Some things strongly affirmed to me that I am meant to do more than laundry for all time here are a few.
“Any notion that God desired that women be passive should have been dispelled when the Prophet Joseph Smith told women that they were responsible for their own salvation.”
“If the woman is to reach her highest potential in her
creative and nurturing role, how can she achieve it by being helpless and
dependent?"
“It is important for a
woman to learn in this life her eternal role so that when she is sealed she
will be prepared and ready—with all her heart—to function in and glorify that
role."
So what is it? what is that role?
Family a proclamation states: HUSBAND AND WIFE have a solemn responsibility to love and care for each other and for their children… Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children in love and righteousness, to provide for their physical and spiritual needs, and to teach them to love and serve one another, observe the commandments of God, and be law-abiding citizens wherever they live
That still was not enough for me. I wanted something beyond diapers to get me up in the morning and what about when my children are raised. What then? I then found these quotes
Despite the challenges and tests life
has to offer—from marriage or lack of marriage, children’s choices, poor
health, lack of opportunities, and many other problems—women remain remarkably
strong and immovable and true to the faith. Our sisters throughout the Church
consistently “succor the weak, lift up the hands which hang down, and
strengthen the feeble knees.” ... [The] work of salvation
includes member missionary work,
convert retention, activation of less-active members, temple and family history
work, … teaching the gospel,” and caring for the poor
and needy.
Through serving in the Relief Society, Young Women, and Primary
organizations—not to mention their private acts of love and service—women have
always played and will always play an important part in helping “bring forth
and establish the cause of Zion” (D&C 6:6).
They care for the poor and the sick; serve proselytizing, welfare,
humanitarian, and other missions; teach children, youth, and adults; and
contribute to the temporal and spiritual welfare of the Saints in many other
ways.
I admit I have a great desire to do work for the very less fortunate, Like orphanages and schools in third world countries. I want to help in a big way but within the church this often means gathering up a toothbrushes, wash cloths, and combs. I love to help those in need but how does that become satisfying for me. I don't think I could live for that, I still needed more. I needed a purpose to fill me up completely.
I then read this article: It answered my original thoughts but then other questions would pop in my mind. No sooner would I think it then the talk would actually state my exact concern word for word and answer it. I almost believe that this was written for me. (If you just want to see what touched me just read the parts I highlighted in red :))
Women of Righteousness
BY
ELDER M. RUSSELL BALLARD
Of the Quorum of
the Twelve Apostles
From a devotional address given at Brigham Young University on 13 March
2001.
More than ever we need women of faith, virtue, vision, and charity who can
hear and who will respond to the voice of the Lord.
My topic is
something that is very close to my heart. I have been married to Sister Ballard
for 50 years. The greatest day in my life was the day I met Barbara Bowen. My
greatest accomplishment was convincing her to marry me. It was a most important
day when we were married in the Salt Lake Temple. We are the parents of two
sons and five daughters. Perhaps being the father of our five daughters and now
the grandfather of 22 granddaughters makes me an expert on the subject of women.
As I have
considered the days that lie ahead, I believe this message is vital to both men
and women. So I invite the men to prayerfully consider these words: Your lives
are significantly influenced by the women who are your wives, your daughters,
and your associates with whom you are privileged to work and serve in the
Church.
Let me set the
stage by quoting from a letter sent to Church headquarters. This woman wrote:
“I have a
wonderful husband and children, whom I love deeply. I love the Lord and His
Church more than I can say. I know the Church is true! I realize I shouldn’t
feel discouraged about who I am. Yet I have been going through an identity
crisis most of my life. I have never dared utter these feelings out loud but
have hidden them behind the huge, confident smile I wear to church every week.
For years I have doubted if I had any value beyond my roles as a wife and
mother. I have feared that men are that they might have joy, but that women are
that they might be overlooked. I long to feel that I, as a woman, matter to the
Lord.”
I would like to
respond to the issue that underlies the concern of this faithful woman. Does
the Lord respect women? Do women matter to the Lord? The answer is yes—a
resounding yes!
The Value of Women
Elder James E.
Talmage (1862–1933) of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles stated that “the
world’s greatest champion of woman and womanhood is Jesus the Christ” (Jesus the Christ, 3rd edition
[1916], 475). I believe that. The first time the Lord acknowledged Himself to
be the Christ, it was to a Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well. He taught her about
living water and proclaimed, simply, “I … am he” (John 4:26).
And it was Martha to whom He proclaimed: “I am the resurrection,
and the life. … And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die” (John 11:25–26).
Then, during His
greatest agony as He hung on the cross, the Savior reached out to one
person—His mother—when in that terrible but glorious moment He asked John the
Beloved to care for her as though she were his own (see John 19:26–27).
Of this you may be
certain: The Lord especially loves righteous women—women who are not only
faithful but filled with faith, women who are optimistic and cheerful because they
know who they are and where they are going, women who are striving to live and
serve as women of God.
There are those
who suggest that males are favored of the Lord because they are ordained to
hold the priesthood. Anyone who believes this does not understand the great
plan of happiness. The premortal and mortal natures of men and women were
specified by God Himself, and it is simply not within His character to diminish
the roles and responsibilities of any of His children.
As President
Joseph Fielding Smith (1876–1972) explained, “The Lord offers to his daughters
every spiritual gift and blessing that can be obtained by his sons” (in
Conference Report, April 1970, 59). All of us, men and women alike, receive the
gift of the Holy Ghost
and are entitled to personal revelation. We may all take upon us the Lord’s
name, become sons and daughters of Christ, partake of the ordinances of the
temple from which we emerge endowed with power, receive the fulness of the
gospel, and achieve exaltation in the celestial kingdom. These spiritual
blessings are available to men and women alike, according to their faithfulness
and their effort to receive them.
The basic
doctrinal purpose for the Creation of the earth is to provide for God’s spirit
children the continuation of the process of exaltation and eternal life. God
said to Moses:
“And I, God,
created man in mine own image, in the image of mine Only Begotten created I
him; male and female created I them.
“And I, God,
blessed them, and said unto them: Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the
earth” (Moses 2:27–28).
The Church’s
proclamation on the family
confirms that God has not revoked or changed this commandment. The First
Presidency and the Twelve Apostles “solemnly proclaim that marriage between a
man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is central to the
Creator’s plan for the eternal destiny of His children” (“The Family: A
Proclamation to the World,” Liahona, October 1998, 24).
This doctrine sometimes
causes women to ask: “Is a woman’s value dependent exclusively upon her role as
a wife and mother?” The answer is simple and obvious: No. Although there is
nothing a woman can do that has more far-reaching, eternal impact than to rear
her children to walk in righteousness, motherhood and marital status are not
the only measures of a woman’s worth. Some women do not have the privilege of
marrying or rearing children in this life. Yet if they are worthy, these
blessings will come later. Men and women who do have the privilege of rearing
children will of course be held accountable for that priceless, eternal
stewardship. Although there is simply not a more significant contribution you
can make to society, to the Church, or to the eternal destiny of our Father’s
children than what you will do as a mother or father, motherhood and fatherhood
are not the only measures of goodness or of one’s acceptance before the Lord.
Every righteous man and woman has a significant role to play in the onward
march of the kingdom of God.
Concern about Satan’s Distortions
I have a deep and
abiding feeling about women and about the crucial difference they make in every
important setting—particularly in the family and in the Church. I have spoken
boldly about the role women must play in the council system of the Church (see
“Strength in Counsel,” Ensign, November 1993, 76–78). We cannot fulfill our
mission as a Church without the inspired insight and support of women.
For that reason I
am concerned about what I see happening with some of our young women. Satan
would have you dress, talk, and behave in unnatural and destructive ways in
your relationships with young men. The adversary is having great success
distorting attitudes about gender and roles and about families and individual
worth. He is the author of mass confusion about the value, the role, the
contribution, and the unique nature of women. Today’s popular culture, which is
preached by every form of media from movies to the Internet, celebrates the
sexy, sassy, socially aggressive woman. These distortions are seeping into the
thinking of some of our own women.
My deep desire is
to clarify how we in the presiding councils of the Church feel about the
sisters of this Church, how our Heavenly Father feels about His daughters, and
what He expects of them. My dear sisters, we believe in you. We believe in and
are counting on your goodness and your strength, your propensity for virtue and
valor, your kindness and courage, your strength and resilience. We believe in
your mission as women of God. We realize that you are the emotional (and
sometimes spiritual) glue that holds families and often ward families together.
We believe that the Church simply will not accomplish what it must without your
faith and faithfulness, your innate tendency to put the well-being of others
ahead of your own, and your spiritual strength and tenacity. And we believe
that God’s plan is for you to become queens and to receive the highest
blessings any woman can receive in time or eternity. On the other hand, Satan’s
plan is to get you so preoccupied with the world’s glitzy lies about women that
you completely miss what you have come here to do and to become. Remember,
Satan wants us to “be miserable like unto himself” (2 Ne. 2:27).
Never lose your precious identity by doing anything that would jeopardize the
promised eternal future your Heavenly Father has provided for you.
Young men, lest
you get too comfortable while I focus on the women, you have a significant role
in all of this. You are sometimes the reason our young women get distracted
from their eternal mission here. Let the women in your life know that you want
them to be women of God and not women of the world. The Lord expects you to
protect and safeguard His daughters. Great will be your remorse if you should
steal from any young woman her virtue and purity.
Women Are Vital to the Lord’s Work
My earnest plea
and prayer is that young men and women will understand that our sisters have
always been vital and integral to the work of the Lord. Faithful women have
labored valiantly in the cause of truth and righteousness from before the
foundations of this world. In his vision of the redemption of the dead,
President Joseph F. Smith (1838–1918) saw not only Father Adam and other
prophets but “our glorious Mother Eve, with many of her faithful daughters who
had lived through the ages and worshiped the true and living God” (D&C 138:39).
Think about the incomparable role of Eve, whose actions set in motion the great plan of our Father. And what about Mary, the “precious and chosen vessel” (Alma 7:10) who bore the Christ child? Surely no one would question the contributions made by these majestic women.
Our dispensation is not without its heroines. Countless women from every continent and walk of life have made dramatic contributions to the cause of Christ. Consider Lucy Mack Smith, the mother of the martyred prophets Joseph and Hyrum and the grandmother of President Joseph F. Smith. Her resilience and righteousness under the most emotionally and spiritually taxing conditions surely influenced her prophet sons and set them firmly on the path toward fulfilling their foreordained destiny.
At this point you may be thinking, “But what about me and my contribution? I’m not Eve or Mary or even Lucy Mack Smith. I’m just regular, plain old me. Is there something about my contribution that is significant to the Lord? Does He really need me?” Remember, the righteous who are not highly visible are valued too and, in the words of a Book of Mormon prophet, are “no less serviceable unto the people” (Alma 48:19).
President Spencer
W. Kimball (1895–1985) responded to that question this way: “Both a righteous
man and a righteous woman are a blessing to all those whom their lives touch.
“… In the world
before we came here, faithful women were given certain assignments while
faithful men were foreordained to certain priesthood tasks. While we do not now
remember the particulars, … we are accountable for those things which long ago
were expected of us” (My Beloved Sisters [1979], 37).
Every sister in
this Church who has made covenants with the Lord has a divine mandate to help
save souls, to lead the women of the world, to strengthen the homes of Zion,
and to build the kingdom of God. Sister Eliza R. Snow (1804–87), the second
general president of the Relief Society, said that “every sister in this church
should be a preacher of righteousness … because we have greater and higher
privileges than any other females upon the face of the earth” (“Great
Indignation Meeting,” Deseret Evening News, 15 January 1870, 2).
The Savior’s Example
I have been drawn
to an interchange between God the Father
and His eldest and Only Begotten Son, who is the ultimate example of living up
to one’s premortal promises. When God asked who would come to earth to prepare
a way for all mankind to be saved and strengthened and blessed, it was Jesus Christ who said, simply, “Here am I,
send me” (Abr. 3:27).
Just as the Savior
stepped forward to fulfill His divine responsibilities, we have the challenge
and responsibility to do likewise. If you are wondering if you make a
difference to the Lord, imagine the impact when you make commitments such as
the following:
“Father, if You
need a woman to rear children in righteousness, here am I, send me.”
“If You need a
woman who will shun vulgarity and dress modestly and speak with dignity and
show the world how joyous it is to keep the commandments, here am I, send me.”
“If You need a
woman who can resist the alluring temptations of the world by keeping her eyes
fixed on eternity, here am I, send me.”
“If You need a
woman of faithful steadiness, here am I, send me.”
Between now and
the day the Lord comes again, He needs women in every family, in every ward, in
every community, in every nation who will step forward in righteousness and say
by their words and their actions, “Here am I, send me.”
My question is,
“Will you be one of those women? And will you men who hold the priesthood
answer the same call?”
Now, I know most
of you want to. But how will you do it? How, in a world filled with deceptive
messages about women and the family—and the significance of both to the
Lord—will you constantly respond to the Lord, “Here am I, send me”?
For those who
really want to live up to who you are, for those who want to see through
Satan’s deceptions and who at all costs want to repent if necessary, I have two
suggestions: First, listen to and follow those whom we sustain as prophets,
seers, and revelators. Second, learn to hear the voice of the Spirit, or the
voice of the Lord as communicated by the power of the Holy Ghost.
Follow the Prophet and the Apostles
I cannot stress
enough the importance of listening to and following the prophet and the
apostles. In today’s world, where 24 hours a day television and radio
commentators spew forth conflicting opinions, where marketers compete for everything
from your money to your vote, there is one clear, unpolluted, unbiased voice
that you can always count on. And that is the voice of the living prophet and
the apostles. Their only motive is “the everlasting welfare of your souls” (2 Ne. 2:30).
Think of it! Think
about the value of having a source of information whom you can always count on,
who will always have your eternal interests at heart, and who will always
provide inspired truth. That is a phenomenal gift and guide.
In November 2000,
President Hinckley spoke to youth in a Churchwide fireside (see “A Prophet’s
Counsel and Prayer for Youth,” Liahona, April 2001, 30–41). Have you young
adults studied his message and identified things you need to avoid or do
differently? I know a 17-year-old who just prior to the prophet’s talk had
pierced her ears a second time.
She came home from
the fireside, took off the second set of earrings, and said to her parents, “If
President Hinckley says we should wear only one set of earrings, that’s good
enough for me.”
Wearing two pairs
of earrings may or may not have eternal consequences for this young woman, but
her willingness to obey the prophet will. And if she will obey him now, on
something relatively simple, how much easier it will be to follow him when
greater issues are at stake.
I make you a
promise. It is a simple one, but it is true. If you will listen to the living
prophet and the apostles and heed our counsel, you will not go astray.
Learn to Hear the Voice of the Spirit
If you want to
avoid the snares of Satan, if you need direction when the choices in front of
you are puzzling and perplexing, learn to hear the voice of the Lord as
communicated through the Holy Ghost. And then, of course, do what it tells you
to do.
Nephi taught
clearly that the Holy Ghost “is the gift of God unto all those who diligently
seek him” and that “he that diligently seeketh shall find” (1 Ne. 10:17, 19).
The stunning reality, my dear brothers and sisters, is that you control how
close you are to the Lord. You determine just how clear and readily available
promptings from the Holy Ghost will be. You determine this by your actions, by
your attitude, by the choices you make, by the things you watch and wear and
listen to and read, and by how consistently and sincerely you invite the Spirit
into your life.
Contemplate for a
moment the extent and the impact of this blessing! You have been given a gift
that when exercised and respected will give you the answers to all of the
confusing, difficult questions and problems you face in your lives.
I can only imagine
some of the questions you young women are facing right now. Should you marry
the young man you are now dating, or not? Should you finish your degree, or
not? Should you serve a mission, or not? What career should you pursue? Why
pursue a career with vigor when all you’ve ever really wanted is to be a
mother?
As life
progresses, how will you respond to challenges that will inevitably come? Will
you know where to turn for peace and consolation if you are called upon to bury
a child—as two of our own children have done—or if a child threatens to stray
from the gospel path? How will you know what to do when you face financial
reverses? Where will you turn for insight and inspiration when you are called
upon to lead in your ward or stake? You young men are facing similar kinds of
questions.
To all of you
there is only one way to safely and confidently meet the obstacles and
opportunities that are part of life’s path. First, listen to the prophet and
the apostles. Study the principles we teach. Then take those principles to the
Lord and ask Him how you should apply them in your life. Ask Him to influence
your thoughts, temper your actions, and guide your steps. “Counsel with the
Lord in all thy doings, and he will direct thee for good” (Alma 37:37).
He will communicate with you through the power and presence of the Holy Ghost.
Heed Spiritual Promptings
There are several
things that greatly enhance our ability to understand the promptings of the
Holy Ghost and thereby hear the voice of God.
First is fasting
and prayer. When the sons of
Mosiah were united with Alma the Younger, they rejoiced in their reunion and
acknowledged that because “they had given themselves to much prayer, and
fasting,” they had been gifted with the spirit of prophecy and revelation, “and
when they taught, they taught with power and authority of God” (Alma 17:3).
Second is
immersing yourself in the scriptures. The words of Christ “will tell you all things what ye should do” (2 Ne. 32:3).
The scriptures are a conduit for personal revelation. Young adults, your
generation is much more versed in holy writ than was mine at your age. You have
been taught to read and study the scriptures. I urge you to intensify your
study of them. I promise that your ability to hear the voice of the Lord as
communicated through the Holy Ghost will increase and improve.
Third is preparing
to spend time in the house of the Lord. When the time appropriately comes for us to go to the temple, we leave the
temple “armed with … power” (D&C 109:22)
and with the promise that as we “grow up” in our knowledge of the Lord, we will
“receive a fulness of the Holy Ghost” (D&C 109:15).
The temple is a place of personal revelation. If you are endowed, visit the
temple regularly. If you are not, prepare yourself to enter, for inside the
doors of the temple rests the power that will fortify you against the
vicissitudes of life.
Fourth is
listening to the counsel of your father and mother and your spouse. They are wise and experienced. Share with them
your fears and concerns. Seek blessings from your father. If for some reason he
is not worthy or able, go to your bishop or your stake president. They love you
and will count it a privilege to bless your life. If you have not already done
so, you should also receive your patriarchal blessing.
Fifth is obedience
and repentance. There are certain
things you simply cannot do if you want to have the Holy Ghost with you. It is
not possible to listen to vulgar lyrics, watch movies filled with sexual
innuendo, tamper with pornography
on the Internet (or anywhere else, for that matter), take the name of the Lord
in vain, wear revealing clothing, compromise in any way the law of chastity, or
disregard the values of true manhood and womanhood and expect the Holy Ghost to
remain with you. Anyone who participates in those kinds of activities should
not be surprised if feelings of loneliness, discouragement, and unworthiness
follow. Do not make the choice to live without the Spirit of the Lord to guide,
to protect, to prompt, to warn, and to fill you with peace. Repent if you need
to so you can enjoy the companionship of the Spirit.
Women and men who
can hear the voice of the Lord, and who respond to those promptings, become
invaluable instruments in His hands. I will never forget an experience I had
following a stake conference. I was asked to participate in a blessing for a
young woman who was suffering with cancer. The family were converts, and they
had found peace through the promptings of the Spirit. Prior to our giving the
blessing, this dear sister said to me: “Elder Ballard, I am not afraid to die,
but I would like to live here with my family. I am prepared to accept the will
of my Father in Heaven. Please bless me to find peace and to know that He will
be with me.” What faith, insight, and courage the Spirit had blessed her with!
A few months later the family advised me that Heavenly Father had called her
home. She died in peace, and the family lived in peace because they were
familiar with the Spirit. One of the sweetest messages the Spirit will relay is
how the Lord feels about you. And that reassurance will strengthen you in a way
that almost nothing else can.
Now, finally, I
turn again to you dear sisters, you who have such a profound, innate spiritual
ability to hear the voice of the Good Shepherd. You need never wonder again if
you have worth in the sight of the Lord and to the Brethren in the presiding
councils of the Church. We love you. We cherish you. We respect you. Never
doubt that your influence is absolutely vital to preserving the family and to
assisting with the growth and spiritual vitality of the Church. This Church
will not reach its foreordained destiny without you. We men simply cannot nurture
as you nurture. Most of us don’t have the sensitivity—spiritual and
otherwise—that by your eternal nature you inherently have. Your influence on
families and on children, youth, and men is singular. You are natural-born
nurturers. Because of these unusual gifts and talents, you are vital to taking
the gospel to all the world, to demonstrating that there is joy in living the
way the prophets have counseled us to live.
More than ever
before we need women of faith, virtue, vision, and charity, as the Relief
Society declaration proclaims (see Mary Ellen Smoot, “Rejoice, Daughters of
Zion,” Liahona, January 2000, 112). We need women who can hear and who will
respond to the voice of the Lord, women who at all costs will defend and
protect the family. We don’t need women who want to be like men, sound like
men, dress like men, drive like some men drive, or act like men. We do need
women who rejoice in their womanhood and have a spiritual confirmation of their
identity, their value, and their eternal destiny. Above all, we need women who
will stand up for truth and righteousness and decry evil at every turn and
simply say, “Lord, here am I, send me.”
I bear my witness
and testimony to you that you are precious, that this is The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints. The kingdom of God will roll forward until it
fills the entire earth. It is for you to be beacons and banners to the entire
world, to show the women and the men of the world that women have a natural
disposition to do good and to seek after things of the Spirit.
I simply say to
you, God bless the women of the Church."
The greatest thing I gained from this article was that mens roles are to run the church. They have callings that are great and influential and I have full respect for them and their calling. But God made us different. We are very in touch with our emotions this only serves to bring us closer to the spirit and allows us to feel what is wanted of us. We also have a nurturing spirit and care deeply about others emotions. I feel that for this reason God gave us a different call, neither greater nor lesser. He knew we would turn to him to ask what our purpose is. Where men know that their purpose is to fulfill their priesthood responsibilities and they seek his guidance in how to best do that. Women however must turn to the Lord and ask for him to guide them to what they are meant to do and then they fulfill it. It allows God to define women's roles individually.
I Don't know yet what is meant to be next for me but now I know where to go to find out.
And until I figure it out I have this quote
Though we often speak of the influence of women on future
generations, please do not underestimate the influence you can have today.
President David O. McKay (1873–1970) said that the principal reason the
Church was organized is “to make life sweet today, to give contentment to the
heart today, to bring salvation today. …“Some of us look forward to a time
in the future—salvation and exaltation in the world to come—but today is part
of eternity
Disclaimer: I copied many quotes from the church web site to a word doc mostly for my personal use so some, well most will not have an author. But you may find one on the church website if you need it.
1 comment:
You are AWESOME!!
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