This was a tricky talk for me to study for some reason. I think it was because I had a hard
time figuring out what the main theme was supposed to be. The majority of the middle was devoted
to a list of different paths Jesus walked in life—paths of disappointment,
temptation, pain, obedience, service, and prayer—and how we can follow his
example. But the title seemed to give a different spin
altogether—ponder the path of thy feet.
Eventually I realized that “ponder the path of thy feet” was
the main theme and that we can’t follow the Savior unless we do a lot of
pondering the path of our feet and figuring out how to adjust according to the
Savior’s example.
This is when I realized how valuable this message is for us right now. Consider that we have so many things clamoring for our time
and attention and so many distractions and so
much media that we could lose ourselves in that we are liable to get
alternately frantic and overwhelmed or lulled into a thoughtless stupor.
Living the life of a Latter-day Saint does not happen by accident in this day and
age. This talk is about thinking
about what we’re doing and carefully following Christ’s example, living our
lives with reference to Him.
My
beloved brothers and sisters, I am humbled as I stand before you this morning.
I ask for your faith and prayers in my behalf as I share with you my message.
All of us
commenced a wonderful and essential journey when we left the spirit world and
entered this often-challenging stage called mortality. The primary purposes of
our existence upon the earth are to obtain a body of flesh and bones, to gain
experience that could come only through separation from our heavenly parents, and
to see if we would keep the commandments. In the book of Abraham chapter 3 we
read: “And we will prove them herewith, to see if they will do all things
whatsoever the Lord their God shall command them.”
The world gives us the sense that our purpose on earth is to
get as rich and powerful and famous and attractive as we can as quickly as we
can.
In contrast to that, what does President Monson say the
purpose of our earthly existence is?
·
Gain a body
·
Gain experience from being separated from our
heavenly parents
·
Prove that we will keep the commandments
How are you doing with respect to those heavenly purposes?
Body?
Check.
Experience away from heavenly parents? Um, working on it. (Incidentally, I wonder how one would
know they had gotten enough experience at this?)
Proving I will do whatever God commands? Um, working on that too. I think this encompasses not just
following previously revealed commandments, but also learning to follow the
guidance of the Holy Ghost through personal revelation.
When we
came to the earth, we brought with us that great gift from God—even our agency.
In thousands of ways we are privileged to choose for ourselves.
I love the way President Monson put this. We are sometimes liable to look on
decision-making as a burden, when it is really a privilege.
Here we
learn from the hard taskmaster of experience. We discern between good and evil.
We differentiate as to the bitter and the sweet. We learn that decisions
determine destiny.
In what way is pondering our path related to each of those
things? Can we do any of those
things without pondering our path?
I want to share how I’ve learned to ponder when I’ve made
mistakes. I’ve learned that how I think can make the difference
between it being a painful experience and a learning experience.
If I say to myself over and over, “That was terrible! I can’t believe you just did that! How could you do such a thing! You’re a terrible person!” then I’m
beating myself up. What good does
that do? None at all. There’s
no learning involved, just self-flagellation.
I can make it into a learning experience if instead I say to
myself, “Okay, self, you’ve made a mistake. Where did the mistake first start? What went through your head at the moment you decided to do
that?” Then I try to piece
together the thought process that led to that mistake. Then I tell myself to notice carefully
the unhappiness that I feel because of the mistake or sin, so that I can
remember that choosing the right will keep me from feeling that. Then I ask myself, “Okay, what should
you have done instead?” And I try
to think of better alternatives or I acknowledge that I should have done
something different. Then I
tell myself, “Okay, self, think about how good you will feel next time when you
make the right decision,” and I allow myself to anticipate that and yearn for
that. And then I tell
myself, “Okay, self, what kind of temptations might happen that will make you
want to still not make the right choice?” and I try to anticipate and imagine the
opposition I might face and what my response should be.
By the time I’m done thinking these things through, I’ve
committed to choosing the right, I’ve got a plan, I’ve seen what thoughts and
reactions caused the problem, and I’m ready to change.
Am I ready to repent and use the Atonement? You betcha! Am I ready to ask for grace to strengthen me? You better believe it!
This pondering takes practice, but it is what helps you
learn the lessons and forgive yourself and move on in a way that helps you show
yourself the same respect that you’d give anyone else.
I also can’t help but observe how happy I am that it is
possible to learn through the experience of others as well as our own. If we couldn’t learn through others’
experiences, there would be no point in sharing our experiences and stories
with others and there would be no point in having the scriptures. We would be doomed to make the same
mistakes over and over again every generation.
I am
certain we left our Father with an overwhelming desire to return to Him, that
we might gain the exaltation He planned for us and which we ourselves so much
wanted. Although we are left to find and follow that path which will lead us
back to our Father in Heaven, He did not send us here without direction and guidance.
Rather, He has given us the tools we need, and He will assist us as we seek His
help and strive to do all in our power to endure to the end and gain eternal
life.
To help
guide us we have the words of God and of His Son found in our holy scriptures.
We have the counsel and teachings of God’s prophets. Of paramount importance,
we have been provided with a perfect example to follow—even the example of our
Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ—and we have been instructed to follow that
example. Said the Savior Himself: “Come, follow me.”2 “The works which ye have
seen me do that shall ye also do.”3 He posed the question, “What manner of men
ought ye to be?” And then He answered, “Verily I say unto you, even as I am.”4
“He marked the path and led the way.”5
As we
look to Jesus as our Exemplar and as we follow in His footsteps, we can return
safely to our Heavenly Father to live with Him forever. Said the prophet Nephi,
“Unless a man shall endure to the end, in following the example of the Son of
the living God, he cannot be saved.”6
It’s not enough to find the right way. We have to stay in it to the end of our
lives. Since we’re prone to
wandering, this is a continual challenge.
It is also why pondering our path periodically is so important because
that’s going to be when we discern we’re off and what we need to do to get back
on.
One
woman, each time she related experiences she had during a visit to the Holy
Land, would exclaim, “I walked where Jesus walked!”
She had
been in the vicinity where Jesus lived and taught. Perhaps she stood on a rock
on which He had once stood or looked at a mountain range He had once gazed
upon. The experiences, in and of themselves, were thrilling to her; but
physically walking where Jesus walked is less important than walking as He
walked. Emulating His actions and following His example are far more important
than trying to retrace the remnants of the trails He traversed in mortality.
I don’t think President Monson means to discourage anyone
from taking trips to the Holy Land because that can be strengthening to one’s
testimony of the reality of Christ’s life. But when all is said and done, if seeing the geography that
Christ saw is thrilling, how much more
thrilling is it to chose what He chose, to testify as He testified, and
obey God as He obeyed… so that we can be exalted as He was exalted?
We can find the spiritual
geography he traveled and walk it ourselves.
And that doesn’t require being in the Holy Land. We can do that anywhere. (Yaaaay!)
This suggests another way of reading the Gospels—to look for
actions Jesus did that we can emulate, also looking for things to do that He
said to do. After all, He would
not have said to do something if He hadn’t done it Himself.
When
Jesus extended to a certain rich man the invitation, “Come, follow me,”7 He did
not intend merely that the rich man follow Him up and down the hills and
valleys of the countryside.
We need
not walk by the shores of Galilee or among the Judean hills to walk where Jesus
walked. All of us can walk the path He walked when, with His words ringing in
our ears, His Spirit filling our hearts, and His teachings guiding our lives,
we choose to follow Him as we journey through mortality. His example lights the
way. Said He, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.”8
What does it take to have Jesus’s words ringing in our ears?
What is required to have His Spirit filling our hearts?
What do we do to get ourselves to the point that His
teachings guide our lives?
In a world with so many choices and voices and conflicting
methods and opinions, how does it help us to know that Jesus is “the way, the
truth, and the life”?
Why are each of those words—way, truth, and life—important
to Jesus’s statement? What do they
teach us about Jesus?
As we
examine the path Jesus walked, we will see that it took Him through many of the
same challenges we ourselves will face in life.
For
example, Jesus walked the path of disappointment. Although He experienced many
disappointments, one of the most poignant was depicted in His lament over
Jerusalem as He closed His public ministry. The children of Israel had rejected
the safety of the protecting wing which He had offered them. As He looked out
over the city soon to be abandoned to destruction, He was overcome by emotions
of deep sorrow. In anguish He cried out, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest
the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have
gathered thy children together, as a hen doth gather her brood under her wings,
and ye would not!”9
I thought it was interesting that President Monson brought
this up about Jesus walking the path of disappointment. I started thinking about all the
different kinds of disappointments Jesus experienced:
·
People thought He had a devil.
·
Some of the people didn’t have faith to be
healed by Him.
·
People wanted Him to feed them more than they
wanted to believe in Him.
·
Some people found fault with His healing
miracles just because He did some on the Sabbath.
·
He was not accepted in His home country.
·
He was often not understood by His disciples.
·
He was betrayed by one of His friends.
It is interesting that Jesus did not choose disappointment.
He chose to be perfectly obedient, and yet He still experienced
disappointment because of the choices of other people. Yet he did not allow disappointment to
discourage Him.
I think it is easier to bear with disappointment with other
people than it is to bear disappointment in myself from bad choices.
Jesus
walked the path of temptation. Lucifer, that evil one, amassing his greatest
strength, his most inviting sophistry, tempted Him who had fasted for 40 days
and 40 nights. Jesus did not succumb; rather, He resisted each temptation. His
parting words: “Get thee hence, Satan.”10
Did Jesus choose temptation? Of course not.
He went about Heavenly Father’s business and temptation came at weak
moments, such as described by President Monson when Jesus had fasted for so
long and was tempted to turn stones into bread.
The three temptations that came to Jesus at the beginning of
His ministry are probably the best known, but I wonder if it is possible to
discern other points when He was tempted and resisted?
I like that President Monson points out those words Jesus
said—“Get thee hence, Satan.” That
reminds me that calling temptations what they are can really help us fight
them.
I have a very good friend who once was a drug addict and
drug dealer and who now lives a clean life. She likes to call Satan “Hoof Boy.” (When I’d tell her about the
discouragement I was dealing with, she’d say, “And who is it that wants you to
think that? It’s Hoof Boy! Flick him off your shoulder and tell
him to get lost!”) I know someone else who calls Satan
“that dirty rotten scoundrel.” Satan hates being called out because that means
that he’s been unmasked and his tricks are uncovered, so we need to do that as
much as possible. Also, we have to
tell him to go away. Repeatedly.
This really helped me because as I was thinking about this
section of President Monson’s talk, I thought about my life and I realized I am
on a path of temptation right now.
And remembering that is part of what is going to help me resist.
Jesus
walked the path of pain. Consider Gethsemane, where He was “in an agony … and
his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground.”11
And none can forget His suffering on the cruel cross.
I really don’t like pain. I try to avoid it.
It is amazing to me that Jesus chose to go through those pains for me
and everyone else. His pain was
for a great purpose.
It makes me wonder.
If we are to strive to be like Christ, might we too find higher purpose
in our pains? (Probably we’d need
revelation for this.) Can Heavenly Father use our pains for the benefit of the
rest of the world if we endure them bravely and well, just like Christ? Can Heavenly Father make our
pains redemptive?
Each of
us will walk the path of disappointment, perhaps because of an opportunity
lost, a power misused, a loved one’s choices, or a choice we ourselves make.
The path of temptation too will be the path of each. We read in the 29th
section of the Doctrine and Covenants: “And it must needs be that the devil
should tempt the children of men, or they could not be agents unto
themselves.”12
Likewise
shall we walk the path of pain. We, as servants, can expect no more than the
Master, who left mortality only after great pain and suffering.
We know we will all experience disappointment, temptation,
and pain. Do we know the best way
to cope? How did Jesus cope
faithfully?
We will also have people around us trying to cope with
disappointment, temptation, and pain.
Do we know how to help them?
Can we live so as to not disappoint others, tempt others, or cause pain
to others?
While we
will find on our path bitter sorrow, we can also find great happiness.
These next paths President Monson are ones that we can
choose for ourselves.
We, with
Jesus, can walk the path of obedience. It will not always be easy, but let our
watchword be the heritage bequeathed us by Samuel: “Behold, to obey is better
than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.”13
The story that quote refers to has some important principles
of obedience:
--Obeying a commandment with exactness
--Obeying a commandment completely
--Not modifying the commandment to suit our convenience or
our desires
--Not making excuses about half-baked obedience as if it
were full obedience
--Emphasizing obedience to those we have stewardship over
instead of letting things slide.
Let us remember that the end result of
disobedience is captivity and death, while the reward for obedience is liberty
and eternal life.
I just wanted to emphasize that sentence because of its
close linkage to the theme of pondering the path of our feet. It shows us the end of two different
paths. Part of prophecy is being
able to see the end from the beginning, seeing the end of the path and where it
led.
When we’re pondering, can we point to the ways we were
blessed for our obedience? Can
we use that to extrapolate how we will be blessed in the future?
One of the things I’ve noticed in my life is that when I am
disobedient, I almost never can discern the bad consequences that will come out
of it. I can’t tell how my agency
will be abridged. I’m pretty much
blinded. But when I’m obedient, I
know I will be blessed and I can discern how disobedience will bring negative
consequences.
The story of King Saul in 1 Samuel is a pretty good case
study of how disobedience leads to captivity and death. Even though he was king, his disobedience to the commandments made him more and more a
prisoner of his paranoia and anger.
We, like
Jesus, can walk the path of service. As a glowing searchlight of goodness is
the life of Jesus as He ministered among men. He brought strength to the limbs
of the cripple, sight to the eyes of the blind, hearing to the ears of the
deaf.
There is plenty we can ponder about our service. Are we serving gladly? Are we looking for opportunities to
serve? Do we see the little
mundane things we do for our families as the services they are?
What is the result at the end of a path of service? I personally feel satisfaction and love
for those I’ve served. I feel
happy and less worried about myself.
Jesus
walked the path of prayer. He taught us how to pray by giving us the beautiful
prayer we know as the Lord’s Prayer. And who can forget His prayer in
Gethsemane, “Not my will, but thine, be done”?14
I did a blog post on the things we can learn from theexample of the Lord’s prayer.
Under what conditions did Jesus pray? (Yet another thing to study in the four
Gospels..)
Are we praying enough?
Other
instructions given to us by the Savior are at our fingertips, found in the holy
scriptures. In His Sermon on the Mount, He tells us to be merciful, to be
humble, to be righteous, to be pure in heart, to be peacemakers. He instructs
us to stand up bravely for our beliefs, even when we are ridiculed and
persecuted. He asks us to let our lights shine so that others may see them and
may desire to glorify our Father in Heaven. He teaches us to be morally clean
in both our thoughts and our actions. He tells us it is far more important to
lay up treasures in heaven than on earth.15
That was a fast version of the Sermon on the Mount.
Can we see the end of the path and how we will be blessed if
we keep each of those commandments briefly mentioned above?
The merciful >> obtain mercy
The humble >> are exalted
The righteous >> _________
The pure in heart >> see God
Peacemakers >> are the children of God
Can you think of recent instances in your life when you’ve
practiced these virtues? Can you
anticipate events coming up when you will be challenged in those areas?
His
parables teach with power and authority. With the account of the good
Samaritan, He teaches us to love and to serve our neighbors.16 In His parable
of the talents, He teaches us to improve ourselves and to strive for
perfection.17 With the parable of the lost sheep, He instructs us to go to the
rescue of those who have left the path and have lost their way.18
Can we see what will come to us if we keep those
commandments? Can we see how we’d
be changed?
As we
strive to place Christ at the center of our lives by learning His words, by
following His teachings, and by walking in His path, He has promised to share
with us the eternal life that He died to gain. There is no higher end than this,
that we should choose to accept His discipline and become His disciples and do
His work throughout our lives. Nothing else, no other choice we make, can make
of us what He can.
Great perspective there about how transformative
discipleship can be. Do we
have something about ourselves that we are trying to change, and are we getting
Christ’s help? Can we see in
our lives how we are being changed?
As I
think of those who have truly tried to follow the example of the Savior and who
have walked in His path, there comes readily to my mind the names of Gustav and
Margarete Wacker—two of the most Christlike individuals I have ever known. They
were native Germans who had immigrated to eastern Canada, and I met them when I
served as a mission president there. Brother Wacker earned his living as a
barber. Though their means were limited, they shared all they had. They were
not blessed with children, but they nurtured all who entered their home. Men
and women of learning and sophistication sought out these humble, unlettered
servants of God and counted themselves fortunate if they could spend an hour in
their presence.
Their
appearance was ordinary, their English halting and somewhat difficult to
understand, their home unpretentious. They didn’t own a car or a television,
nor did they do any of the things to which the world usually pays attention.
Yet the faithful beat a path to their door in order to partake of the spirit
that was there. Their home was a heaven on earth, and the spirit they radiated
was of pure peace and goodness.
We too
can have that spirit and can share it with the world as we walk the path of our
Savior and follow His perfect example.
I love this sketch of what the Wackers were like. How wonderful that even though they
lived in obscurity, the way they lived attracted the faithful.
Now, think about the kind of choices the Wackers made that
made them what they were. Let’s
list them:
--they shared all they had
--they nurtured all who entered their home
--their appearance was ordinary
--their home was unpretentious
--they didn’t own a car
--they didn’t own a television
--they didn’t do things the world usually pays attention to
--their home was a heaven on earth
--they radiated a spirit of pure peace and goodness
Do all these things happen by accident? No. There are signs that the Wackers pondered the path of their
feet and put their effort into following the Savior instead of striving for
worldly success.
Maybe they were too poor for a fancy home, a car, and a
TV. Maybe. But then again maybe they decided those things weren’t important to them. If their means were limited, they could
have decided to hoard all they had instead of sharing. If they wanted a fancy home
and a car and a TV they could have skimped their charity and/or gone into debt
for those things. Many people do. But they didn't.
That they nurtured all who entered their home tells us that
they thought about their childlessness and what to do to transcend their
circumstances and gain experience helping others grow.
That their appearance was ordinary suggests they thought
about what the consequences might be of putting emphasis on outward appearances
and decided they preferred to escape a trap of temporary vanity.
That they didn’t do things the world usually pays attention
to tells us they pondered where to put their energies and efforts and decided
that quiet satisfaction was better than the world’s applause.
That they made their home a heaven on earth tells us that
they pondered how to make their home a welcoming and loving place and practiced
those principles constantly.
That they radiated a spirit of pure peace and goodness tells
us that they pondered what impact they wanted to have on the people they met
and they worked to be a positive influence. That kind of spirit does not happen by accident. It has to be cultivated on purpose and practiced
even in adverse circumstances.
We read
in Proverbs the admonition, “Ponder the path of thy feet.”19 As we do, we will
have the faith, even the desire, to walk the path which Jesus walked. We will
have no doubt that we are on a path which our Father would have us follow.
Here we get prophetic promises of blessings that come from
pondering the path of our feet. We
will have the faith and desire to follow Jesus, and we will enjoy certainty
that we are in the right way.
Those are great blessings, aren’t they?
The
Savior’s example provides a framework for everything that we do, and His words
provide an unfailing guide. His path will take us safely home. May this be our
blessing, I pray in the name of Jesus Christ, whom I love, whom I serve, and of
whom I testify, amen.
I want to share a personal experience of a time when
pondering the path of my feet prevented me from making a mistake which could
have affected others in my family.
One year for summer vacation our family rented a condo for a
week up in Wisconsin at a resort.
The resort had a pool in the main building, and one day two younger
brothers, my younger sister, and I went to swim in the pool.
As we enjoyed playing in the pool, some teenaged boys came
in to swim too. I made friends
with them. After some time, they
got the idea to go up to a balcony that overlooked the pool and use it as a
diving platform to jump into the pool.
They did it a few times and made tremendous splashes. It looked rather fun to me.
I found myself wanting to go up there and do some jumps of
my own. But just as I was about to
get out of the pool and go do it, an impression came to my mind to ponder what
would be the result if I did. I
played the scenario through my mind and realized that if I did, my younger
siblings would be very likely to want to imitate my example. They would probably think, “Older
sister does cool things, and if older sister does it, it’s okay for me to do it
too.”
Then I pondered further whether it would be a safe thing for
them to do. The horizontal distance from the edge of the balcony to the
pool wasn’t a problem for me, but would it be a problem for them? And then I realized that if it was a
problem, or if there was the slightest mishap, our play could turn tragic very
easily. I could see in my mind the
result--one of my siblings falling nine feet onto the cement next to the pool
and hurting him or herself very badly.
And I realized if that
happened, I would feel horrible for
being the one to start it.
So I stayed in the pool. And a few minutes later, an adult from the resort got after
those boys for their unsafe jumping and made them stop.
Again, pondering the path of my feet and considering the
consequences of my example on my siblings, and whether it would be safe for
them to do what I did restrained me from acting irresponsibly.
Ideas for teaching
from this talk
Ask your class what things they ponder about. Are there specific ways that pondering
has helped them?
Ask class members to share an experience they had when
pondering helped them avoid making a mistake or helped steer them in the right
direction.
Ask your class to think about what disappointments they are
feeling about their life right now.
Is this something they have control of, or is it something that they
feel about others? What are good
ways of coping with disappointment?
(Ask the same questions about temptation and pain.)
How can we help our children and others learn to ponder
their path and make good decisions?
What things get in the way of us having time to ponder? Are there things we can do to lower the
noise in our lives?
(See also my blog post on 15 Ways to Study a General Conference Talk to Teach a Lesson)
2 comments:
Thanks for taking the time to blog your thoughts and insights and questions.
You're welcome, Jonathan Millet. Thanks for stopping by.
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