Rising
to the Occasion
By Susan Law Corpany
When I was 23, I took my first
trip to the islands of Hawaii, where I now live.
I was traveling with a group of young adults from
Salt Lake City, most of them female. We were on
Oahu on Sunday, so a group of about twenty of us,
all girls, decided to find a church meeting to attend.
We arrived a bit early for the
meetings at the Honolulu Tabernacle, so we took
some pictures and visited with a few people before
the services started. At the beginning of Sacrament
meeting, the bishop gave a special welcome to the
girls’ choir from Salt Lake City. He looked
in our direction.
We exchanged glances with each
other. Girls choir? Where did that come from? We
found it quite amusing, that is until the bishop
stood up to close the meeting and announced that
they would dispense with the closing hymn, because
it wasn’t often that they had a traveling
singing group visiting, and he invited our “girls’
choir” to come up and sing Love at Home.
We sat there, stunned, unsure
what to do, and then a couple of girls stood up
and went to the choir seats. The rest of us realized
we had better follow. Feeling somewhat self-conscious,
we assembled, we sang and we sat down. The bishop
thanked us and commented that we had a very strong
alto section.
Stretch or
Shine
Recently I was sitting in a
sacrament meeting and found myself without a hymn
book. I have been a member of the Church all my
life, and I know the words to most of the hymns,
but the opening hymn was not one of them.
Undaunted, I looked to the chorister,
one of the older young women in the ward. A good
chorister not only leads but enunciates the words
clearly so that you can lip read if you are lost
or short a hymn book. Sure enough, I was able very
quickly to see the words she was forming to this
unfamiliar hymn in 6/8 time. “One two three
four five six. One two three four five six.”
I believe that callings usually
come in one of two varieties — those that
allow us to shine because of capabilities we already
have, and those that give us the opportunity to
stretch and work new muscles and become strong in
an area of less expertise. Often those in the latter
category are the ones we are loath to accept.
“Are you sure you’ve
got the right person, Bishop?”
“Is this inspiration or
desperation?”
“I don’t have a
lot of patience with small children.”
“The Cub Scouts? I have
all girls. Why the Cub Scouts?”
“Gospel Doctrine class?
You know I’m not a gospel scholar.”
“The teenagers, Bishop?
At my age, the teenagers???”
Sometimes our reluctance to
accept callings is because we do not already have
the capabilities needed and fear that we will subject
our fellow ward members to our learning curve. We
may also secretly wish for a calling that showcases
talents we already have. Perhaps this young woman
accepting a call as chorister, even though she was
still learning about music, allowed another sister,
frequently called to conduct because of her musical
talent, to be a Young Women leader.
I try to look at callings that
don’t utilize my already-acquired talents
as a chance to stretch and grow in new ways. I don’t
necessarily look forward to those times of being
put on the racks for some spiritual stretching,
but in looking back I can always see the growth.
I Don’t
Fit the Mold.
When I was called a few years
ago to be Primary president, I did not feel up to
the job. I was new in the ward. Many of the children
had Hawaiian names that were difficult to pronounce
or remember, and I had a hard time telling them
apart. I had no frame of reference as to which family
they belonged.
Everyone knows that a good Primary
president knows the children. “You in the
blue shirt” wasn’t going to cut it.
I like children, but my comfort zone is teaching
Relief Society, which I consider the best calling
in the Church. You teach once a month. The teachees
stay in their chairs, have reasonable bladder control,
and attention spans that have been known to last
through an entire lesson.
I considered myself too perk-impaired
to be Primary president, but I accepted the calling.
I have a mental picture of the perfect Primary president.
She is young, animated, has the patience of a saint,
and is full of energy. I did not fit the mold.
One of the things I did as Primary
president, during the year that our theme focused
on temples, was create Temple Traveling Tigger.
I took a Tigger, dressed in angelic robes, complete
with angel wings and a trumpet, and we sent him
on a journey that started at the Kona Hawaii Temple.
I gave him to some friends of
mine who were here on vacation and they took him
their temple in Portland, Oregon, for some photos,
which they sent to me. Then they gave him to someone
else who was headed to a temple and ask them to
do the same. He had a laminated card stuck on his
back with directions.
The plan was to see how many
temples he could visit during that year. At the
end of year, the instructions were to send Tigger
back home. During that year we got pictures of Tigger
visiting temples from Seattle to Chicago. He made
a special visit to the Nauvoo Temple, as well. Sometimes
we just received pictures, but often there was a
letter that I was able to read to the children.
Looking back, though I might
not have done it the same as someone else would
have, I can see that I did a good job and brought
my own strengths to the calling. And by the time
I was released, I knew all the names of my children.
On the Right
Hand and the Left
We are not asked to face difficult
assignments on our own. When facing a calling as
the president of an organization, your weaknesses
can be compensated by the counselors the Lord helps
you pick.
When the bishop called me to
be Primary President, and asked me to pray and give
him the name of two counselors, I heard unmistakably
the still small voice saying “You have already
been shown who your counselors should be.”
Immediately I blurted out the names of two sisters,
neither of whom I knew well, immediately aware and
finally understanding the meaning behind the same
conversation I had had with each of them earlier
in the week. After each chance conversation I had
asked myself, “Why did I ask her that? I never
ask people if they are ready for a change in their
Church calling.”
The bishop was surprised by
my swiftness, but said that he had been ready to
suggest one of the names as a possible counselor.
However, he told me he wasn’t sure the other
sister was in a position to accept because of some
family challenges. I told him I felt strongly about
her and to ask just in case. Both accepted. Not
only were they a strength to me in running the Primary,
but we have been a strength to each other in facing
the difficulties of life.
None of us could have foreseen
the challenges that would beset each of us in different
ways as we struggled to teach the Lord’s children.
I am convinced that that calling came to me at that
time not so much for the skills I could bring to
the assignment but to provide me with the fellowship
of these two wonderful women with whom I served.
When I was called as a young
Relief Society president, I felt inadequate. I didn’t
want to be one of the ward icons, having people
say, “Well, I saw the Relief Society president
do this or say this.”
As I counseled with the bishop,
he told me that they had been praying for someone
creative who would bring new ideas to our Relief
Society. I sighed. “If you prayed for creative,
you’ve got the right person, but you might
be sorry that’s what you asked for.”
I figured that if the bishop could ask for creative,
and he got me, I could ask for the qualities I needed
in counselors, so I asked God to send me two organized
counselors. (At other times, perhaps I have been
the creative counselor or teacher prayed for by
the organized president.)
As a result, my two counselors
were an office manager and a sister who taught organizational
classes. We had all bases covered.
As we first met together, we
contemplated the names of sisters to call as secretary.
I said, “Let’s look over the ward list
and see which name jumps out.” I don’t
think I ever told Lucille that she was called as
our secretary because hers was the only name on
our Relief Society roster that was printed in boldface.
What can I say? Her name “jumped out.”
We bless the lives of our leaders
when we accept callings willingly and serve in them
diligently. We bless those we serve and serve with
when we do the best we can in the assignments we
are given.
Often some of our strongest
friendships grow out of serving opportunities. What
a shame it would be if we had turned down a calling
and missed those wonderful associations. We also
bless our own lives and that of our families by
developing in new ways.
When we visit Honolulu and drive
by the Tabernacle, I always remember that impromptu
performance of more than half a lifetime ago and
remember the lesson learned about rising to the
occasion when it is needful. You never know but
what you might discover that you have a wonderful
alto section.