The twelfth chapter of Alma is like a field of precious stones
lying about on the surface. I have picked one very small one, very
precious one, only fifteen words, to use as my text. "God gave
unto them commandments, after [first] having made known unto them
the plan of redemption." (Alma 12:32)
Thirty-eight years ago I came from Brigham City to the office I
now occupy in the Administration Building to see Elder Harold B.
Lee, who, next to President Joseph Fielding Smith, was the senior
member of the Quorum of the Twelve. I had just been appointed the
supervisor of Seminaries and Institutes of Religion. I knew there
were serious problems in the system and I wondered why they had
not appointed someone with more experience.
Elder Lee had agreed to give me counsel and some direction. He
didn't say much, nothing really in detail, but what he told me has
saved me time and time again. "You must decide now which way
you face," he said. "Either you represent the teachers
and students and champion their causes or you represent the Brethren
who appointed you. You need to decide now which way you face."
then he added, "some of your predecessors faced the wrong way."
It took some hard and painful lessons before I understood his counsel.
In time, I did understand, and my resolve to face the right way
became irreversible.
One of the early lessons was also my first lesson in correlation.
The seminaries were sponsoring speech contests., They were very
successful -- much better than similar contests sponsored by the
Mutual Improvement Association. It was an ideal gospel-centered
activity for seminaries. They were succeeding beautifully under
able teachers who could assist even the shy students. We were instructed
to discontinue them!
There was something of an uprising among the teachers. They accused
Superintendent Curtis of the Young Men and President Reeder of the
Young Women of being responsible. Perhaps they were. The teachers
wanted Brother Tuttle and me to plead their cause before the Brethren.
The logic was all on our side. Nevertheless we remembered the counsel
of Brother Lee, and really, just out of obedience, we declined.
Later I could see that the seminaries served then only a very small
part of our youth; the MIA, all of them. A B-minus program reaching
most of the youth would, in the aggregate, bring better results
than an A-plus program which reached relatively few. It wasn't until
many years later, when some other problems arose, that I could see
that those contests, even though they were gospel centered, pulled
the teachers into an activity-oriented mind-set and away from the
less exciting responsibility of teaching the Old and New Testaments
to teenagers. Finally I could see that the very success of the program
was an enemy.
Other lessons followed, some of them hard ones. I was asked to
write an article for the Improvement Era. It was returned with the
request that I change some words. I smarted! The replacement words
didn't convey exactly what I was trying to say. I balked a bit,
and was told that Richard L. Evans, then of the Seventy and magazine
editor, had asked that the changes be made. I remembered Brother
Lee's counsel. I had to submit. Now, though that article is piled
under thirty-five years of paper, I'm glad, very glad, that if someone
digs it out, I was "invited" to change it.
After one of my first general conference talks, I received a call
from Joseph Anderson. In a very polite way he said that President
McKay and his counselors suggested that I add one word to the text
of my talk. Would I mind doing that? Actually the word was in my
text, I just failed to read it at the pulpit. A most embarrassing
lesson -- the First Presidency! It was easier when Elder Evans corrected
my work; even easier when one of my associates was kind enough to
do it.
Only last Friday while putting together some things for a presentation,
I read part of it to some brethren from BYU. I noticed they looked
at one another at one place in my reading, and I stopped and asked
if there was a problem. Finally one of them suggested that I not
use a certain scripture that I had included even though it said
exactly what I wanted to convey. How dare they suppose that a member
of the Twelve didn't know his scriptures! I simply said, "What
do you suggest?" He said, "Better find another scripture,"
and he pointed out that if I put that verse back in context, it
was really talking about another subject. Others had used it as
I proposed to use it, but it was not really correct. I was very
glad to make a change.
Now you may not need a correlating hand in what you do, but I certainly
do. This brother lingered after the meeting to thank me for being
patient with him. Thank me! I was thankful to him. If I ever make
that presentation, it will only be after some of our Correlation
staff have checked it over for me.
Now I give you all full credit for knowing more about your work
than anyone else -- more, certainly than the staff of the Correlation
Department. That is how it should be, for you are hired or called
to be a specialist. I also know from experience how easy it is to
get turned around, and, as Brother Lee warned, to face the wrong
way.
However much you know about your work, I doubt that you know, or
have the time to learn, as much as do the Correlation staff about
how your work interacts with everything else that is going on. The
Council of the Twelve Apostles is the Correlation Committee, with
the President of the Twelve and the two senior members acting as
the executive committee. Correlation is the one department where
they are hired to be generalists. They represent the Brethren in
pointing out to you areas where you, in one detail or another, might,
in the interest of the overall program, need to make an adjustment
or two.
The principle of correlation is a sound principle. Except for its
having been established, we could not now possibly administer an
ever-growing multi-national and multi-lingual church. The full purpose
for its having been established, I know, is yet to be realized.
If we neglect it, we will pay a very, very heavy price one day.
The value of having struggled through those years, and there aren't
many around who struggled through those years, will one day be apparent.
The greatest use of this is yet to come.
The responsibility to effect a reduction and simplification in
programs was assigned by the First Presidency to Correlation Department.
We have been only modestly successful at best. Perhaps just to have
slowed the growth is enough reward for all the effort that has been
put in. There are isolated success stories. The Music Department,
catching the vision, reduced five manuals of 190 pages into one
manual of 18 pages. They did it themselves, and they count themselves
better for it.
Perhaps too many of us are strong advocates of our own specialized
work or are such strong protectors of our own turf that we face
the wrong way -- maybe just sideways. Simplification and reduction
must come. Simplification and reduction will come! If we cannot
do it on our own -- and we seem to be in that circumstance -- the
future will see us doing, in anxious haste, that which we might
have done with deliberate care had we followed the vision which
has been given to us.
Surely you have been anxiously watching the worldwide evaporation
of values and standards from politics, government, society, entertainment,
schools. Could you be serving in the Church without having turned
to those pages in the revelations and to those statements of the
prophets that speak of the last days? Could you, in working for
the Church, not be conscious of or have ignored the warnings? Could
you be blind to the drift that is taking place? Are you not conscious
of the drift that is taking place in the Church? Could you believe
other than it is critical that all of us work together and set aside
personal interests and all face the same way?
It is so easy to be turned about without realizing that it has
happened to us. There are three areas where members of the Church,
influenced by social and political unrest, are being caught up and
led away. I chose these three because they have made major invasions
into the membership of the Church. In each, the temptation is for
us to turn about and face the wrong way, and it is hard to resist,
for doing it seems so reasonable and right.
The dangers I speak of come from the gay-lesbian movement, the
feminist movement (both of which are relatively new), and the ever-present
challenge from the so-called scholars or intellectuals. Our local
leaders must deal with all three of them with ever-increasing frequency.
In each case, the members who are hurting have the conviction that
the Church somehow is doing something wrong to members or that the
Church is not doing enough for them. To illustrate, I will quote
briefly from letters on each of those subjects. They are chosen
from among many letters which have arrived in the last few weeks.
These have arrived in just the last few days.
The Gay/Lesbian Challenge
The first is from a young man, possibly a gay rights activist:
"May 3rd marks my 18th year in the Church. As a gay Mormon,
I have witnessed and experienced first-hand during those eighteen
years what it's like to be a homosexual in a Church which is sometimes
less than accepting of its gay members. My experiences have run
the range from incredible, Spirit-filled and loving encounters with
members, Bishops and Stake Presidents to a laughable run-in with
a departing Mission President. May I share with you some of the
more permanent and meaningful memories?"
After a page or two of those, he said, "So in a spirit of
friendship I offer that which I have to give -- the life experience
of a gay Mormon. At your convenience I would be happy to meet with
you to discuss the issues facing gay Latter-day Saints and the Church.
The purpose for meeting is not to debate, or to presumptively call
you to repentance, or to be called to repentance myself for being
gay. The point is to meet together and share what we have for the
good of The Kingdom and the furthering of the Will of the Lord on
Earth."
The Feminist Movement
The next quotation is from a woman who is hurting, and perhaps
wonders if anyone but the feminists care about her problems:
"I'm upset that I was always advised to go back and try harder
only to get abused more. I need some comfort, I need solace, need
hope, need to know Heavenly Father sees all that I have endured.
What hope do I have for a chance to live with Heavenly Father? If
temple marriage is the key to the celestial [kingdom], where am
I? Outside gnashing my teeth for eternity? Help me."
The Scholars
The last is from a self-described intellectual:
"My concern is that the Brethren are contending with the church's
own scholars. ... In the Catholic Church, the great scholars' efforts
were used by the Church to refine and strengthen the doctrine (St.
Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, for example). In our Church, the scholars
are put down, even banished [and he names three of them, and they
would be names all of whom you would know]. Once again I extend
an offer to you to be a peacemaker between the Brethren and the
scholars, if you wish me to attempt it, since I know so many in
both groups. More than that, I understand the mind-sets of both
groups."
These letters and hundreds more are from members who are hurting
or leaders who are worried. I might say here that I can see in the
last few weeks a change in the letters coming in. There isn't time
to talk about it now, but out in the Church there is another growing
group of the discontented. That is the rank and file who are trying
to do what they are supposed to do and feel neglected as we concentrate
on solving the problems of the exceptions.
Those who are hurting think they are not understood. They are looking
for a champion, an advocate, someone with office and influence from
whom they can receive comfort. They ask us to speak about their
troubles in general conference, to put something in the curriculum,
or to provide a special program to support them in their problems
or with their activism.
When members are hurting, it is so easy to convince ourselves that
we are justified, even duty bound, to use the influence of our appointment
or our calling to somehow represent them. We then become their advocates
-- sympathize with their complaints against the Church, and perhaps
even soften the commandments to comfort them. Unwittingly we may
turn about and face the wrong way. Then the channels of revelation
are reversed. Let me say that again. Then the channels of revelation
are reversed. In our efforts to comfort them, we lose our bearings
and leave that segment of the line to which we are assigned unprotected.
The question is not whether they need help and comfort. That goes
without saying. The question is "How?" The Prophet Joseph
Smith, when he organized the Relief Society said, "There is
the need for decisions of character aside from sympathy."
Working Mothers
To illustrate principles which apply to all of these problems,
I have taken one common one -- working mothers. President Ezra Taft
Benson gave a talk to wives and mothers. There was a reaction within
the Church. (Ten years ago, that would not have happened.) That
was very interesting, because if you read his talk carefully, it
was, for the most part, simply a compilation of quotations on the
subject from the prophets who have preceded him. (See
Teachings About Motherhood and the Role of Women home page)
Some mothers must work out of the home. There is no other way.
And in this they are justified and for this they should not be criticized.
We cannot, however, because of their discomfort over their plight,
abandon a position that has been taught by the prophets from the
beginning of this dispensation. The question then is, "How
can we give solace to those who are justified without giving license
to those who are not?"
The comfort they need is better, for the most part, administered
individually. To point out so-called success stories inferring that
a career out of the home has no negative effect on a family is an
invitation to many to stray from what has been taught by the prophets
and thus cause members to reap disappointment by and by.
I think President Thomas S. Monson may not appreciate what I am
going to say now. I know of no one who maintains such a large private
ministry of counsel and comfort in the midst of heavy pressures
of office than does Brother Monson. He says very little about it,
but he visits the sick, hospitals, homes, comforting, counseling,
both in person and in writing. However, I have never heard him over
the pulpit, nor have I read anything in his writings -- not one
thing -- that would give any license to any member to stray from
the counsel of the prophets or to soften the commandments that the
Lord has given. There is a way to give comfort that is needed.
If we are not very careful, we will think we are giving comfort
to those few who are justified and actually we will be giving license
to the many who are not. The process of correlation is designed
to keep us from making mistakes in manuals, in publications, in
films, in videos, in those specialized programs which are justified.
Those fifteen words from Alma state: "God gave unto them commandments,
after having made known to them the plan of redemption." There
are many things that cannot be understood nor taught nor explained
unless it is in terms of the plan of redemption. The three areas
that I mentioned are among them. Unless they understand the basic
plan -- the premortal existence, the purposes of life, the fall,
the atonement, the resurrection -- unless they understand that,
the unmarried, the abused, the handicapped, the abandoned, the addicted,
the disappointed, those with gender disorientation, or the intellectuals
will find no enduring comfort. They can't think life is fair unless
they know the plan of redemption.
That young man with gender disorientation needs to know that gender
was not assigned at mortal birth, that we were sons and daughters
of God in the premortal state.
The woman pleading for help needs to see the eternal nature of
things and to know that her trials -- however hard to bear -- in
the eternal scheme of things may be compared to a very, very bad
experience in the second semester of the first grade. She will find
no enduring peace in the feminist movement. There she will have
no hope. If she knows the plan of redemption, she can be filled
with hope.
The one who supposes that he "understands the mind-set of
both groups" needs to understand that the doctrines of the
gospel are revealed through the Spirit to prophets, not through
the intellect to scholars.
Only when they have some knowledge of the plan of redemption will
they understand the supposed inequities of life. Only then will
they understand the commandments God has given us. If we do not
teach the plan of redemption, whatever else we do by way of programs
and activities and instructions will not be enough.
"God gave unto them commandments, after having made known
unto them the plan of redemption." We face invasions of the
intensity and seriousness that we have not faced before. There is
the need now to be united with everyone facing the same way. Then
the sunlight of truth, coming over our shoulders, will mark the
path ahead. If we perchance turn the wrong way, we will shade our
eyes from that light and we will fail in our ministries.
God grant that a testimony of the redemption and knowledge of the
doctrine will be so fundamentally in our minds and in our hearts
that we will move forward with his approval. This Church will prevail.
There is no power in existence that can thwart the work in which
we are engaged. Of that I bear witness, and of him who is our redeemer
I bear witness in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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