My beloved brethren and sisters,
Amy has
very capably and ably introduced us and shared her beautiful testimony of the
prophet Joseph Smith. As far as I’m concerned, I feel like we could end the
meeting without another word being spoken.
In
talking to Bishop Wilkinson last week regarding our assignment to speak today,
he advised us that if we each planned on taking around 20 minutes, we’d be in
good shape. Amy told me straight up that speaking in Church is not one of her
favorite things, and that she’d leave me lots of time. Bishop Wilkinson
indicated last week that we shouldn’t worry if our time falls short; the
bishopric would just call on someone from the congregation to bear their
testimonies. In order to keep everyone happy, and in order to avoid any hard
feelings that might arise if I were to be brief, I would like to share with you
my side of our story as well as my own testimony of the prophet Joseph Smith.
I first met Amy while I was
serving as a veil worker in the Mount Timpanogos Utah Temple. I had been
working there since I commenced my part-time missionary service in 2006. Fast
forward a bit to January 2009 when I had just started at BYU. I had retained my
temple service even after my missionary service had ended seven months earlier.
I had become somewhat anxious about finding someone who would love me, because
in my case, I knew that was going to be tough for whoever I finally ended up
with. With those thoughts in mind, I had routinely checked the left hand of
young ladies I brought through the veil, mostly because I was curious about
their marital status. When Amy came through my veil, I noticed instantly that
the proper finger was empty. A strong impression came to mind, “This woman will
one day be your eternal companion.”
Thinking about it and knowing
now what I felt then, I should have gone after her that day in the temple.
However, the timing wasn’t right for us to get together. So, as most men
habitually do, I forgot that strong impression and let her slip through my
fingers.
Fast forward again to August
2009. Amy had then become a temple worker herself, and, due to a schedule
conflict, she wound up on one of the shifts I was working. We got to know each
other better, and our mutual attraction blossomed. Because I had been unlucky
in love before that time, I procrastinated the urge to ask Amy out, explaining
my situation to the Lord. I cried unto Him and covenanted that, if some way
presented itself that she and I could get together, I would delay no longer
than was absolutely necessary in commencing a relationship with her.
By this time, more time had
passed. By late May 2010, the temple was closed for maintenance. I guess Amy
grew tired of waiting for me to make the first move. At that time, she had
someone in her singles’ ward that looked like he may have wanted to ask her
out. Because of her feelings for me, she decided she wanted me to have a first
chance with her before she even considered the other guy. So, she tracked down
my address (that’s how I first learned how resourceful she was in going after
something she wanted) and wrote me a beautiful letter that was mailed to and
received by me while the temple was still closed.
In the letter, she expressed an
interest in me and her desire to get to know me better. I can never forget the
tender tone of that letter. I still treasure it today. She put it beautifully:
“I realize your life may be complicated, so if you ever wanted to go do
something together, I would be happy to drive.” That was enough of a prodding
for me. She said some other things too about why she wrote the letter and what
she hoped would come of it. I had the instant confirmation for which I had been
seeking that this would be the right thing to do, especially as she seemed
ready to embrace whatever my situation was (as we hadn’t had a chance to talk
about my disabilities and other health issues). In the letter, she had given me
her e-mail address, so I sent off a reply befitting the invitation. I saw her
again the first Friday night after the temple was open. She looked several
times like she wanted to say something to me, but she didn’t. Or at least she
kept silent till the end of the night.
We were exiting the room where
we both had waited for the last session of the day to be over, and Amy took the
opportunity to approach me at that time. She asked if I had received her
letter. I said I did and that I replied to her. She said she hadn’t received
anything from me at all. I was quick to reassure her of my interest in her, and
said I would dash off another copy of that e-mail to her that very night. This
I did.
What followed was a whirlwind
romance. We must have really hit it off. We went on fourteen dates in the first
three weeks after our exchange of email messages. At one point, I told her that
it wouldn’t surprise me if we were engaged by the end of the year. But the Lord
had a very different and much quicker timetable in mind.
We got along so well together
that we agreed after the first week that the question of marriage for us would
be when and how rather than if. By that time, we were done looking for or
considering any other individual to spend eternity with. I proposed to her on
July 4 (the best Independence Day I ever had), and she willingly accepted. I
must have been quite surprised at her instant acceptance of my proposal,
because after she said “Yes” I said “Really?” She was quick to assure me that
her answer was sincere.
We were now in the courtship
phase of our relationship, tentatively setting a marriage date for December 18.
We would have preferred it to be a month or two sooner, but that was not to be.
And the timing worked out beautifully because her parents’ anniversary was
December 18, and Amy’s mother had passed away from complications of multiple
sclerosis the January before we started dating. So, we determined to do all we
could to make December 18 work as a wedding day.
Shortly after our engagement, I
was reading in the Book of Mormon, and I came across a scripture that really
hit me. I shared it with Amy, and we determined this would be the theme
scripture of our courtship and marriage. What was that scripture that touched
us so deeply? It’s found in the Book of Moroni within the Book of Mormon. It
reads, “And Christ hath said: If ye will have faith in me, ye shall have power
to do whatsoever thing is expedient in me.”[i]
Isn’t that a powerful promise? I testify that this gave us the courage and
faith we needed to press onward. Preparing for our marriage was an uphill climb
with numerous obstacles. In spite of this, one by one, things fell into place
for us to be married, and on our preferred date.
Soon after our engagement, we
were discussing our preferences as far as who would officiate at our wedding.
She said as I’d had more experience with the sealers at the temple, she would
let me pick our sealer, and that whoever I decided on was all right with her. I
told her that there was no one I’d rather have officiating at our wedding than
C. Max Caldwell. Brother Caldwell had previously served as a General Authority
in the Second Quorum of the Seventy, and at the time I first met him, he was
living in my same stake. When I first started serving at the temple and found
out he was the senior sealer there, we struck up an easy and deeply rewarding
friendship. It didn’t take much to convince Amy that he was the best person to
officiate at our marriage. When I asked him to do so, in that very humble way
of his, he acted like the pleasure and the honor was completely his.
Almost two years after
officiating at our sealing, Brother Caldwell became very sick and unable to
serve in the temple anymore. He passed away in 2012. For a time, I kept an eye
on his widow to ensure that she was doing all right. I knew that’s what Brother
Caldwell would have wanted me to do, and it was my honor to do so.
I miss my friend Brother
Caldwell a lot. He was a strong warrior in the cause of Christ, and it was my
privilege to know him. I take comfort in the knowledge that at least he was
able to officiate at our sealing before his passing. We may have been among the
last of those weddings he officiated in.
It is an honor I deeply cherish
to have been counted among his friends, and I will never forget the wonderful
influence this remarkable man had on me, especially as he officiated at the
event wherein everything that was important to me took on a new, deeper, and
more fulfilling meaning. May God bless this humble, unassuming man to continue
our Heavenly Father’s “work and . . .glory to bring to pass the immortality and
eternal life of man”,[ii]
which I know he is now doing on the other side of the veil. I know when I see
him again, we will instantly recognize each other and that the bond of our
friendship still exists, a friendship I hope to continue in all the eternities
to come.
When that great reunion with this treasured
friend takes place, I will likely be called upon to let him know how true I was
to the advice and counsel he gave us when officiating at our sealing. It is my
dearest hope and prayer that he may be pleased when I do so.
It was interesting to see how
things fell into place when the timing was right. Remembering the promise in
our scripture, we pressed forward in spite of many obstacles to our marriage,
recognizing that the richest and best things in this life often take hard work,
a lot of faith, and making sure to involve the Lord. One by one things fell
into place, with not a lot of time to spare. We found our first dwelling place
a mere four days before the wedding.
Some time had passed after our
marriage, when suddenly one day while Amy and I were working at the temple,
something triggered my memory, and the impression I’d had in 2009 that Amy
would be my future wife returned to me. I’m sure all of you can appreciate the
fact that I lost that impression until we had been married for a while. It
worked out so much better for us that things happened the way they did.
Fast forward again to this last
October. We had been wanting to be in a place of our own and had been looking
for a while. We came across a trailer in Mon-A-Lea trailer court and knew
instantly it was the right place for us to be, and we were able to purchase it.
The first Sunday we attended this ward, we both felt at home. This was a big
thing for me because I had been in my previous stake since moving to American
Fork in 1999.
Enough about our story. Now let me share some
things about Joseph Smith When we
originally got this topic last week, I immediately said that I would have it
easy because I had given a talk on Joseph Smith back when I was in the Singles’
Ward. With the permission of the bishopric and with some additions and
corrections, I am resurrecting and reusing that talk this morning. Contrary to
what I had supposed, it took a lot more preparation than I thought.
It is a great privilege for me to
talk to you today about the Prophet Joseph Smith. He has always been one of my
heroes. Much has been written and said of him. To discuss in detail even one
aspect or teaching from his life would be impossible in the remaining time I
have. And so I have chosen to touch briefly upon several lessons we can learn
from the prophet’s life, example, and teachings. I have patterned my remarks
after a talk President Thomas S. Monson gave in the October 2005 General
Conference entitled: “The Prophet Joseph Smith—Teacher by Example.” So, hang on
to your hats! This will be a wild ride!
First, I quote from Teachings of Presidents of the Church—Joseph
Smith regarding an experience the Prophet had as a young boy. “Evidence of
the Prophet’s extraordinary character emerged early in his life. The Smiths
were living in West Lebanon, New Hampshire, when a deadly epidemic of typhoid
fever attacked many in the community, including all the Smith children. While
the other children recovered without complication, Joseph, who was about seven
years old, developed a serious infection in his left leg. Doctor Nathan Smith
of Dartmouth Medical School at nearby Hanover, New Hampshire [who, by the way,
was not related to Joseph’s family], agreed to perform a new surgical procedure
to try to save the boy’s leg. As Doctor Smith and his colleagues prepared to
operate, Joseph asked his mother to leave the room so she would not have to
witness his suffering. Refusing liquor to dull the pain and relying only on his
father’s reassuring embrace, Joseph bravely endured as the surgeon bored into
and chipped away part of his leg bone. The surgery was successful, although
Joseph walked the next several years with crutches and showed signs of a slight
limp the rest of his life.”[iii]
One lesson that I observed from
this is that, even as a young boy, Joseph refused to take anything into his
body that was not good for him. I don’t know this for a fact, but I am of the
opinion that the Smith family may have been observing some form of the Word of
Wisdom all of Joseph’s life, long before it became the revealed word of the
Lord. Joseph saw those blessings in this instance. It’s not documented, but
again, an educated guess leads me to believe that this adherence to a law of
health was one of the reasons Joseph was able to come through such a traumatic
experience at such a tender age. The promise the Lord would give through the
Prophet became true in his own life.
We all know the words of that
promise: “And all saints who remember to keep and do these sayings, walking in
obedience to the commandments, shall receive health in their
navel and marrow to their bones;
“And shall find wisdom and
great treasures of knowledge, even hidden treasures;
“And shall run and not
be weary, and shall walk and not faint.
“And I, the Lord, give unto them
a promise, that the destroying angel shall pass by them, as the
children of Israel, and not slay them. Amen.”[iv]
The Prophet Joseph Smith learned
at a very early age what we know now. He taught obedience to a law of health and abstinence from practices that would
have a negative effect—by example.
Throughout his short life of 38
years, he would endure much more adversity. One such incident happened as a
result of his First Vision in which he saw our Heavenly Father and His Son,
Jesus Christ. This was the first time our Heavenly Father had appeared to
anyone in the history of the world.[v]
I hope that gives us a sense of how important this work really is. Great
persecution followed the young Prophet, but, in spite of it all, he could not
and would not deny either that vision or the many more manifestations that
followed him. The Prophet Joseph Smith taught us how to stand by our testimonies—by example.
Another incident happened when he
was imprisoned at Liberty Jail in Missouri amidst miserable and sometimes even
dangerous conditions. In his anguish, he pleaded with the Lord, asking why He
had seemingly abandoned His people. The questions he asked, the petitions he
made, and the answers he received are instructive to all of us who face
adversity. He cried out, “O God, where art thou? And where is the
pavilion that covereth thy hiding place? . . .
“[S]tretch forth thy hand; let
thine eye pierce; let thy pavilion be taken up; let thy hiding
place no longer be covered; let thine ear be inclined; let
thine heart be softened, and thy bowels moved with compassion toward us.
“Let thine anger be
kindled against our enemies; and, in the fury of thine heart, with
thy sword avenge us of our wrongs.
“Remember
thy suffering saints, O our God; and thy servants will rejoice in thy
name forever.”[vi]
The Lord’s answer to Joseph can
be very helpful to us in our own moments of trial. He said,
“My son [for which we could also
substitute “my daughter”], peace be unto thy soul; Thine adversity and thine
afflictions shall be but a small moment;
“And then, if thou endure it
well, God shall exalt thee on high; thou shalt triumph over all thy foes [for
which we could also substitute “trials”].”[vii]
The Lord goes on to enumerate
some of the worst circumstances anyone could be in, ending with a profound
promise and reminder:
“And if thou shouldst be cast
into the pit, or into the hands of murderers, and the sentence of death
passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep; if the billowing surge
conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if the heavens
gather blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way;
and above all, if the very jaws of hell shall gape open the mouth wide
after thee, know thou, my son, that all these things shall give
thee experience, and shall be for thy good.
“The Son of
Man hath descended below them all. Art thou greater than he?”[viii]
Joseph learned from and was
sanctified through his experiences at Liberty Jail. There followed some of the
greatest revelations and experiences the world has ever known. The Prophet
Joseph Smith taught us how to endure to
the end and have faithful courage amidst great trials—by example.
Joseph also had a unique
experience interacting with the guards set to watch over him in Liberty Jail.
They had been involved in chasing those who believed in Joseph and the restored
gospel message out of town, and had done all sorts of unspeakable things to the
Saints. They boasted of their deeds to one another. Joseph lay still and
listened to their reviling as long as he could take it. He then shot to his
feet, and, with fire in his eyes, thundered out, “Silence, ye fiends of the infernal pit! In the name of Jesus Christ
I rebuke you and command you to be still! I will not live another minute and
hear such language. Cease such talk, or you or I die this instant!”
Parley P. Pratt, one of Joseph’s
fellow prisoners, writes of this experience, “He ceased to speak. He stood
erect in terrible majesty. Chained, and without a weapon; calm, unruffled and
dignified as an angel, he looked upon the quailing guards, whose weapons were
lowered or dropping to the ground; whose knees smote together and who,
shrinking into a corner, or crouching at his feet, begged his pardon and
remained quiet till a change of guards.
“I have seen the ministers of
justice, clothed in ministerial robes, and criminals arraigned before them,
while life was suspended on a breath . . .; I have witnessed a Congress in
solemn session to give laws to nations; I have tried to conceive of kings, of
royal courts, of thrones and crowns; and of emperors assembled to decide the
fate of kingdoms; but dignity and majesty have I seen but once, as it stood in chains, at midnight, in a dungeon in an
obscure village of Missouri.”[ix]
The Prophet Joseph Smith taught us how to boldly
speak out when the conduct of others is less than it should be —by example.
Shortly after his release from
Liberty Jail and following the Saints’ migration to what was then Commerce,
Illinois (later renamed Nauvoo, or “The City Beautiful”) an epidemic of cholera
left many saints, including Joseph, his wife Emma, and many of their children,
confined to bed and unable to do much. This epidemic lasted several weeks,
until one day Joseph faithfully prayed for healing and was granted that blessing.
He rose from his sickbed completely healed, and, in what came to be known as “a
day of God’s power”, he proceeded to administer first to his family, then all
through Nauvoo. Each person he spoke to rose from their sickbeds, and many
apostles of that day were witness to the healing power of God.
When Joseph became physically
and spiritually drained from performing these miraculous healings, he exhorted
and admonished the apostles to do as he had done. Initially doubting their own
abilities to do what Joseph had done, the apostles were emboldened by his
statement that they, as special witnesses of Christ, could do as he did. They
continued the work of healing that Joseph started.[x]
Whether it was starting a
collection for a needy brother, wiping the mud from the boots of small
children, rescuing a sister from a mud hole, giving labor to two out-of-work
brothers or whatever it might be, his life was all about service. Joseph said:
“A man filled with the love of God, is not content with blessing his family
alone, but ranges through the whole world, anxious to bless the whole human
race.”[xi]
The Prophet Joseph Smith taught us the
high importance of service—by example.
In a
revelation given to the Prophet Joseph Smith, we read the following:
“My disciples, in days of old,
sought occasion against one another, and forgave not one another in their
hearts; and for this evil they were afflicted and sorely chastened.
“Wherefore, I say unto you that
ye ought to forgive one another; for he that forgiveth not his brother his
trespasses standeth condemned before the Lord, for there remaineth in him the
greater sin.
“I, the Lord, will forgive whom
I will forgive, but of you it is required to forgive all men.”[xii]
This instruction, given in 1831,
became the pattern for Joseph’s life. On the fateful night of March 24, 1832,
the Prophet was forcefully dragged from his home and tarred and feathered. What
followed was a painful night during which he watched one of his babies die and
had to stay up most of the night getting the tar and feathers removed by some
friends. He rose from that experience the next day and preached a powerful
sermon on forgiveness. As a result of
his response to the persecution, as was not uncommon in that time, some of the
very men who had so abused him the night before came forward, humbly confessing
their sins and requesting forgiveness and baptism, which the Prophet willing
and unconditionally extended to them.
When Elder Parley P. Pratt came
to himself after a temporary period of disaffection and asked the Prophet’s
forgiveness, Brother Joseph willingly gave it. William W. Phelps turned away
from and joined in the persecution of the Church during the trials of Missouri.
When he wrote to the Prophet asking his forgiveness, the Prophet responded with
these words:
“Dear Brother Phelps: I must say
that it is with no ordinary feelings I endeavor to write a few lines to you in
answer to your [letter]; at the same time I am rejoiced at the privilege
granted me. … It is true, that we have suffered much in consequence of your
behavior—the cup of gall, already full enough for mortals to drink, was indeed
filled to overflowing when you turned against us. … However, the cup has been
drunk, the will of the Father has been done, and we are yet alive, for which we
thank the Lord. And having been delivered from the hands of wicked men by the
mercy of our God, we say it is your privilege to be delivered from the powers
of the adversary. … Believing your confession to be real, and your repentance
genuine, I shall be happy to give you the right hand of fellowship, and rejoice
over the returning prodigal. … ‘Come on, dear brother, since the war is past,
For friends at first, are friends again at last.’
“Yours as ever, Joseph Smith, Jun.”[xiii]
The Prophet Joseph Smith taught us
the importance of forgiveness—by
example.
On one occasion, Jesse Crosby
informed the Prophet Joseph Smith that helping out with what he termed “woman’s
work” (such as carrying out the ashes, bringing in water and firewood, tending
the children and washing the dishes) was not in keeping with his idea of a
great man’s self-respect. The prophet rebuked Brother Crosby with these words
that still ring true for any married man today: “If a man does not properly
love and cherish his wife in this life and take care of her, he will not be
privileged to have her in the next.” Properly rebuked, Jesse Crosby treated his
wife better from that time forward.[xiv]
Throughout his marriage, the Prophet would pitch in and help as often as he
could. Joseph Smith taught how husbands
should treat their wives—by example.
I might add that I have been quick to forget this in my own marriage, and, as
with anything, there is always room for improvement.
The final four topics I want to
cover are interconnected. In a letter to John Wentworth, Joseph said: “The
Standard of Truth has been erected; no unhallowed hand can stop the work from
progressing; persecutions may rage, mobs may combine, armies may assemble,
calumny may defame, but the truth of God will go forth boldly, nobly, and independent,
till it has penetrated every continent, visited every clime, swept every
country, and sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be
accomplished, and the great Jehovah shall say the work is done.”[xv]
There is a dual lesson to be taught from this quote: No unhallowed hand can
stop the work from progressing. But by the same token, no unhallowed hand can
help to move it forward. Each of us must consistently ask ourselves, as Joseph
did, “Are my hands clean? Is my heart pure? Am I a worthy instrument in the
Lord’s hands?” If the answers to these questions are “no,” then we have work to
do. When we can answer “yes” to these questions, then we will know that the
Prophet Joseph Smith taught us how we
can best further the gospel cause—by example.
Joseph would, in the time prior
to his martyrdom, confer upon the apostles the authority to lead Christ’s
church. He also emphasized the special place of the Twelve in the church
hierarchy when he said, “Where I am not [and this would apply to all future Church
Presidents], there is no First Presidency over the Twelve.”[xvi]
The Prophet Joseph Smith gave the
ultimate sacrifice—his life—in the furthering of the gospel. When Joseph
prepared to go to jail for the final time in his life, he knew he would not be
returning. At that time, he stated: “I am going like a lamb to the slaughter;
but I am calm as a summer’s morning. I have a conscience void of offense
towards God and towards all men. I SHALL DIE INNOCENT, AND IT SHALL YET BE SAID
OF ME—HE WAS MURDERED IN COLD BLOOD.”[xvii]
Joseph died as his final testament that the work he restored to the earth is
true. Our task is somewhat different than that of our beloved prophet: we are
asked to live what we believe. As we do so, could we say the same as Joseph
Smith? Are our consciences void of offense towards God and towards all men? Or
is there room for improvement? Let us do as Joseph Smith did. He taught us how to live and die for the work—by
example.
Though none of us can interact with
the Prophet Joseph Smith, as did the saints in his day, his eye is on the work
that he helped restore to the earth for the last time. 171 years after his
martyrdom, the powerful testimony he bore of the Savior lives on in our
scriptures, and more importantly, in our hearts. We can hear it ring as truly
as it did when it was first given in 1832:
"And now, after the many testimonies which have been given of him, this is the testimony last of all, which we give of him: That he lives!
"For we saw him, even on the right hand of God; and we heard the voice bearing record that he is the Only Begotten of the Father—
"That by him and through him, and of him, the worlds are
and were created, and the inhabitants thereof are begotten sons and daughters
unto God."[xviii]
"And now, after the many testimonies which have been given of him, this is the testimony last of all, which we give of him: That he lives!
"For we saw him, even on the right hand of God; and we heard the voice bearing record that he is the Only Begotten of the Father—
He sealed that testimony with his
blood. He did not die for a lie. The Prophet Joseph Smith taught us the nature and characteristics of Disciples
of Christ—by example.
I close now with my testimony. I
testify that Joseph Smith was indeed a Prophet of God. He was chosen and
foreordained to be the instrument in the hands of the Lord in restoring His
work upon the earth today. He did see the Father and the Son. He had the
priesthood conferred upon him by angels. He translated the Book of Mormon by
the gift and power of God, and received many instructions that are still
applicable to us today. His was a life of total obedience to the commandments
of the Lord. Like the Master he served, he sealed his testimony with his blood.
I echo the noble sentiment expressed by W. W. Phelps: “Praise to the man who
communed with Jehovah!” and I testify that indeed “millions shall know ‘Brother
Joseph’ again.”[xix]
I bear my witness that the gospel is true, and leave my love and blessing with
you all in the sacred name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
[i]
Moroni 7:33.
[ii]
Moses 1:39.
[iii] Teachings of the Presidents of the Church:
Joseph Smith, p. 2. Copyrighted 2007, all rights reserved.
[iv]
D&C 89:18-21.
[v]
Joseph Smith—History 1:15-20.
[vi]
D&C 121:1, 4-6.
[vii]
D&C 121:7-8.
[viii]
D&C 122:7-8.
[ix]
See The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt,
p. 180. See also Gerald N. Lund’s The
Work and the Glory series volume 4: Thy Gold to Refine, pp. 443-444.
[x]
See Church History in the Fulness of
Times, pp. 217-219 for an account of what happened that day.
[xi]
HC 4:227.
[xii]
D&6 64:8-10.
[xiii]
HC 4:163–64.
[xiv]
As recounted in Gerald N. Lund’s The Work
and the Glory series, volume 5: A Season of Joy pp. 480-482.
[xv]
HC 4:540.
[xvi]
HC 2:374.
[xvii]
D&C 135:4.
[xviii]
D&C 76:22-24.
[xix] Praise to the Man, Hymn #27.