Lesson 41
“Every Member a Missionary”
D&C 1:4-5, 30; 65; 109:72-74; 123:12
By
Breck England
The Doctrine and Covenants is an invitation to all people
everywhere to come unto Christ. In the revelations of this book
“one hears the tender but firm voice of the Lord Jesus Christ,”
inviting all to come unto Him “preparatory to his second coming.”
The
purpose of missionary work is to bring souls to Jesus Christ.
One
of the worrisome things about much of what is called missionary
work in the Church is our lack of determination to do this. I’m
not talking about the organized missionary effort, unprecedented
in all the dispensations in its scope and success. I’m referring
instead to the work we should all be doing every day—for we are
all “on a mission” in this world by virtue of being baptized.
Every soul who takes the name of Christ is clearly under the obligation
to share the gospel. The Lord has said, “The voice of warning
shall be unto all people, by the mouths of my disciples, whom
I have chosen in these last days.” “It becometh every man who
has been warned to warn his neighbor.” Every disciple of Christ
has this obligation. What we often forget, however, is the second
half of the Lord’s exhortation: “And they shall
go forth and none shall stay them, for I the
Lord have commanded them.”
Too
often we allow ourselves to be “stayed” instead of “going forth”
to do the work of bringing souls to Christ. We are fatally distracted
from our missionary responsibility by our fears and by the cares
of the world. We are lax in our study of the Gospel and in the
cultivation of our own testimonies. We think ourselves weak and
powerless. We fail to exercise the great power that the Lord gives
to those who follow his commandments: the power to bring our brothers
and sisters out of darkness and into his marvelous light and warm
embrace.
“And
also those to whom these commandments [are] given, might have
power to lay the foundation of this church, and to bring it forth
out of obscurity and out of darkness.”
When
we tell people that they have a Savior who loves them, the Spirit
invests that testimony with power. When they hear that the Prophet
Joseph was sent by God to bring them this message, they feel the
force of that witness. When they can tell that we in our turn
love them, what a powerful influence it has on them.
Too
often we fail to send this message and end up sending the wrong
message instead. We argue about doctrines. We mistake some political
position for the Gospel message. Or we fail to send any particular
message at all. I think of home teaching visits where no testimony
is borne. I think of Sunday School lessons where the Gospel of
the Son of God is not taught. I think of so-called “motivational”
talks in meetings that preach this or that virtue but give little
attention to the name of Jesus Christ other than to invoke it
at the end.
As
disciples of Christ we are on a singular mission that requires
our best efforts—to bring ourselves and our brothers and sisters
back to Him. This is the broad and true meaning of the term “missionary
work.” Too often we narrow the definition of “missionary work”
to the great efforts of the full-time elders and sisters. But
we are all engaged in the same work, whether in our homes or our
Church callings or our communities.
That
work consists of helping others to prepare to meet the Lord and
to be “encircled eternally in the arms of his love.”
“Hearken,
and lo, a voice as of one sent down from on high . . . Prepare
ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.
. . . Yea, a voice crying—Prepare ye the way of the Lord, prepare
ye the supper of the Lamb, make ready for the Bridegroom.” These
commandments are the very essence of missionary work. We are to
“prepare the way” by helping others to come to the “supper of
the Lamb,” or the sacrament table. How do we do this? By “making
the paths straight.” We cannot go at this work in a roundabout
fashion. What people need is the straightforward teaching of the
plain Gospel of Christ and the straightforward testimony of the
love of our Savior.
How
do we ensure that the Lord guides our efforts? He makes clear
that if we pray seriously for it, for the softening of the hearts
of the world, that guidance will come and the kingdom will move
forward. “Call upon the Lord, that his kingdom may go forth upon
the earth, that the inhabitants thereof may receive it, and be
prepared for the days to come, in the which the Son of Man shall
come
down in heaven, clothed in the brightness of his glory,
to meet the kingdom of God which is set up on the earth.”
Additionally,
the members of the Church must make sure that they keep the commandments
faithfully so that they will have the power to bring others to
Christ, “That thy church
may come forth out of the wilderness of darkness, and shine forth
fair as the moon,
clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners.” This
beautiful verse might be paraphrased this way: that the children
of God might be brought out of the darkness of this telestial
world, the Church members must qualify themselves to do so. They
must “shine forth fair as the moon”—as pure and white as the moonlight—“clear
as the sun”—as pure and purifying as the heat of the sun—and “terrible
as an army with banners,” meaning as awe-inspiring as a great,
united army marching under the flag of a unifying message. To
succeed in our mission, we need to be pure and at one with the
Lord and with each other. Only if we fulfill these conditions
can we exercise the “powers of heaven.”
If
we do so, we can have the confidence of a true disciple of Christ.
We can have confidence that He will grant us the power we need
to do His work. “For there are many yet on the earth among all
sects, parties, and denominations, who are blinded
by the subtle craftiness of men, whereby they lie in wait
to deceive,
and who are only kept from the truth because they know
not where to find it.” Our task is to show them where to find the truth.
The
day will come the Lord will unveil the heavens and invite each of his disciples to come forward—one
by one—and greet and embrace Him. On that day, we will want to
be surrounded by as many as possible of our brothers and sisters,
surrounded by those we have influenced in some way to come unto
Him—our children, our family members, our ward or branch members,
our friends, our neighbors—as many as we have touched with the
power of our testimonies. If we do so, He will take us into his
loving embrace and whisper to us, “Well done, thou good and faithful
servant.”
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