There is no way the
Church can honestly describe where we must yet go and
what we must yet do without creating a sense of immense distance.
--Elder Neal A Maxwell
Have you ever felt
overwhelmed by the distance you see between yourself and God? At one time or another in our mortal journey,
all of us will need to give, as well as receive, assistance from others. We were never meant to make it back to the
Father alone. In fact, I believe it is
impossible. President Joseph Fielding
Smith said, "Therefore our salvation and progression depends upon the
salvation of our worthy dead with whom we must be joined in family ties." In the Doctrine & Covenants we read "that
they without us cannot be made perfect—neither can we without our dead be made
perfect."
President Joseph Fielding Smith also said, "There must
be a welding, a joining together of the generations from the days of Adam to
the end of time." In other words, although
individuals must personally qualify for eternal life, the quest to be saved is more
than even an endeavor of an immediate family.
Rather, it is the work of the whole family of Adam. In my opinion, to be saved means that God
accepts the human family, not just individually, but also as a whole. After all, He once said, "And if ye are
not one, ye are not mine."
Keep in mind that there is an important distinction between
eternal life and exaltation as well as between the many degrees of salvation
that exist. Notwithstanding these
differences, and no matter what level of progression the above quotes and
scriptures refer to, it is obvious that the Lord wants us to return to him as a
unit. Do we see it that way? Or do we believe that salvation is an
"every man for himself" proposition?
We are literally brothers and sisters. Somehow we manage to convince ourselves that
because that is true only in a spiritual sense that it doesn't really count. And yet in the same breath we declare that our
Father in Heaven is just as literally our parent as the person who gave birth
to us. The more I see those around me as
siblings, the more I see ourselves as a team, a family, all fighting towards
the same goal. We are in part responsible for their spiritual welfare, just as they are in part responsible for ours. We were meant to lean on
others when we need support, even as we support them in turn. So what if some of us struggle more than
others? Are our literal siblings less
valuable because they have physical or mental limitations, even if they were caused in part by their own lack of effort?
There is a word for a piece of humanity who accepts their spiritual
familial identity. For a people who work
and love together, with each member valuing his brother's salvation as much as
his own. It is a word that describes
something that the Lord requires us to build before the coming of Christ. Something miraculous, world-changing, and utterly achievable. That word is ZION.
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