I’m so glad I get the opportunity to speak this afternoon before I head out on my mission this week. I have been called to the Missouri Independence Mission and will be serving in the Independence Visitors’ Center. I am so so excited for my mission. It amazes me how Heavenly Father is in the details of all of our lives. Since getting my call, I have really come to know that that is true. After my freshman year in high school, I went on a church history trip with 50 other youth for three weeks back east. It was at those church history sites and visitors’ centers where I really got my testimony of the gospel and of Joseph Smith. It was there that I felt the spirit so strongly for the first time testifying to me that this gospel is true.
When I opened my call to find out I would get to serve in, what to me, is one of the most sacred spots, I was beyond thrilled. All of the church history sites have a special spirit about them. It is almost impossible to not feel at peace and want to smile when there, so yeah, I am incredibly stoked about going out to the midwest. I’m excited to learn so much more about church history and about the gospel and about our Savior, Jesus Christ.
My talk today is based off of the Seeing Others As They May Become conference talk given during Priesthood session in October of 2012. I want to take certain points from Thomas S. Monson’s talk and talk about how we all can apply them in our lives to be a better missionary, and more importantly a better disciple of Christ.
To start this out, I wanna share a short story that is in the talk. “During the 1940s and 1950s, an American prison warden, Clinton Duffy, was well known for his efforts to rehabilitate the men in his prison. Said one critic, “You should know that leopards don’t change their spots!”
Replied Warden Duffy, “You should know I don’t work with leopards. I work with men, and men change every day.”
That is so true. Change happens to us every single day. This past year up at college, a close friend of mine and I had drifted apart a little bit and when I confronted her and asked why she thought this had happened, she questioned me, “don’t you think you have changed?” I took a little offense to that, and said no! In my mind, I was the same person I have always been. I thought about that comment a lot and came to the realization that yes, I had changed. For one, I lived with five other young girls instead of my family, I was responsible for feeding myself (which I am still trying to get the hang of), and I was making a lot of decisions on my own but besides all those insignificant changes, I had changed into someone I was more proud of than before. My testimony had grown significantly, I relied on Christ more, and I strived to be happy every day. Change is good and it isn’t something we should be afraid of. The prophet Alma in the Book of Mormon said,
“Have ye spiritually been born of God? Have ye received His image in your countenances? Have ye experienced this mighty change in your heart?” (Alma 5:14).
Just as a small changes happen to each and every one of us daily, we are also all capable of having big changes in our lives.
This is where seeing others as they may become comes in. I want to focus on that phrase in missionary work first and then I’m going to talk about it in other areas. We need to be open to sharing the gospel with everyone, with our friends and our loved ones and those we care most about. We need to be willing to share the happiness that we have found in this gospel with others, even if, in our mind, “they don’t seem ready” or we get too afraid to bring it up. We are not able to tell when other people are ready to accept the gospel or not. Thomas S. Monson said,
“We should develop the capacity to see men not as they are but as they can become when they are members of the Church, when they have a testimony of the gospel, and when their lives are in harmony with its teachings.”
Another story that President Monson told in his conference talk was when N. Eldon Tanner asked a young missionary how he had so much success after completing his two year mission in Great Britain. The young missionary said that if he knocked on the door and saw a man smoking a cigar and dressed in old clothes and seemingly uninterested in anything—particularly religion—the missionary would picture in his own mind what that man would look like under a different set of circumstances. In his mind he would look at him as clean-shaven and wearing a white shirt and white trousers. And the missionary could see himself leading that man into the waters of baptism. He said, “When I look at someone that way, I have the capacity to bear my testimony to him in a way that can touch his heart.”
I had an experience these last couple weeks in which the Lord really showed me the importance of seeing others as they may become as I wasn’t exactly doing that. I was getting ready to go on a trip in which I would be taking several plane flights by myself. And we all always here about the “plane flight missionary experience” that seemingly everyone has. So, as I was getting ready to leave on my mission in a month, I figured it’d only be right to bring an extra book of mormon along with me and see what happens. I prayed about possibly being given the opportunity to share the gospel while I was out on my own on this trip. Although that was on my mind to prepare myself for my mission, what was on my mind even more as “mission prep” was just talking to people. In my mission prep class that I took last semester, I was told over and over that all we needed to do to be missionaries was open our mouth and get to know people and learn about their lives and in turn share a little bit about us. I’m typically the type of person who doesn’t talk to strangers that much in airports or other places just because it’s completely out of my comfort zone, kind of like giving this talk is. ha. But, I knew that I needed practice so I attempted this a few times on my trip, and. I just got on my final flight back to vegas, socially exhausted and kind of discouraged. This lady sat down next to me and was putting on her makeup for a good ten minutes and smelt like smoke, and in the back of my mind, I was totally thinking, well she isn’t going to want to hear about the gospel or want to talk to me or anything, so it’s a good thing i’m tired and i know how to sleep on planes. turns out, i was 100% wrong on what I thought of her. We started talking, I found out she was coming home from visiting family. She and her family of course happened to be from Missouri! I learned about her family and her struggles in life and also all the good food places in Missouri. I told her how I was leaving on a mission in a few weeks, and I how I just finished up a year of school at BYU. and so on. and wow.
The lord cares about every single one of his children brothers and sisters. Just as in Doctrine and Covenants states:
“Remember the worth of souls is great in the sight of God. …“And if it so be that you should labor all your days in crying repentance unto this people, and bring, save it be one soul unto me, how great shall be your joy with him in the kingdom of my Father”
He knows each and every one of us and knows exactly what we are going through and how we are feeling. Something that I learned on the Church History Tour that has stuck with me was hearing that difference between a sympathizer and an empathizer. I can have sympathy for others going through hard times and I can try to help them and try to understand what they are going through, but I can’t empathize with everyone because I have not personally gone through everything others have. Christ, however, has. He is the perfect empathizer. I love the scripture in John that says, “I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine.” Let us make sure that we come to know Christ and our Heavenly Father as much as we can in this life, He knows us so well wants all of His children to hear His full restored gospel in this lifetime. And if we earnestly pray about having missionary experiences in our everyday lives. we will have them. I was able to share the book of mormon I had been lugging around all week with this woman that I met on my flight back to vegas. i’m not sure what happened with her or how interested she really was but as she got up and left, she thanked me and told me how she switched her seat an hour before the flight and started to tear up a little and just said, i’m going through a really hard time right now, thank you for giving me this.
President Monson brings up one word after telling these many stories of missionaries and ward members seeing others as they may become. That word is courage.
He goes on,
“Courage is the word we need to hear and hold near our hearts. courage to turn our backs on temptation, courage to lift up our voices in testimony to all whom we meet, remembering that everyone must have an opportunity to hear the message. It is not an easy thing for most to do this. But we can come to believe in the words of Paul to Timothy: “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind." “Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord.”
I love President Monson’s testimony and I lean on it constantly. I am no longer afraid to share the message of Christ with others. A few years ago, my answer would have been the complete opposite. This makes me think of two valuable things. One, that we can change and two as we try to be better at seeing others as they may become, we can not forget to see ourselves as we may become. I’m going to go back to my experiences on the church history tour four years ago. After we left the Independence Visitors’ Center, I wrote in my journal about the sister missionaries there and their testimony and a few other thoughts that I had had and then wrote,
I am grateful for all I have been given, even my hardships and trials. It is absolutely amazing how the Lord works.
I can bear witness that this is true. I didn’t know half of the reasons to why I had the trials I had at that point in my life when I wrote that, but I knew some of the reasons. It’s incredible how the Lord continues to teach us and continues to show us what He wants us to be. Everybody has trials. It’s a necessary part of this life, but we need to try to look at all of our hardships and trials in a different perspective. Heavenly Father gives us all of our trials in order to build us up into the person He wants us to be. If we knew who we were supposed to be after this life or even in 30 years from now, in my opinion, I wouldn’t believe that I could become that person, but that’s who our Heavenly Father sees in us. When we sometimes feel like He is breaking down the small humble cottage we just finished becoming. He is really just making room for the palace that He knows we can become. This principle has been so eye opening to me these last couple years. I have been able to see all the things I have learned from the toughest times in my life and to see why I needed to go through those moments to be the person I am today. I am speechless and constantly in awe at how much our Savior loves and cares about me and about those around me. I have said this for the past couple years, but I love trials. Definitely not because I am strong enough to not let any trial and hardship bother me, but because I get to look forward to something better that the Lord is preparing me for. Sometimes, we don’t find out what that something is until years down the road, or perhaps not in this lifetime, but I know that the something better is there and it is so fun to see His plan for us unfold.
I want to close by testifying to you that Christ is involved in every detail of our lives. He loves us more than we know how to love. and He wants us to return to live with Him. In order to do that, and to be more prepared to be reunited with Him, we must draw closer to Him while we’re on this earth. I testify that Joseph Smith did restore the full gospel on this earth almost two hundred years ago. A gospel that had been prophesied of being restored since the prophets of Abraham and Moses. I testify that when we live in a way that is in accordance to Christ’s teachings, we can draw closer to Him and we can truly be happier than we have ever been before. I know that if we live in this manner, we will be so grateful in the future for the way we chose to live our life. I also know that the Atonement is the greatest gift the Lord has given to us on this Earth and that we can be forgiven of our mistakes so easily because of His grace. He is there for us. and He wants to do anything He can to help us while on this Earth so that we can return to live with Him. He is our best friend, our brother, and most importantly, our Savior.
I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
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