Leadership for Saints: Part 57
The Price of the Gift
by Rodger Dean Duncan and Ed J. Pinegar
What can we do to increase
our susceptibility to the ministrations of the Holy Ghost?
The steps are clear.
First, we must be humble and obedient, living the Lord’s gospel
on the Lord’s terms. “Selective” obedience is a cop-out.
“Partial” commitment is really no commitment at all.
The Lord doesn’t expect
us to be perfect, yet.
But he does expect us to be making definite
and deliberate progress toward perfection.
Obedience is the result
of faith and love. “Line upon line, precept upon precept”
can be roughly translated to read: “Yard by yard it’s
hard, but inch by inch it’s a cinch.” To make it so, our
hearts must undergo the “mighty change” discussed in the
fifth chapter of Alma. Our loving Father shows us the
way.
Second, we must study the scriptures.
How can we obey
the law if we don’t know the law? Gospel scholarship
cannot be acquired through osmosis or by proxy. We can’t
be saved through someone else’s understanding of the scriptures.
The plan of salvation is not a piggyback proposition.
It’s a personal, individual opportunity. We must
read and study and internalize the richness of the scriptures
for ourselves. That includes the standard works and the
words of the living prophets.
Third, we must pray.
The most repeated command
that we’ve received from our Father is to pray. Prayer
is the principal means by which the Spirit is obtained
and felt. The scriptures admonish us to “pray unto the
Father will all the energy of heart.”16
You’ve likely found that
the most productive prayers are personal, private prayers—when
you’re not fashioning words for the ears of any mortal
person.
And it’s clear that productive
prayers—especially those in which we are asking for specific
guidance—require preparation. “Behold, you have not understood,”
we are taught in D&C 9:7–8, “You have supposed that
I would give it unto you, when you took no thought save
it was to ask me. But, behold, I say unto you, that you
must study it out in your mind; then you must ask me if
it be right.”
A fourth step that will make us more susceptible to the influence
of the Holy Ghost is clearing the static from our spiritual
airwaves. Static comes from interference. Interference
is all around us. Certain kinds of literature, television
programming and movies can clog our minds with debris
unworthy of a child of God.
If we’re honest with ourselves, most of us can
identify these. Simply follow the counsel in the Doctrine
& Covenants: “.
. . that which doth not edify is not of God, and is darkness”
(See D&C 50:23).
Interference can come from
music. Many of us enjoy a wide range of musical fare,
and different kinds of music can be appropriate for different
circumstances. The kind of music that might be just right
when you’re doing aerobic exercise is terribly out of
sync with invitations to the Spirit.
The kind of music that
helps prepare us for inspiration is soothing music. Music that promotes quiet introspection. For
many of us, the kind of music often sung by our Young
Women is a perfect spiritual conditioner.
Interference can come from
poor health.
When we talk about the
Word of Wisdom, we often confine our meaning to the abstinence
from substances known to harm us. But how many of us who
wouldn’t dream of drinking a cup of coffee has allowed
our bodies—the tabernacles of our spirits—to get woefully
out of shape? From personal experience, we know that when
we’re in good physical condition we think more clearly,
we listen more carefully, we learn more surely.
To quote President Boyd
K. Packer, “As valuable as the Word of Wisdom is as a
law of health, it may be much more valuable . . . spiritually
than it is physically.”
Quotes Worth Remembering
… we must be worthy of the companionship
of the Holy Ghost to aid us in the work of righteousness
all the day long, to enable us to sacrifice our own will
to the will of the Father … – Lorenzo Snow
The mechanism of the spirit is so delicate
that even our thought may interfere with good reception
and unguarded actions may create such static as to make
reception impossible. – Hugh B. Brown
Note:
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