Sunday, September 26, 2010

The top ten things that I look forward to not having to deal with, once Zion is built.

My wife, Janell, has a seriously bad poison ivy rash covering the majority of her arms, neck and face.  We’re talking big time misery – large and nasty weeping blisters, terrible itching, and achy skin.  All in all, she’s feeling miserable.   So, rather than write a long winded post this week, I’m going to take care of her needs instead.  Therefore, I’ve come up with the “Top ten things that I look forward to not having to deal with, once Zion is built” list.  Drop me a note and tell me what your top ten are…or at least whatever annoying issues that will become extinct when God’s City is built.

My top ten:
10. Election Campaign Idiocy
09. Billboard Advertising
08. Pornography
07. Taxes
06. Unwieldy government
05. Health Insurance
04. People texting while driving their cars
03. Secondhand smoke
02. Banks in general and Money in specific
01. Telemarketers
See you next week!
Jeffrey

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Anger

Looking To Zion Lite
The Condensed Version for Super Busy Moms

I got angry.  Not the type of anger that blows over after a few hours to cool down, but the kind of anger that made me resemble Mount Vesuvius.  It made me question how I could be worthy of building Zion.  We all have our bad moments, and negative emotions poison us.  We are inundated by Satan’s efforts to destroy us – within our environment, by all of the things (conscious and unconscious) that influence us, and even through our imperfect bodies.

The well of negativity often times runs deep.  Escaping it won’t happen in a day, nor will it be an easy effort.  Change, no matter what the venue, requires patience and perseverance.  Just as Zion will not be built in a day, improving our lives will come one stone at a time.  Our journey to Zion will begin with one small step but, in order to endure the hardships of the road, we must keep the positive vision of where we are going at the forefront of our minds at all times.  I wholly believe that if we do this, the changes that we are so desperately seeking will subtly enter our lives without our conscious knowledge.  Imagine our surprise, when we look back over the long journey to realize just how far we walked?

We, each and every one of us, are all on the same path.  Our burdens are unique in detail, but alike in the challenge they present to us.  As we comfort one another, we begin to recognize that we are all of the same heart.  We yearn for the same things.  And when we recognize that our hearts are beating to the same rhythms, how long before our minds acknowledge that we’re thinking alike as well?

One step at a time.  One stone at a time.  One prayer at a time.  And, before you know it Zion will be built.
________________________________________

Looking To Zion Not-So-Lite

(The “Everyone” Version)

A few weeks ago I had a monumentally bad day.  It was one of those once in a year bad days, where everything goes wrong and you are left holding nothing but ashes for all of your suffering.  For those reading that do not know me personally, I have a bad case of Fibromyalgia – or so my many doctors think.  The trial of functioning from day to day, amidst the constant and chronic agony and fatigue, is terrible.  Tack onto that the hormonal imbalance of a teenager, a precocious seven year old, and a toddler that has been savoring the Terrible Twos for the last six months…well, you can probably imagine that my patience.

I view my lot in life as challenging.  There are people out there who have it much worse than me, and I don’t want to give the impression that I’m complaining for my lot in life.  I am trying to set the stage though.  The day in question was probably the worst I’ve had in the last five years.  The tension had been building for some time, and I’m ashamed to say that my fuse lit all too easily.  When I erupted, it was like Mount Saint Helens.  The blast was big and the resulting fall out was just as bad.  I was hurt, and those I love were hurt as well.  When faced with the prospect of healing those wounds, I feared that they would be too deep.

Inevitably I looked in the mirror, metaphorically speaking, and I wondered just how I’m supposed to build a Zion in my heart and home when I’m so quick to anger?  How do we hope to lay a foundation of God’s city, when we cannot escape the weight and poison of negative emotions?  The truth is, we can’t.  Anger, depression, apathy, loneliness, feeling slighted, and a host of other negative feelings are all very self-centered in their origin and their focus.  After much thought and pondering, I’ve come to the conclusion that part of problem comes from environment, part of it comes from direct influence, and the lion’s share comes from this imperfect body that our spirits are stuck in.

The environmental factors are pretty straight forward.  If we live in a messy house, then chances are we aren’t going to feel good.  Part of it comes from the physical problems that such an environment introduces, but another aspect is that our spirits are naturally orderly.  There are many contributing factors to the environmental side of things – too many in fact to really discuss here.  Our physical surroundings do have an impact on how we judge and perceive the world, and those perceptions, in turn, influence how we feel.

Likewise, direct influence from outside sources separate from our physical environment will also have a severe impact on how we feel.  We are assaulted by so much negative information, whether it be from the news, the complaints of our family and co-workers, or even the adversary and his minions.  Satan’s media campaign against us is harsh and has a great deal of momentum.  It’s no wonder so many people suffer from depression and apathy!  What is there, out in the world today, uplifting enough to overshadow the noise that the devil and his band of miscreants are making?

Now toss in the Natural Man and the recipe for disaster is complete.  This imperfect body is constantly breaking down, gaining weight, or distracting us with all those silly urges.  We’re always having to take away from important things to feed it, and bathe it, and ensure it gets enough sleep.  Everything we experience, good or bad, is channeled through it.  And because of it, we invariably find ourselves thinking and feeling that we are the center of the universe.  We can’t help it.  It’s the nature of our body.

The problem with negative emotions is the “feedback loop” that forms once we start to feel them.  Ask any person that has dealt with serious depression, and they will tell you that they feel trapped.  A person who feels apathetic can’t seem to gather enough energy to care.  A person with anger issues can’t let go.  With any negative emotion, I feel it is safe to say that we become prisoners – slaves even – to those feelings.  So how do we build Zion in our hearts and homes, when we are so easily swayed and enslaved by negative emotion?
It takes little steps, and small realizations.  Sounds simple, doesn’t it?  Well, that’s the beauty of the gospel.  It is.

The first step is acknowledging that we are not the center of the universe.  Being the center of the universe carries with it a great deal of weight and responsibility.  The person at the center of the universe affects everything!  It’s their fault if it rains, and they are responsible for the long series of unfortunate events that happen to, not only themselves, but everyone else around them!  Trying to be the mortal center of the universe is like being a black hole.  It sucks.  Heavenly Father is the only being capable and empowered to fill that task.  When we realize that and let go, there will be a great weight lifted from our shoulders.

The second step is a bit harder.  It requires a great deal of self-discipline and acknowledgement.  Breaking habits is harsh.  Anyone who has struggled with addiction can testify to that.  Yet, once we’ve accepted that we are the only people that can change our situation, we can actually start to change our situation.  Our first desire is to shift the blame, because we don’t want ownership of the problem.  Why would we?  It’s making us miserable!  However, in taking ownership of the small (and sometimes not-so-small) things, we exert control over our situation.  When we exert control, we feel a boost of confidence; and confidence is a positive emotion.  The more positives we have in our life, the better our outlook will be.

This concept is not really new.  Nephi, the son of Lehi, taught it to us in his second book:
For we labor diligently to write, to persuade our children, and also our brethren, to believe in Christ, and to be reconciled to God; for we know that it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do. (2 Ne. 25:23)
We can’t do everything ourselves, and many of the solutions to our problems require outside intervention.  Yet that does not mean that we are absolved of responsibility and effort.  We must take ownership of what we can, and actively do our part to change those things that we are able.  Once we have, this is when God steps in and fills the rest of the gaps that we missed out on.  That’s when the miracle comes.

Those three fonts of negativity: our imperfect bodies, the incessant voices that influence us throughout our day, and our environment – each one of these can be influenced by us, in some small fashion, to affect change.  For those with clinical depression, it means acknowledging the problem, making an appointment with the appropriate specialist, and then getting into the car and keeping that appointment.  For those with strained relationships, it might be as simple as taking a deep breath and actively praying for the person that offended you.  For those trapped in an undesirable environment, making just one lasting improvement (no matter how small or insignificant) goes a long way.

The well of negativity often times runs deep.  Escaping it won’t happen in a day, nor will it be an easy effort.  Change, no matter what the venue, requires patience and perseverance.  Just as Zion will not be built in a day, improving our lives will come one stone at a time.  Our journey to Zion will begin with one small step but, in order to endure the hardships of the road, we must keep the positive vision of where we are going at the forefront of our minds at all times.  I wholly believe that if we do this, the changes that we are so desperately seeking will subtly enter our lives without our conscious knowledge.  Imagine our surprise, when we look back over the long journey to realize just how far we walked?
Imagine the joy!

So, how am I going to build Zion when I am so quick to anger?  I’m going to be just as quick to love.  I’ll find small moments to express compassion and understanding.  I’ll change the things about my environment that upset me, and I will actively choose to listen to positive and uplifting voices more often.  These small steps will eventually give me more patience.  And with more patience, I will be slower to react and more thoughtful in my actions.  Will I still get angry?  The obvious answer is yes.  But my hope is that the times between my anger will grow longer and more joyful, actively progressing towards the day when it vanishes altogether.
“…the Lord spake unto me, saying: Fools mock, but they shall mourn; and my grace is sufficient for the meek, that they shall take no advantage of your weakness;

“And if men come unto me I will show unto them their weakness. I give unto men weakness that they may be humble; and my grace is sufficient for all men that humble themselves before me; for if they humble themselves before me, and have faith in me, then will I make weak things become strong unto them.” (Ether 12: 26-27)
 I couldn’t say it any better.  I look forward to the day that my weaknesses become my strengths.  I look forward to the day that my broken body is made strong, or the day that my short temper becomes a deep well of compassion towards all men.  I look forward to the day that I express joy instead of feeling the pressing weight of depression all the time.  I hunger for the day when I can be a friend…instead of yearning for friendship.

We, each and every one of us, are all on the same path.  Our burdens are unique in detail, but alike in the challenge they present to us.  As we comfort one another, we begin to recognize that we are all of the same heart.  We yearn for the same things.  And when we recognize that our hearts are beating to the same rhythms, how long before our minds acknowledge that we’re thinking alike as well?

One step at a time.  One stone at a time.  One prayer at a time.

And, before you know it Zion will be built.  That’s how we build Zion when we feel angry, or depressed, or unjustly persecuted.  So here’s my first step, for both you and I.  I pray for a good week, filled with little moments of active improvement in our lives.  I pray for our visible success in overcoming all the negativity in our lives.  I’ll let you know how my prayer was answered next week.  Feel free to drop me a note and let me know how it went for you.

Until next week.
Jeffrey

Sunday, September 12, 2010

A Perfect Moment and moments of perfection

Looking To Zion Lite
The Condensed Version for Super Busy Moms
(This is in no way discriminating against Super Busy Dads – Moms are simply a lot scarier…)

We are all looking for unconditional love and acceptance in our lives.  We felt that love and sense of belonging in the pre-mortal world, and we spend our whole lives looking for that same experience without really actively recognizing it.  We might find perfect moments, or moments of perfection, but this hardly satisfies our quest.

If we ever desire to feel that again, we will have to build a place where that spirit can thrive.  It will first take shape in our hearts, and then in the confines of our homes.  From there, the spirit will touch others, incrementally growing until it fills the small circle of friends and family around us.  From there it grows until soon the entire community is filled with that spirit of love and unity.  It will move slowly at first, but its momentum will grow steadily and shortly, we will again experience that singularly perfect moment.

This world needs dreamers.  It needs Dreamers and Doers.  Men and women who will step up to that improbable task and believe in their ability to see it accomplished.  I share all of these things with you in the hopes of helping build the momentum to see that dream become a reality.  Even if you have but one moment this week, one instant, wherein you love perfectly or can look someone in the eye and embrace them unconditionally, then we are one step closer to building God’s City.  Look for them.  Beg God to help you to experience them more and more frequently.  And once you feel them, do all that you can to make yourself worthy of sharing that feeling with someone else.

Is it hard?

Yes.  Terribly so.  We have to give up so much of ourselves in order to make this a reality.  Can it be accomplished in this lifetime?  Yes.  One instant, one perfect moment and one moment of perfection at a time, we will build it until it becomes an eternal reality.

________________________________________

Looking To Zion Not-So-Lite
(The “Everyone” Version)

During the first two weeks of July, my wife, my sons, and I took our first real vacation in years.  There was no other design or purpose to our trip, outside of coming together as a family and exploring our world a little more.  The motto of our trip became “Adventure!” early on, as we detoured (seemingly endlessly) throughout the back roads of eastern Missouri.  It wasn’t a term of excitement or endearment; but more an expression of pleading exasperation to the Lord, and longsuffering amongst one another.  We used it quite frequently as we made our way from Independence up to Nauvoo, and then back down to Saint Louis.

There was much grumbling, a little murmuring, and every once in a while our tempers frayed.  The five plus hour trip from Independence to Nauvoo took a fair bit longer than we planned – due to a number of unexpected detours.  Instead of arriving around lunch time, we made it closer to late afternoon.  We were left with just enough time to visit a few of the sites, starting with the Visitor’s Center and ending with Lucy Mack Smith’s home.

My wife imparted some precious family history to us as we stood in that small home.  Her ancestor, Joseph Bates Noble, was the original owner of the home.  When it came time for the saints to leave Nauvoo, the home was passed on to Sister Smith, in order to care for her needs in her last years.  It was humbling to stand where my sons’ ancestor lived, and it brought home the fact that, in spite of being a convert to the church, I can share in the pioneer heritage of the early saints.

From there we moved on, eating a light dinner and then watching the Nauvoo pageant.  The production fanned the flames of my preoccupation to see Zion built.  It showed me that Zion, as a physical place, was a reality that could be achieved.  The characters came alive for me in a way that my readings have never allowed.  King Follet, Parley Pratt, Joseph and Emma Smith…a vision of Nauvoo came alive for me.
Granted, it was an idealized vision of Nauvoo that ignored the majority of the harsher lessons the Saints were faced with.  Yet, for one perfect moment while watching the actors play out the lives of some of my personal heroes, I saw what Zion looked like.  I was filled with such a sense of longing afterwards, words alone cannot adequately describe.

As we drove down to Quincy, to our hotel, my wife and I discussed what I had felt at length.  The whole experience reminded me of a dream that I’d had in the first month of my mission.  I remember this dream clearly, as if I had just woken from it, to this day.  I have struggled with the thought of sharing this in such a public forum, yet, in order to touch on the topic that has been weighing on me, I need to.

In the dream I had been wandering, searching and exploring the world alone for something…it was not clear what I was seeking, but the sense of weariness and exhaustion were evident in the way I felt.  My legs were tired of walking, my once sturdy clothing was threadbare, and I walked with the aid of a tall walking stick.
The ground beneath my feet was rocky and desolate, having the feel of being high on a mountain…or perhaps in a desert filled with dunes of loose stones and sparse vegetation.

I remember cresting a rise, or perhaps it was a dune, the imagery wasn’t clear.  What was clear was how uncertain my footing was.  I had to take great care in moving downward, a task that took a great deal of time and active choice on my part.  I wasn’t mindful of much beyond the precarious nature of my path, and therefore I was quite surprised to hear a deep voice call out my name.  I stopped, leaned on a large stone that was easily twice my size, and looked up to see Brigham Young standing not twenty paces down the slope from me.  He radiated authority, looking quite severe, and made me feel very small.  I must admit that out of all the prophets that I have studied, Brigham Young intimidates me the most.  Perhaps it was because of this dream, but I feel that, in some strange way, I have failed the man.  I don’t know how, and I don’t know why I feel this way, but I do.

We stood looking at one another for a time, and then he simply said, “You’re late.” and beckoned me to follow.  I did so, and after an indeterminate amount of time, we arrived at the gates of a walled city.  The massive barrier was made of white marble, and polished so that it gleamed in the sun.  As we entered, I noted that the whole community was out in droves, and that there were a profusion of buildings being erected; as evidenced by the abundance of scaffolding.  It was like being amidst an ant colony.

There was a driven sense of purpose in every person I saw.  No one stopped to talk to me, but I saw a host of familiar faces amidst the crowds as they went about their industry.  Every building was white, like the walls of the community, but there was one edifice that stood out above them all in beauty.  At the center of the city, the temple stood, more magnificent than any building I have ever seen.  Even unfinished as it was, it shamed the monoliths and monuments built by man.  Even the Salt Lake Temple seemed dull in comparison.  Brother Brigham led me to the foot of a particular scaffold that stretched high up one of the walls of the edifice and motioned upwards, saying: “He’s been waiting for you.”

Now, it should be known that I am deathly afraid of heights – more specifically, falling from them.  Therefore, being presented with the prospect of climbing a rickety scaffold (in a nice steady breeze mind you), was anything but appealing – even in I was being bade to do so in a dream.  It took me several minutes of fierce battling with my terror, with Brother Brigham standing at my back, before I made to scale the skeletal structure.  The going was horrific, and I vaguely remember waking from the dream later and feeling sore and exhausted.  But I pushed forward, albeit at a snail’s pace, in spite of the swaying and the groaning of the wood, and the increasingly strong wind that seemed to want to sweep me off the side of the building.  I moved upward to the silhouetted figure I could see above me.  It took forever, but I did, at long last, attain my goal.

Upon cresting the level that held my mysterious appointment, I am not ashamed to say that my eyes looked neither left nor right.  They were glued to the grain of the narrow planks of wood that separated me from a long fall.  Thus, I didn’t see who my appointment was with until I was all but on top of the man.  The hand that suddenly entered my vision patted to the worn and dirty wood beside him, ever so close to the far edge of the scaffold plank.  I crawled like a baby, on hands and knees, to his side.  It felt so embarrassing, and I was at once ashamed of my weakness and terrified at the thought of being picked up by the winds and dashed on the flagstones a hundred meters or more below.  Yet, the man’s smiling face, and patient demeanor proved his kindness as he was content to wait me out.  When I was finally able to settle myself and meet the man’s eyes, I saw that it was Joseph Smith Jr., the Prophet of the Restoration.

There was no glow about him, nor were there Heavenly choirs announcing his identity.  The man before me was just a man.  He sported work-stained clothes, and his dusty boots dangled over the side of the scaffold.  His skin was dusty and bruised, and his hands were weathered and worn from hard work.  Even his tanned face was dirty.  He looked neither majestic, nor mighty…at least until I looked into his eyes.  I feel wholly inadequate in my ability to describe what I saw in those eyes.  They were deep, and filled with a wisdom that only a long or frightfully hard life brings.  In them, in that moment, I saw unconditional acceptance and love.  In them I saw an unshakable faith and an unwavering trust…in me.  I can’t describe how I knew all of this was directed at my person, but it was.  He was pleased to see me.  He knew me.  Not the me that I callously present to the rest of the world, but that secret me – the imperfect, dirty, broken part of me that I’m so ashamed of.  He saw it all and was still glad to see me!

There are no words in any living language that could hope to convey what I felt in, and still feel about, that moment.  And all of those feelings pale next to what I felt when he smiled and said, “I’m glad you could make it.  We’ve been waiting for you for a very long time.”

Then he calmly reached to his side and produced a humble, brown paper-sack lunch.  He pointedly told me that Emma had made extra, and offered me half of his lunch.  We sat and ate, looking out over the sprawling city, and the joyful industry that played out below.  My fear left me, like fog burning away in the open sun.  The rest of what was said is sacred to me, therefore, I will not share it.  However, I will say this: I had never felt such a perfect and abiding sense of acceptance and love until that moment.  As the years have rolled by, I have been able to digest this dream and ponder its meaning many times.  And at the end of it all, I’ve come to the conclusion that this is what it must feel like – on some miniscule and wholly imperfect level – to be in the presence of the Savior.

Since that day, I have spent great, if entirely unconscious, effort searching for that feeling again.  I looked for it throughout my mission.  I hungered for it in my wards and stakes.  I tried to recreate it within my marriage.  I chased after it in my friendships and other social relationships.  All of my considerable efforts were wasted though.  It was a perfect moment; one that could never be recaptured.  At least until I felt the powerful spirit of Nauvoo through the eyes of the pageant.

Do I recognize that Nauvoo was anything but perfect?  Yes.  I know the history of the saints well enough to see the City Beautiful for what it was.  Nauvoo wasn’t perfect, but the dream that built it was.  Given enough time and freedom, I know that Joseph could have seen a Zion built there.  I didn’t see the real Nauvoo that night, I saw the power and majesty of Enoch’s city staring me in the face.  And let me tell you it was a beautiful place; a place where I had no fear of being myself – warts and all.

We spend our whole lives looking for acceptance and a sense of belonging, in a world that is actively working against us and God’s plan.  We waste our lives trying to “fit in” or adhere to the “way things are” – fruitlessly searching for that perfect moment of acceptance and unconditional love that our spirits remember from another life.  It makes us sick.  It makes us question and doubt.  It makes us look towards that great and spacious building from Lehi’s dream and wonder how they can look so happy and yet so empty at the same time.

I’ve driven myself to illness looking for that sense of peace.  It is only now, almost twenty years after having that dream, I realize that I will never find that sense of acceptance or experience that perfect moment of unconditional love in the world that surrounds me.  If I ever desire to feel that sense of perfect love again, I will have to build a place where that spirit can thrive.  I have to build it.  With my very own hands.  It will first take shape in my heart, and then in the confines of my home.  From there, the spirit will touch others, incrementally growing until it fills the small circle of friends and family around me.  They will to grow in turn, until soon the entire community is filled with that spirit of love and unity.  It will move slowly at first, which requires patience on my part.  But its momentum will grow steadily and soon, I will again experience that singularly perfect moment.

So, yeah.  I’m a dreamer.   But this world needs dreamers.  It needs Dreamers and Doers.  Men and women who will step up to that improbable task and believe in their ability to see it accomplished.  I share all of these things with you in the hopes of helping build the momentum to see that dream become a reality.  Even if you have but one moment this week, one instant, wherein you love perfectly or can look someone in the eye and embrace them unconditionally, then we are one step closer to building God’s City.

Look for these moments.  Beg God to help you to experience them more and more frequently.  And once you feel them, do all that you can to make yourself worthy of sharing that feeling with someone else.  Is it hard?

Yes.  Terribly so.

We have to give up so many of our short-sighted dreams, and so much of our imperfect selves in order to make this a reality.  Can it be accomplished in this lifetime?  Yes.  One instant, one perfect moment and one moment of perfection at a time, we will build it until it becomes an eternal reality.

May God preserve and protect you, and may you experience that perfect moment of clarity this week – this is my prayer and desire for all who read this.  I leave you in the name of our beloved Savior, even Jesus Christ.

Amen.

Sunday, September 05, 2010

The Fourth Cornerstone: The Family

Looking To Zion Not-So-Lite
(The Yogurt Version)

The Fourth CornerstoneThe Family

To Qualify as a cornerstone:
•    It must be an eternal principle
•    It must support and sustain itself
•    It must be sanctioned by Heavenly Father

The family is the skeleton of society.  It supports the growth or stagnation of any culture.  Families are spiritual as well as physical entities.  God established that from the very beginning.  Its purpose is to propagate the species, as well as teach God’s Law.  It is a mirror for our cultural problems and our cultural successes.

Today, the family is an endangered species.  Satan is attacking it from all sides.  If we are to build Zion, we must choose to follow God’s laws, rather than the laws of man.  By establishing this last cornerstone, we finally have a foundation that will support the weight and calling of God’s Zion.

________________________________________

Looking To Zion Not-So-Lite
(The Lasagna Dinner Version)

The Fourth Cornerstone:  The Family

Okay, I’m putting on both my geek and artist hats for this post.  For those film buffs out there, you may or may not know the name Ray Harryhausen.  Harryhausen is an American film producer and special effects wizard.  He is probably best known for his work on the original King Kong (1933) and Mighty Joe Young (1949).  He’s done a great number of other sci-fi and fantasy classics, notably the 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958) and Jason and the Argonauts (1963).  The special effect that he is most noted for is stop-motion model animation.  For those who do not know what stop-motion model animation is, it is an animation technique where you physically manipulate an object to make it appear to move on its own.  The animator manipulates the object and then takes a picture, repeating this process over and over until the desired result is achieved.  Each one of these frames is then sped up and you achieve the illusion of motion.  Some of the more recent, and famous, examples of this technique are: The Nightmare Before Christmas, James and the Giant Peach, and Chicken Run.  My family and I are big Wallace and Gromit fans and we just recently discovered a new favorite in Shaun the Sheep.

You’re probably wondering what this all has to do with Zion, cornerstones, and the family.  Well, it ties in with the process of producing the models for the animation.  You see, in producing Claymation, which is what most of us are more familiar with, the animator has to double as a sculptor.  All of those little models are built of wire and clay.  The wire skeleton beneath the clay is called the armature, and gives the sculpture the necessary support and range of motion in order to withstand the rigors of the animating process.  In essence, the Fourth Cornerstone is Zion’s skeletal armature.  It stands as a “type and shadow” of the much larger community.  The family unit is the framework that supports any society.

A few weeks ago, I talked about how the family is the Keystone of Zion.  I should have qualified it by saying that it was one of the keystones of Zion.  The bonds of family are the first strings binding any society together.  In fact, the greatest lessons of socialization are learned within the confines of the homes from the youngest of ages.  The family is where we practice connecting to one another, it is where we learn, either through good examples or bad examples, how relationships work.  Is it any wonder that Satan has targeted the family for extinction?  Is it any surprise that he is trying so hard to undermine and outright destroy the sanctity of this essential building block to God’s kingdom?  No.  Not in the least.  More and more, I’m seeing just how sacred the family is – mainly due to the fact that it is being so actively attacked and hunted.  Will we allow it to be hunted to extinction?  No, but I fear that it is already an endangered species.

So what makes a family, a family?  That seems to be the big question on everyone’s mind these days.  Well, let’s start there.  The family is the oldest form of organization known to mankind.  Traditionally, it has been considered the basic societal unit, consisting of a father, a mother, and their children.  Natural and Eternal Law supports this definition.  If we look to nature, we see that there is a Natural Order to things.  The family, as it is represented in nature, is a vehicle for procreation.  I submit to you that this is how God planned it.

Yet the Eternal Order of things builds beyond procreation.  When Heavenly Father created the Garden of Eden, He established the Eternal Order first, establishing a foundation for all of creation to follow.  He created Heaven and Earth and all the things that within them are.  And to govern and care for them, He created His last and greatest creation – man and woman.

As a follower of Christ, it is my belief that all things were created spiritually before they were created temporally. Before we came to this Earth, we were spirits, and as spirits, the relationships were cultivated and nurtured, were in fact – spiritual.  God created the family structure that He introduced to Adam and Eve, long before we ever came to the Earth.  It was a close knit experience, and one founded on the other three cornerstones that I have already spoken about.  We have been endeavoring, since the day we could recognize the need, to emulate that sense of society and the intimate bonds we formed there.  Is it wrong for a single parent, regardless of the reasons for their circumstance, to feel a void where their partner is supposed to be?  No.  It is natural.  Is it wrong for a homosexual to want a family?  Not in the least.  We all yearn “to belong to” and “to be accepted into” close knit relationships.  It’s the default for our spirits to look for and build relationships towards that end, since it’s what our spirits naturally recognize.

Spiritually speaking, do today’s choices of lifestyle conform to God’s vision of the family?  Sadly, no.  Alternative lifestyle choices step outside of God’s plan, promoting individual desire over adherence to divine plans.  The voices of commerce, entertainment, sensuality, acceptable theoretical scientific fact and logic, and political opinion, all sow seeds of discord.  If we don’t wear a certain brand, we are socially less than our peers.  If we do not watch certain movies or television shows, play certain video games, or listen to the most popular music we are not current.  If we do not drink or smoke, or indulge in some other form of bodily gratification, we are missing out on all the fun.  If we do not accept traditional scientific views, then we are uneducated quacks.  If we believe in God, who cannot be empirically or mathematically defined by our limited understanding of the universe, then we are religious wingnuts. If our politics conform with God’s values, then we are bigots. However, as we make choices that conform to worldly views, they wear away at the unity that ties our families together by focusing on philosophies that center around the importance of the individual rather than a unified whole.  Additionally, we as individuals can influence what our children believe. If we are seduced away from God's plan, how much more likely will our children be as well?

We cannot escape the fundamental organization of the family.  God established it in the Garden of Eden.  He could have chosen an alternative option.  We could all be amorphous, shape-shifting beings that become whatever we desire on a whim (which I must admit would be really cool from a personal stand point).  But the scriptures tell us that God didn’t do it that way.  Have you ever asked yourself why?  Did He perhaps have a reason for establishing such a precedent?  Yes.  Yes He did.

He created Adam and Eve, and gave them a commandment – go forth and multiply.  Build a great big family.  There was a purpose in this commandment, and it had nothing to do with civil rights.  In lieu of being created, they were now subject to the Laws of the Universe – both natural and eternal.  As their children, we are subject to those laws as well.  Satan, over time, has tempted mankind with the idea that he can get around the laws that are laid down.  That too started in the Garden of Eden.  Man’s run with the concept, and made all of his laws fluid and in many cases paradoxical.

So we find ourselves at an impasse.  Do we follow the desires of man or God?  Do we define ourselves as of the family of man, or of the family of God?

Satan will inevitably and collectively drive a wedge between mankind and God.  It’s what he does, and he’s become exceptionally good at it.  The world will inevitably accept a change in definition on what the family is, in order to appease the desires of men.  And then we will have Man’s definition of family versus God’s definition of family.  Man’s definition will change to suit the whims of the mob, wherein God’s definition will fulfill a long-term and eternal plan.  In the end, mankind will choose as it best suits their desires.  Heavenly Father reserved that agency for us all, making it sacrosanct and inviolate.  We will choose for ourselves the course we desire and, in turn, we will be subject to those choices.

Yet, where some will choose to walk their own way, others will choose to embrace God’s vision and follow His way.  This will be the way to Zion; and in Zion the family is a sacred thing, established and sanctified by our Heavenly Father.  At its heart, the family is meant to espouse peace and understanding, unity of mind and spirit.  If we are at war, it is because our families are at war within themselves.  If we are, societally, loving – that is a reflection of the love that is built and nurtured within the confines of our own homes.

So, with Zion in mind, I challenge you to look at the family from God’s perspective.  Make the family a sacred thing.  Fight for it.  Defend it with all your might, mind, and strength. And remember, there are many levels of family.  You have mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents. Close friends become an integral part of your family.  President Gordon B. Hinkley was wont to encourage the idea that God’s Church “…has become one large family scattered across the earth…” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “The Stone Cut Out of the Mountain,” Ensign, Nov 2007, 83–86).

As we build to Zion, we build to family.  As we build to Zion, we build to a life founded on God’s Law.  As we build to Zion, we build to a life filled with Faith, Hope, and Charity.  As we build to Zion, we build to Jesus Christ.  Four stones.  Four very large and oft times intimidating stones.  I look at all of them together and look at how to lay these four cornerstones in my life, and how they will apply to the actual building of the physical city of Zion.

My personal relationship with Christ will act as my guiding light.  He is the King of Zion, and it is only under His leadership that the city will be raised and governed.  Accepting that and abiding by His direction will see the city built sooner rather than later.  Faith, Hope, and Charity are the attributes that need to fill my life’s every action.  I look forward, hoping.  I believe in myself and my God, faithfully serving.  I love unconditionally, unifying myself with my brothers and sisters – regardless of race, financial circumstance, politics, or creed.  In these there is safety.  In these there is life.  With these attributes guiding my every action, exact obedience to God’s laws will not only be easier, obeying will become a pleasure instead of a hardship.  All three of these bind my family closer to me, making them immovable stones, stones that will support Zion’s weight and allowing it to endure every hardship the world has to offer.

Four immovable, eternal cornerstones that will lay the foundations of the greatest city the world has ever known.  The thought of it sends chills down my spine and fills my heart with such a majestic longing…

Laying these stones requires a great deal of effort and even more maintenance.  But we only have to look as far as the Salt Lake Temple, or any temple for that matter, in order to see a type and shadow of just how magnificent Zion will be.


Until next week,
Jeffrey