step. For He
had an appointment with divine destiny. In a very real way He visits us,
each one, with His teachings. He brings cheer and inspires goodness. He
gave His precious life that the grave would be deprived of its victory,
that death would lose its sting, that life eternal would be our gift.
Taken from the cross, buried in a borrowed tomb,
this man of sorrows, acquainted with grief, arose on the morning of the
third day. His Resurrection was discovered by Mary and the other Mary
when they approached the tomb. The great stone blocking the entrance had
been rolled away. Came the query of two angels who stood by in shining
garments: "Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is not here,
but is risen."2
Paul declared to the Hebrews, "Wherefore seeing
we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us
lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and
let us run with patience the race that is set before us."3
Other Examples of Patience
Perhaps there has never occurred such a demonstration
of patience as that exemplified by Job, who was described in the Holy
Bible as being perfect and upright and one who feared God and eschewed
evil.4 He was blessed
with great wealth and riches in abundance. Satan obtained leave from the
Lord to try to tempt Job. How great was Job's misery, how terrible his
loss, how tortured his life. He was urged by his wife to curse God and
die. His later reply bespoke his faith: "I know that my redeemer
liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: And
though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I
see God."5 What
faith, what courage, what trust. Job lost possessionsall of them.
Job lost his healthall of it. Job honored the trust given him. Job
personified patience.
Another who portrayed the virtue of patience was
the Prophet Joseph Smith. After his supernal experience in the grove called
Sacred, where the Father and the Son appeared to him, he was called upon
to wait. At length, after Joseph suffered through over three years of
derision for his beliefs, the angel Moroni appeared to him. And then more
waiting and patience were required. Let us remember the counsel found
in Isaiah: "My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways
my ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts."6
The Savior's Invitation
Today in our hurried and hectic lives, we could
well go back to an earlier time for the lesson taught us regarding crossing
dangerous streets. "Stop, look, and listen" were the watchwords.
Could we not apply them now? Stop from a reckless road to ruin. Look upward
for heavenly help. Listen for His invitation: "Come unto me, all
ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."7
He will teach us the truth of the beautiful verse:
Life is real! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.8
We will learn that each of us is precious to our
Elder Brother, even the Lord Jesus Christ. He truly loves us.
His life is the flawless example of one afflicted
with sorrows and disappointments, who nonetheless provided the example
of forgetting self and serving others. The remembered verse of childhood
echoes afresh:
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus loves me!
The Bible tells me so!9
And so does the Book of Mormon, so does the Doctrine
and Covenants, and so does the Pearl of Great Price. Let the scriptures
be your guide, and you will never find yourself traveling the road to
nowhere.
Today, some are out of work, out of money, out of
self-confidence. Hunger haunts their lives, and discouragement dogs their
paths. But help is hereeven food for the hungry, clothing for the
naked, and shelter for the homeless.
Thousands of tons move outward from our Church storehouses
weeklyeven food, clothing, medical equipment and supplies to the far
corners of the earth and to empty cupboards and needy people closer to
home.
I am inspired by the devotion which prompts busy
and talented dentists and doctors on a regular basis to leave their practices
and donate their skills to those who need such help. They travel to faraway
places to repair cleft palates, correct malformed bones, and restore crippled
bodiesall for the love of God's children. The afflicted who have patiently
waited for corrective help are blessed by these "angels in disguise."
Patience in Germany
In the words of a well-known song, I wish you could
"come fly with me" to eastern Germany, where I have visited
many times. Not long ago, as I traveled along the autobahns, I reflected
on a time almost 35 years before when I saw on the same autobahns just
trucks carrying armed soldiers and policemen. Barking dogs everywhere
strained on their leashes, and informers walked the streets. Back then,
the flame of freedom had flickered and burned low. A wall of shame sprang
up, and a curtain of iron came down. Hope was all but snuffed out. Life,
precious life, continued on in faith, nothing wavering. Patient waiting
was required. An abiding trust in God marked the life of each Latter-day
Saint.
When I made my initial visit beyond the wall, it
was a time of fear on the part of our members as they struggled in the
performance of their duties. I found the dullness of despair on the faces
of many passersby but a bright and beautiful expression of love emanating
from our members. In Görlitz the building in which we met was shell-pocked
from the war, but the interior reflected the tender care of our leaders
in bringing brightness and cleanliness to an otherwise shabby and grimy
structure. The Church had survived both a world war and the cold war which
followed. The singing of the Saints brightened every soul. They sang the
old Sunday School favorite:
If the way be full of trial; Weary not!
If it's one of sore denial, Weary not!
If it now be one of weeping,
There will come a joyous greeting,
When the harvest we are reapingWeary not!
Do not weary by the way,
Whatever be thy lot;
There awaits a brighter day
To all, to all who weary not!10
I was touched by their sincerity. I was humbled
by their poverty. They had so little. My heart filled with sorrow because
they had no patriarch. They had no wards or stakesjust branches.
They could not receive temple blessingsneither endowment nor sealing.
No official visitor had come from Church headquarters in a long time.
The members were forbidden to leave the country. Yet they trusted in the
Lord with all their hearts, and they leaned not to their own understanding.
In all their ways they acknowledged Him, and He directed their paths.11
I stood at the pulpit, and with tear-filled eyes and a voice choked with
emotion, I made a promise to the people: "If you will remain true
and faithful to the commandments of God, every blessing any member of
the Church enjoys in any other country will be yours."
That night as I realized what I had promised, I
dropped to my knees and prayed: "Heavenly Father, I'm on Thy errand;
this is Thy Church. I have spoken words that came not from me, but from
Thee and Thy Son. Wilt Thou, therefore, fulfill the promise in the lives
of this noble people." There coursed through my mind the words from
the psalm, "Be still, and know that I am God."12
The heavenly virtue of patience was required.
Little by little the promise was fulfilled. First,
patriarchs were ordained, then lesson manuals produced. Wards were formed
and stakes created. Chapels and stake centers were begun, completed, and
dedicated. Then, miracle of miracles, a holy temple of God was permitted,
designed, constructed, and dedicated. Finally, after an absence of 50
years, approval was granted for full-time missionaries to enter the nation
and for local youth to serve elsewhere in the world. Then, like the wall
of Jericho, the Berlin Wall crumbled, and freedom, with its attendant
responsibilities, returned.
All of the parts of the precious promise of almost
35 years earlier were fulfilled, save one. Tiny Görlitz, where the
promise had been given, still had no chapel of its own. Now, even that
dream became a reality. The building was approved and completed. Dedication
day dawned. Sister Monson and I, along with Elder and Sister Dieter Uchtdorf,
held a meeting of dedication in Görlitz. The same songs were sung
as were rendered all those years earlier. The members knew the significance
of the occasion, marking the total fulfillment of the promise. They wept
as they sang. The song of the righteous was indeed a prayer unto the Lord
and had been answered with a blessing upon their heads.13
At the conclusion of the meeting we were reluctant
to leave. As we did so, seen were the waving hands of all, heard were
the words, "Auf Wiedersehen, auf Wiedersehen; God be with
you till we meet again."
Patience, that heavenly virtue, had brought to humble
Saints its heaven-sent reward. The words of Rudyard Kipling's "Recessional"
seemed so fitting:
The tumult and the shouting dies;
The captains and the kings depart.
Still stands thine ancient sacrifice,
An humble and a contrite heart.
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget, lest we forget.14
NOTES
1. Alma
40:11.
2. Luke
24:56.
3. Heb.
12:1.
4. See Job
1:1.
5. Job
19:2526.
6. Isa.
55:89.
7. Matt.
11:28.
8. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "A Psalm of Life,"
lines 58.
9. "Jesus Loves Me!" Alexander's Gospel Songs,
comp. Charles M. Alexander (1908), 139.
10. "If the Way be Full of Trial, Weary Not,"
Deseret Sunday School Songs (1909), no. 158.
11. See Prov.
3:56.
12. Ps.
46:10.
13. See D&C
25:12.
14. "God of Our Fathers, Known of Old," Hymns,
no. 80.
Ideas for Home Teachers
Preparation
Study Romans
5:15 and Mosiah
23:2122 and consider ways that patience has been helpful in
your life. As you study this message, prayerfully choose one or two statements
of truth you feel will most benefit those you teach. For each statement
choose a teaching method or activity that is appropriate for the ages
and circumstances of the family members. A few examples of how this could
be done are listed below.
Suggestions for Teaching
1. Ask a family member to perform a task that
requires patience and asking for help, such as putting together a complex
puzzle, solving a difficult math problem, or reading and explaining a
difficult chapter in the scriptures. Why did the task seem difficult?
How could patience have helped in completing the task? President Monson
said, "Life is full of difficulties. . . . Our problem is that we
often expect instantaneous solutions." What can a person do to develop
more patience?
2. Ask family members to tell of times when the
Savior showed patience. President Monson said, "[Jesus] patiently
suffered excruciating pain and disappointment." Discuss ways Jesus'
promise in Matthew
11:28 could help a person have greater patience.
3. Tell of a time when having patience
helped you. Invite family members to share their experiences with patience.
Then read or invite family members to take turns reading the story of
the Latter-day Saints in Germany. President Monson said that patience
brought to the humble Saints of eastern Germany "its heaven-sent
reward." Testify of the importance of patience in your life.
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