I was struck with the undeniable impression this week that
I should interrupt my existing plan of posting installments of Miracle Girl to
specifically address the topic of
spiritual impossibilities. I hope that
whoever in my small audience this is intended for will feel the Father's love
for them and His desire to share with them some of the important truths of His
Kingdom.
When we think of things that are spiritually impossible, we
are inclined to focus on states of being that are contradictions in terms, such
as "happiness in wickedness,"
or "receiving a witness before
the trial of one's faith." These spiritual
situations can never exist because they come into direct conflict with divine
law. However, there are other spiritual
accomplishments that are impossible for us to reach simply because we do not
have enough power to complete them on our own.
For example, King Benjamin asserted:
"For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall
of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of
the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the
Lord..."
Here
King Benjamin declares that the only way we can ever put off the natural man is by yielding to the enticings of the
Holy Spirit. Why? Because we become a saint through the
Atonement of Christ, not through our own efforts. The Savior illuminated another impossibility
in Mathew 19: "And
again I say unto you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a
needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God. When his
disciples heard it, they were exceedingly amazed, saying, Who then can
be saved? But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God
all things are possible."
In other words, it is impossible for a man who has riches
to have the spiritual willpower, of his own volition, to sacrifice them so that
he can enter the Kingdom of God. Only
God can lift such a man to such a high plane of thought and spiritual power so
as to be able to make a decision of that caliber. If he tries to do so without divine aid, he
will fail.
I believe that there are many, many other things that are
impossible to do without grace from God that is far above what we deserve. For example, loving our enemies, forgiving
those who have committed atrocities, serving out of pure selflessness, having
faith to call down miracles, overcoming ways of thinking that stretch as deep
as the marrow of our souls, being worthy to have the Holy Ghost with us always,
and permanently changing the nature of who we are, are all things that are
impossible for us to do without the Atonement of Christ. So often we think "I have to change
myself, and then Christ will forgive me of my sins," or "I have to
make X amount of progress, and then God will help me change that
weakness." In reality, true change
and progress of great magnitude is spiritually impossible for a lone person.
"And behold, there were divers ways that he did
manifest things unto the children of men, which were good; and all things which
are good cometh of Christ; otherwise men were fallen, and there could no good
thing come unto them." (Moroni 7:24)
The phrase "no good thing" seems pretty
inclusive. To me this means that even
our righteous desires, efforts, and decisions could not exist without the
Atonement. It helps me understand why
those who chose Lucifer's plan have fallen to the point that their only desire
is to make others miserable like unto themselves. They utterly rejected Christ's plan and
Atonement, and the consequence is that it is impossible for them to be or do
good things.
"And I,
John, bear record that I beheld his glory, as the glory of the Only Begotten of
the Father, full of grace and truth, even the Spirit of truth, which came and
dwelt in the flesh, and dwelt among us. And I, John, saw that he received not
of the fulness at the first, but received grace for grace; And he received not
of the fulness at first, but continued from grace to grace, until he received a
fulness; (D&C 93:11-13)"
Elder Bednar
has said that the word "grace" in the scriptures can often be
replaced with the phrase "enabling power." In other words, for Christ to become perfect
and live a perfect life, He required help from a power greater than His
own. Even with a perfectly innocent
conscience, more was required for Him to reach perfection the way God the
Father defines it. If even Jesus Christ
could not progress without help, why do we so often assume that we can do so?
What, then,
is our purpose? What is the role of
works in our eternal progression? The
answer is that although God can transform us into a perfect being without the
slightest effort on our part, and although He is the only being who can do so,
He will not do so against our own agency.
Works are important because they are the means by which we align our
agency, our wills, and the talents and capacities we have been blessed with
through the Atonement, with the will of God.
It is then by our exercise of faith in the omnipotence and love of God
that we pull down power from heaven to rise toward Him. When He sees our faith in His power
demonstrated through our works, He reaches down and makes the true change.
In other
words, it is by using the good that God has already given us to the best of our
abilities that we qualify for the greatest possible endowment of enabling
grace. This means that while failures
and mistakes are to be expected, if we repent and exercise faith God will
quickly lift us above them through the covenants we have made with Him that
bind us to Christ's Atonement. That
lifting is performed through a gift of the Spirit. President George Q Cannon once said, "If
any of us are imperfect, it is our duty to pray for the gift that will make us
perfect. … No man ought to say, ‘Oh, I cannot help this; it is my nature.’ He
is not justified in it, for the reason that God has promised to give strength
to correct these things, and to give gifts that will eradicate them."
There
is a reason why Paul said of the Savior, "...that he might be just, and
the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus... By what law? of works? Nay:
but by the law of faith (Romans 3:26-27)." Although works are required, they have
limited power to change us directly.
Rather, it is by faith in the power of Christ that we are
transformed. Our works are both
confirmations that our faith is genuine and opportunities to use our agency,
but they are often not the principle means by which we are changed. Faith without works is dead, but works
without faith in Christ is also dead.
I know that as we have true faith in Jesus Christ and pull
down the power of the Atonement upon ourselves, we will be empowered beyond
what is humanly possible. We will
perform feats that were previously beyond our abilities and marvel and the
strange, miraculous person that the Lord has made us. Give yourself to the Lord; your thoughts,
decisions, and desires. Give Him your
love, time, and attention. Give them to
Him in your heart, even if He never requires them in the flesh, so that if He
were to ask anything of you you could say, "Of course. My (time, attention, desire, ambition) is
already Thine to do with what Thou wantest because I already gave it to you in
my heart long ago." I promise that
as you do so, God will make more of you than you could possibly make of
yourself. You will never regret any decision to give yourself to the
Lord. I never have.
Listen for God's voice whispering to you these divine
truths in my future blog posts, as well as in all areas of your life, and you
will hear them.
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