Archive for October, 2009

On Spiritual Thoughts and How to Give Them

A couple of months ago I found myself sitting a few rows behind the pulpit in the Sacrament meeting room which I often am on Tuesday nights. That’s where we hold the opening exercises for Youth activities and as is typically the case every other week, a Young Man who had obviously not been prepared to give a spiritual thought was flipping frantically through the scriptures always kept beside the microphone. My friend and I were guessing which scripture mastery he was going to pick. I went with James 1:5-6 and she was pretty confident with Mathew 5:14-16. These were the ones that involved the least amount of brain power, which wasn’t a coincidence.

We quickly found that we had overestimated him as he stood at the front with a little smile on his face as if he’d come up with something truly brilliant.

“John 14:15” He said, managing a straight face and somewhat sincere tone “If ye love me keep my commandments” He closed his scriptures with a confident thud before finishing off with “Yeah, that’s pretty self explanatory, in the name of Jesus Christ amen”

I, along with everyone else (except maybe some of the more serious leaders) thought this was funny. What isn’t funny though is I’ve found that this sort of thing is becoming more and more common.

Just a couple days ago a girl in my seminary class gave this as a spiritual thought “Revelation 14:9 ‘If any man have an ear, let him hear.’ So yeah, as a general rule, if you have ears you can hear… unless of course you’re deaf. Uh… wait… never mind, I guess that doesn’t really make any sense does it? Whatever, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen”

Although I have to admit that stuff like this is funny, it kind of bugs me. Spiritual thoughts mean a lot to me Read the rest of this entry »

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FRG Saturday Night Showcase, No. 3

I found this on Youtube and thought it was hilarious. It’s a spoof of the popular “Ask a Ninja” series. It’s called Ninjormon Episode 1: Mormon Ninja.

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Dude! Nephi like…Killed a Guy!

“And again, I knew that the Lord had delivered Laban into my hands for this cause—that I might obtain the records according to his commandments. Therefore I did obey the voice of the Spirit, and took Laban by the hair of the head, and I smote off his head with his own sword (1 Nephi 4:17-18).”

Nephi was willing to do anything God asked him to. When God did not give him clear instructions on how to accomplish something, Nephi illustrated his faith, obedience, determination, and ingenuity until God finally showed the way.  In other words, the path ahead was not always clear, but Nephi always persevered and obeyed God’s will. This reciprocal relationship, whereby God provided the means so that Nephi could strive and ultimately succeed at obeying God’s will, is in part how everyone, including young adults, should understand their relationship to their Heavenly Father. Read the rest of this entry »

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Spare Yourself the Despair: When Life Kicks You in the Pants

Welcome to Frank’s take on despair.This post will deal with despair as rationalized sadness, or how to deal with it when life kicks you in the pants!

What you have to remember about this is that despair is not a sin. Let me repeat that: Rationalized sadness which you won’t let go of is not a sin. It is, however, a tool which Satan uses to try to get us to sin. Read the rest of this entry »

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Dealing with Loss: That Biblical Job Thing

Everyone reading this should know by now, if you’re outside and a mosquito bites you, do your best not to scratch the bite. Give it about three days, and you should be fine.

But if you scratch that bite, it will most assuredly grow. It will begin to bleed, and pus will start to ooze out the center. The infected wound will get bigger and bigger and scab up. Keep picking at the scab, and the wound will never have a chance to heal properly. What would’ve healed in days, will now take weeks. What never would’ve left a mark, will now leave an unsightly scar.

A younger friend asked me recently why God made his children forget everything they had once learned in the pre-mortal existence. “Wouldn’t this life be easier if we got to keep all that knowledge from before?”

But we haven’t done anything quite like this before! We didn’t know in the pre-mortal realm what it was like to have a physical body that could act and be acted upon. “It’s all about the experience,” I answered. Every action has a consequence, and now the stakes have been raised; we have more to gain but equally more to lose.

That should be straight-forward enough for most Latter-day Saints. Almost as easy for us is the whole, “Why do bad things happen to good people?” Critics say ‘religion is a means of social control’ like it’s a bad thing, but if we all acknowledged and lived God’s law, we wouldn’t have things like war and poverty, and innocents would no longer suffer at the hands of others.

As you can plainly see, the Plan of Salvation has a few things to teach us that aren’t all sunshine and lollipops, and there are parts that I and many others continue to struggle with, such as the randomness of life and, furthermore, the randomness of its unexpected loss.

For example, sometimes things happen that are so beyond our control that there’s nobody to blame, not even ourselves. We struggle to find comfort through meaning, but no meaning can be found. Our only conclusion is that life is cruel because God is cruel.

The loss of a loved one can cut deep, and we subsequently pass through life with spiritual wounds that never heal. This is no confession, but an accusation: Love is a lie, we declare. God is a fantasy, and happiness is a luxury for the ignorant.

But wait! Does God not also experience loss? Imagine one of God’s wounded children. Rather than let the wound heal, the child stubbornly picks and scratches at it. “Here, let me show you what to do,” God offers, but it’s useless. The child keeps it up until the wound utterly consumes him; he dies from infection and blood loss. Whether the wound was manifested as anger, doubt, sadness, or despair, there was nothing God could do but watch.

For people who have loved and lost someone dear to them, this is my best answer to the question they are undoubtedly asking: We endure loss because God endures loss, and he wants us to be like him in every way. Although godhood may epitomize happiness, it’s also the most difficult job in the universe. I testify that God has earned our allegiance one hundred-fold for what has done and continues to do on our behalf.

The best we can do is allow ourselves to heal when we are wounded. We may feel so alone that nobody can possibly comfort us. However, the Atonement is not just an antidote for sin; it heals us when we experience a loss so overwhelming that part of us dies as a result.

We cannot understand the Plan of Salvation unless we understand the Atonement, and knowing every reason why God came to Earth and gave his life for us makes a huge difference to how we perceive our situation. As we traverse this lone and dreary world, we endure the unendurable through Christ. We will not run; we will not hide; we will not lose faith; and we will not abandon hope. Instead, we will stand behind our Savior, steadfast in the promise and reality of Eternal Life.

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