39 And it
shall come to pass that he that feareth me shall be looking forth for the great
day of the Lord to come, even for the signs of the coming of the Son of Man.
40 And
they shall see signs and wonders, for they shall be shown forth in the heavens
above, and in the earth beneath.
41 And
they shall behold blood, and fire, and vapors of smoke.
42 And
before the day of the Lord shall come, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon
be turned into blood, and the stars fall from heaven.
43 And
the remnant shall be gathered unto this place; (D&C
45:39-43)
It impresses me that Jesus says those who fear Him (in the
reverential awe sense) will be looking for the signs of His coming. We can also infer the opposite—that those
who don’t, will pay no attention to
signs, and probably won’t see them.
It’s neat to me that He promises that those who look shall
see signs and wonders in heaven and in earth.
It struck me that maybe He didn’t just mean only those who
were alive when He come, but also those who live in the intervening generations
would see signs as well that show how close He’s getting, even if they don’t
see the specific signs listed that indicate Christ is coming in their day.
In v36-38, Christ uses the parable of the fig tree and how
tender leaves shooting forth indicate coming summer to communicate how members
may know how close the great day is by looking at certain signs.
I have fond memories of seeing how trees bud. It doesn’t
happen all in a day. Little green shoots sprout and unfurl, like a green mist
on the trees. Likewise, there are little sprouting signs we can watch for as
members, such as seeing how much of the world is open to missionary work and
the gospel.
The specific signs and wonders listed in the above verses
are of the violent and destructive variety, meant to wake up the world. But I believe the faithful who are
already “awake” will also be able to see positive
signs, wonders, and miracles—compensatory blessings that are meant to help
confirm their faith in a darkening age.
You can see this from Joel 2:28-32:
28 ¶And
it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh;
and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream
dreams, your young men shall see visions:
29 And
also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my
spirit.
30 And I
will shew wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and pillars
of smoke.
31 The
sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great
and the terrible day of the Lord come.
32 And it
shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be
delivered: for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall be deliverance, as the Lord
hath said, and in the remnant whom the Lord shall call.
The destructive signs are very similar to the quoted verses
from D&C 45, but there is the additional promise of the Spirit poured out,
and increased spiritual gifts of prophecy, dreams, and visions. I believe those gifts are designed to
help us find peace and act in faith in the increasing uncertainties.
I don’t know that I can say much about prophecy or visions,
but I have some experience with dreams, and I want to take a little time to
talk about that particular gift.
There is a kind
of dream that I call at “heads-up” dream. (I’m borrowing this term from someone
else who wrote about dreams.)
Heads-up dreams can come in two forms—they can show us quite
literally what will happen, or they can show us a symbolic situation and we
decode the symbols to understand what will happen. When Heavenly Father talks to us in dreams, He will speak
according to our ability to understand, so it doesn’t much matter what form the
message takes, whether literal or symbolic. (My dreams tend to be symbolic, and I don’t know whether
that means that I can’t handle a literal dream or whether the Lord wants me to
do some work to understand what He is trying to tell me. Whatever the reason,
He puts them in a form adapted for my weaknesses.)
Heads-up dreams can tell us something that will happen the
next day, or they can show us what will happen over larger periods of time. They may suggest something we (as
individuals) must do, or they may prepare us for an experience we must simply
go through. I’ve had some that
warned me of something I needed to do immediately, and others that warned me of
difficult experiences I would have several years down the line. (Of course, I didn't know that until later.)
Usually I know a dream is important if it is particularly
vivid and it stays with me once I’ve awakened. Sometimes I know what it means immediately, but other times
I am puzzled and have to think about it. I have noticed that reading the
scriptures brings the Spirit enough that afterward I realize a dream’s
meaning. Or I might have to ponder
it over a few days. A few have really weirded me out, but have turned out to be
very helpful.
I believe it is important to write in our journals the
dreams that Heavenly Father gives us. They are a form of revelation, and if not
recorded, they are easy to forget. But if we record them, future readings of
our journals will remind us and we will find them verified. Then we can record
that the Lord knew what would happen and we can show how we were helped because
He told us things ahead of time.
I believe that these dreams have a function of 1) preparing
our minds for the future, 2) giving us clarity through synthetic experience, 3)
giving us reassurance that Heavenly Father knows all things. They are not meant to make us
feel superior to others.
These spiritual gifts--prophecy, dreams, visions-- don’t come at our will. Heavenly Father controls them and they
are to fulfill His purposes, so they become very personalized signs to help us
act and endure faithfully. They are meant to save us, and we need saving.
2 comments:
How do you tell, or understand, that a dream is from Heavenly Father? I wonder, but most of the dreams I remember seem to be simply dreams of my own mind. What makes the difference?
For me, I notice two things. 1) Usually dreams from Heavenly Father are so vivid that I remember them strongly after I awake, or at least remember the most important points. They are so strong that they almost feel as if I actually experienced them in life. Then, 2) I spend some time thinking about whether those dreams symbolically match anything that is happening in my life that I'm worried about. If I start noticing some sort of correspondence and the imagery in the dream, I suspect they are symbolic somehow, and start examining more of the dream imagery for comparisons.
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