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All of us are blessed with responsibility for others.
To hold the priesthood of God is to be held responsible by
God for the eternal lives of His children.
That is real, that is wonderful, and at times that
can feel overwhelming.
There are elders quorum presidents listening tonight
who know what I mean.
Here's what happened to one of you.
It has likely happened to many of you, and more than once.
The details may vary, but the situation is the same.
An elder you do not know well asked for your help.
He had just found out that he had to move his wife and young
baby boy today from the apartment where they had been
living to another one nearby.
He and his wife had already asked a friend if they could
borrow a truck for the day to move their household and
personal belongings.
The friend loaned them the truck.
The young father began to load all they owned into the truck,
but in the first few minutes, he hurt his back.
The friend who loaned the truck was too busy to help.
The young father felt desperate.
He thought of you, his elders quorum president.
By the time he asked for help, it was early afternoon.
It was the day of an evening Church meeting.
You had already promised to help your wife with household
projects that day.
Your children had asked you to do something with them, but
you hadn't gotten to it yet.
You also knew that the members of your quorum, particularly
the most faithful, the ones you usually called on to help,
were likely to be in the same time bind that you were in.
The Lord knew you would have such days when He called you
to this position, so He gave you a story to encourage you.
It is a parable for overloaded priesthood holders.
We sometimes call it the story of the good Samaritan, but
it's really the story of a great priesthood bearer in
these busy, difficult last days.
The story is a perfect fit for the
overtaxed priesthood servant.
Just remember that you are the Samaritan and not the priest
or the Levite who passed by the wounded man.
You may not have thought of that story when you faced such
challenges, but I pray you will when such days come
again, as they surely will.
We're not told in the scripture why the Samaritan
was traveling on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho.
It is not likely that he was taking a stroll alone, since
he must have known that robbers waited for the unwary.
He was on a serious journey.
And, as was customary, he had with him a beast of burden as
well as oil and wine.
In the Lord's words, the Samaritan, when he saw the
wounded man, stopped because he "had compassion." More than
only feeling compassion, he acted.
Always remember the specifics of the account (quote): "And
[he] went to him, and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and
wine, and set him on his ... beast, and brought him to an
inn, and took care of him.
And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two
pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take
care of him; and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I
come again, I will repay thee" (close quote).
You and the priesthood bearers you are called to lead can
have at least three assurances.
First, the Lord will give you, if you ask, the feelings of
the compassion He feels for those in need.
Second, He will provide others, like the innkeeper, to
join with you in your service.
And third, the Lord, like the good Samaritan, will more than
recompense all who join in giving help to those in need.
You quorum presidents likely have acted on those assurances
more than once.
You asked others of the Lord's priesthood to help, with
confidence that they would respond with compassion.
You are not afraid to ask those who have responded most
often in the past because you knew that they
feel compassion easily.
You asked them knowing that in the past they have felt the
Lord's generosity when they chose to help.
You asked some already heavily burdened, knowing that the
greater the sacrifice, the greater the compensation they
will receive from the Lord.
Those who have helped in the past have felt the overflowing
gratitude of the Savior.
You may well have been inspired not to ask someone to
help load and then unload that truck.
As a leader, you know your quorum members and their
families well.
The Lord knows them perfectly.
He knows whose wife was near the breaking point because her
husband was unable to find time to do what she needed
done to care for her needs.
He knows which children would be blessed by seeing their
father go one more time to help others, or if the
children needed the feeling that they matter to their
father enough for him to spend time with them that day.
But He also knows who needs the invitation to serve that
might not appear to be a likely or a willing candidate.
You cannot know all your quorum members perfectly well,
but God does.
So, as you have done many times, you prayed to know who
to ask to help serve others.
The Lord knows who will be blessed by being asked to help
and whose family will be blessed by not being asked.
That is the revelation you can expect to come to you as you
lead in the priesthood.
I saw that happen when I was a young man.
I was the first assistant in a priests quorum.
The bishop called me one day at my home.
He said that he wanted me to go with him to visit a widow
in great need.
He said he needed me.
As I waited for him to pick me up at my home, I was troubled.
I knew the bishop had strong and wise counselors.
One was a famous judge.
The other ran a large company and would later become a
General Authority.
The bishop himself would someday serve
as a General Authority.
Why was the bishop saying to an inexperienced priest, "I
need your help"?
Well, I know better now what he might have said to me: "The
Lord needs to bless you."
At the home of the widow, I saw him, to my amazement, tell
the woman that she could get no help from the Church until
she filled out the budget form he had left with her earlier.
On the way home, as he saw how shocked I was, he chuckled at
my surprise and said, "Hal, when she gets control of her
spending, she will be able to help others" (close quote).
On another occasion, my bishop took me with him to the home
of alcoholic parents who sent two frightened little girls to
meet us at the door.
After he visited with the two little girls, we turned away,
and he said to me, "We can't change the tragedy in their
lives yet, but they can feel that the Lord loves them"
(close quote).
On another evening, he took me to the home of a man who
hadn't come to church in years.
The bishop told him how much he loved him and how much the
ward needed him.
I have to put this in.
I hadn't thought I would.
But the fellow kicked a beer bottle with his foot to get it
out of the way so the bishop wouldn't see it.
I heard it roll across the floor.
The bishop's kindness didn't seem to have much
effect on the man.
But that time, and every time the bishop took me with him,
it had a great effect on me.
There is no way that I can find out whether the bishop
prayed to know which priest would be blessed by going with
him on those visits.
He may well have taken other priests with him many times.
But the Lord knew I would someday be a bishop inviting
those whose faith had grown cold to come back to the
warmth of the gospel.
The Lord knew I would someday be charged with the priesthood
responsibility for hundreds and even thousands of Heavenly
Father's children who were in desperate temporal need.
The young men cannot know what acts of priesthood service the
Lord is preparing you to give, but the greater challenge for
every priesthood holder is to give spiritual help.
All of us have that charge.
It comes with being a member of a quorum.
It comes with being a member of a family.
If the faith of anyone in your quorum or your family is
attacked by Satan, you will feel compassion.
Much like the service and mercy given by the Samaritan,
you will also administer to them with healing balm for
their wounds in their time of need.
In your service as a full-time missionary, you'll go to
thousands of people in great spiritual need.
Many, until you teach them, will not even know that they
have spiritual wounds that, left untreated, will bring
endless misery.
You will go on the Lord's errand to rescue them.
Only the Lord can bind up their spiritual wounds as they
accept the ordinances that lead to eternal life.
As a quorum member, as a home teacher, and as a missionary,
you cannot help people repair spiritual damage unless your
own faith is vibrant.
That means far more than reading the scriptures
regularly and praying over them.
The prayer in the moment and quick glances in the
scriptures are not preparation enough.
The reassurance of what you will need comes with this
counsel from the 84th section of the Doctrine and Covenants
(quote): "Neither take ye thought beforehand what ye
shall say; but treasure up in your minds continually the
words of life, and it shall be given you in the very hour
that portion that shall be meted unto
every man" (close quote).
That promise can only be claimed if we "treasure up"
the words of life and do it continually.
The treasuring part of that scripture has meant for me a
matter of feeling something about the words.
For instance, when I've gone to try to help someone
wavering in his or her faith about the Prophet Joseph
Smith's divine calling, feelings come back to me.
It is not only the words from the Book of Mormon.
It is the feeling of assurance of truth that comes whenever I
read even a few lines from the Book of Mormon.
I cannot promise that will come to every person infected
with doubt about the Prophet Joseph or the Book of Mormon,
but I know Joseph Smith is the prophet of the Restoration.
I know that the Book of Mormon is the word of God because I
have treasured it.
I know from experience that you can get assurance of truth
from the Spirit because it has come to me.
You and I must have that assurance before the Lord puts
us in the way of a traveler we love who has been wounded by
the enemies of truth.
There is another preparation we must make.
It is a human characteristic to become hardened to the
pains of others.
That is one of the reasons why the Savior went to such
lengths to tell of His Atonement and of His taking
upon Himself the pains and sorrows of all of our Heavenly
Father's children, that He might know how to succor them.
Even the best of Heavenly Father's mortal priesthood
holders do not rise to that standard of compassion easily.
Our human tendency is to be impatient with a person who
cannot see the truth that is so plain to us.
We must be careful that our impatience is not interpreted
as condemnation or rejection.
As we prepare to give succor for the Lord as His priesthood
servants, there is a scripture to guide us.
It contains a gift we will need for our journey, wherever
the Lord will send us.
The good Samaritan had that gift.
We will need it, and the Lord has told us how we can find it
(open quote): "Wherefore, my beloved brethren, if ye have
not charity, ye are nothing, for charity never faileth.
Wherefore, cleave unto charity, which is the greatest
of all, for all things must fail--but charity is the pure
love of Christ, and it endureth forever; and whoso is
found possessed of it at the last day, it shall
be well with him.
Wherefore, my beloved brethren, pray unto the Father
with all the energy of heart, that ye may be filled with
this love, which he hath bestowed upon all who are true
followers of his Son, Jesus Christ; that ye may become the
sons of God; that when he shall appear we shall be like
him, for we shall see him as he is; that we may have this
hope; that we may be purified even as he is pure."
I pray that we may prepare ourselves to give whatever
priesthood service the Lord may set before us on our
mortal journey.
In the sacred name of Jesus Christ, amen.
Brethren, we are grateful for your attendance this evening.
We likewise thank the Aaronic Priesthood choir for the
inspiring music they have provided and acknowledge and
thank all those who have assisted in preparing for
these proceedings.
It will now be our privilege to hear from our prophet,
President Thomas S. Monson.
Following President Monson's remarks, the choir will sing
"God of Our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand." The
benediction will then be offered by Elder Walter F.
Gonzalez of the Seventy.