

“Zion
cannot be built up unless it is by the principles of the law
of the celestial kingdom” [i]
Living the law of consecration
moves us from gospel hobbyists to career disciples. It is a
mark of true followers. President Benson taught us about this
law.
We covenant to
live the law of consecration. This law is that we consecrate
our time, talents, strength, property, and money for the upbuilding
of the kingdom of God on this earth and the establishment of
Zion.
Until one abides by the laws
of obedience, sacrifice, the gospel, and chastity, he cannot
abide the law of consecration, which is the law pertaining
to the celestial kingdom. "Zion cannot be built up unless
it is by the principles of the law of the celestial kingdom"
(D&C 105:5). The law of consecration is a celestial law,
not an economic experiment. (1988, p.121)
The law of consecration is foreign
to the natural man. To such it appears as a way for the Church
to get rich and exercise control over us.
Those who know God and have experimented
with His ways know otherwise. They know that the more they turn
their lives over to God, the better their lives become. The
ultimate joy is to surrender completely to God. We turn everything
over to Him and life gets inexpressibly good.
Consecration is
the only surrender which is also a victory. It brings release
from the raucous, overpopulated cell block of selfishness and
emancipation from the dark prison of pride (Maxwell, 1997, p.
62)
Various metaphors might be used
for consecration. Only the vines that are connected to the roots
will bear fruit. Only that part of the car which is driven into
the carwash can be cleaned. Only those train cars that are hooked
to the engine can be pulled up the mountain.
Only that which we bring to the
altar can be sanctified and perfected.
To offer everything to God requires
great faith.
For a man to lay
down his all, his character and reputation, his honor and applause,
his good name among men, his houses, his lands, his brothers
and sisters, his wife and children, and even his own life also
— counting all things but filth and dross for the excellency
of the knowledge of Jesus Christ — requires more than mere belief
or supposition that he is doing the will of God; but actual
knowledge, realizing that, when these sufferings are ended he
will enter into eternal rest, and be a partaker of the glory
of God…. A religion that does not require the sacrifice of
all things never has power sufficient to produce the faith necessary
unto life and salvation; for, from the first existence of
man, the faith necessary unto the enjoyment of life and salvation
never could be obtained without the sacrifice of all earthly
things. It was through this sacrifice, and this only, that God
has ordained that men should enjoy eternal life. (Lectures
on Faith, p. 58, emphasis added.)
While many of us tentatively experiment
with trusting God, He waits patiently. He will answer every
experiment with the same result: Love, joy and peace are the
fruits of trusting Him.
An Ancient Model of Consecration
As a young man, Abraham was deeply
troubled when his fathers “turned from their righteousness,
and from the holy commandments which the Lord their God had
given unto them, unto the worshiping of the gods of the heathen
[and] utterly refused to hearken to my voice; For their hearts
were set to do evil" (Abraham 1:5-6). The people were so
totally devoid of light that they turned to sacrificing their
own children. They sacrificed virgins and even attempted to
slay Abraham. Over the years Abraham grew in faith and heavenly
power.
Abraham was 100 years old when
he and Sarah had the yearned-for son, Isaac. How they must have
cherished their boy! How they must have rejoiced that their
lives had been crowned with Isaac’s miraculous birth!
According to tradition, Isaac was
30 years old when Abraham received the commandment to sacrifice
his son. Imagine the soul-stretching pain of being asked to
participate in a ritual he loathed and to lose his cherished
son!
The story is both poignant and
instructive. There are rich details in the Book of Jasher (chapter
XXIII, emphasis added) account that may or may not be fully
doctrinal but are fully instructive.
1 At that time the word of the
Lord came to Abraham, and he said unto him, Abraham, and he
said, Here I am [words that are wonderfully akin to those
uttered by Jehovah in answer to His call to rescue the human
race!].
2 And he said to him, Take now
thy son, thine only son whom thou lovest, even Isaac, and
go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there for a burnt
offering upon one of the mountains which shall be shown to
thee, for there wilt thou see a cloud and the glory of the
Lord.
20 And Abraham went with Isaac
his son to bring him up as an offering before the Lord, as
He had commanded him.
25 And whilst Abraham was proceeding
with his son Isaac along the road, Satan came and appeared
to Abraham in the figure of a very aged man, humble and of
contrite spirit, and he approached Abraham and said to him,
Art thou silly or brutish, that thou goest to do this thing
this day to thine only son? [There are always those who will
call our offerings silly, pointless, and unnecessary!]
38 And Abraham rebuked him and
said unto him, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan, begone from
us for we go by the commands of God.
39 And Satan was terrified at
the voice of Abraham, and he went away from them, and the
place again became dry land as it was at first.
40 And Abraham went with Isaac
toward the place that God had told him.
49 And Abraham took wood for
a burnt offering and placed it upon his son Isaac, and he
took the fire and the knife, and they both went to that place.
50 And when they
were going along Isaac said to his father, Behold, I see here
the fire and wood, and where then is the lamb that is to be
the burnt offering before the Lord?
51 And Abraham answered his son
Isaac, saying, The Lord has made choice of thee my son, to
be a perfect burnt offering instead of the lamb.
Can we imagine Isaac’s shock!
“God wants you to be the burnt offering.” How would you react?
Many of us would suspect our fathers of being unhinged. But
Isaac responded with magnificent grace. Even when his father
probed his resolve, he was unflinching.
52 And Isaac said unto his father,
I will do all that the Lord spoke to thee with joy and
cheerfulness of heart.
53 And Abraham again said unto
Isaac his son, Is there in thy heart any thought or counsel
concerning this, which is not proper? tell me my son, I pray
thee, O my son conceal it not from me.
54 And Isaac answered his father
Abraham and said unto him, O my father, as the Lord liveth
and as thy soul liveth, there is nothing in my heart to cause
me to deviate either to the right or to the left from the
word that he has spoken to thee.
55 Neither limb nor muscle has
moved or stirred at this, nor is there in my heart any thought
or evil counsel concerning this.
56 But I am
of joyful and cheerful heart in this matter, and I say, Blessed
is the Lord who has this day chosen me to be a burnt offering
before Him.
Together they built the altar through
tears. Then Isaac showed the depth of his humility and resolve
with his request of his father.
61 And Isaac said
to his father, Bind me securely and then place me upon the
altar lest I should turn and move, and break loose from the
force of the knife upon my flesh and thereof profane the burnt
offering; and Abraham did so.
Then Isaac asked his father to
look after Sarah, his mother.
63 And Abraham
heard the words of Isaac, and he lifted up his voice and wept
when Isaac spake these words; and Abraham's tears gushed down
upon Isaac his son, and Isaac wept bitterly, and he said to
his father, Hasten thou, O my father, and do with me the will
of the Lord our God as He has commanded thee.
The spirit of total submission
is shown in the battle between their hearts and their eyes.
64 And the hearts of Abraham
and Isaac rejoiced at this thing which the Lord had commanded
them; but the eye wept bitterly whilst the heart rejoiced.
65 And Abraham
bound his son Isaac, and placed him on the altar upon the wood,
and Isaac stretched forth his neck upon the altar before his
father, and Abraham stretched forth his hand to take the knife
to slay his son as a burnt offering before the Lord.
69 At that time the Lord appeared
unto Abraham, and called to him, from heaven, and said unto
him, Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do thou any
thing unto him, for now I know that thou fearest God in performing
this act, and in not withholding thy son, thine only son,
from me.
70 And Abraham lifted up his
eyes and saw, and behold, a ram was caught in a thicket
by his horns; that was the ram which the Lord God had created
in the earth in the day that he made earth and heaven.
71 For the Lord
had prepared this ram from that day, to be a burnt offering
instead of Isaac.
The Call to Consecration in
Marriage
Marriage provides glorious opportunities
to practice consecration. Just as Isaac was willing to give
his life as the ultimate expression of commitment to God, so
we are invited to dedicate our lives, our talents, our weekends,
and our weaknesses to the sacred enterprise of sanctifying our
marriages and ultimately perfecting our souls.
In the day-to-day struggles of
marriage we may fail to see that this ultimate sacrifice qualifies
us for the ultimate reward. We shall “inherit thrones, kingdoms,
principalities, and powers, dominions, all heights and depths”
― all that the Father hath! (See D&C 132:19).
This total willingness to sacrifice
must not be misunderstood. This is not the same as becoming
a gelatinous blob with no form or purpose. This ultimate sacrifice
is combined with obedience and informed by the gospel of Jesus
Christ to provide an appropriate sacrifice. As God would have
it, our whole-souled offerings are likely to bless our partners
even as they refine us.
Most of our sacrifices take a startlingly
pedestrian form. I have never yet been called on to stand in
traffic at risk of life and limb in order to protect Nancy.
But I have been called on to make a thousand sacrifices that
felt earthshaking.
For example, I like to squeeze
the toothpaste very systematically from the bottom of the tube,
making sure that every particle is methodically herded toward
the nozzle and filling the measure of its creation. After emptying
any part of the tube, I fold it so that none of the toothpaste
can retreat and hide. I can easily justify my system as tidy
and frugal. When Nancy grabs the tube in the middle and thoughtlessly
squeezes, a shudder runs through my soul. She seems like a good
person. How could she act in such a reckless way?
Just as that Book of Mormon king
was willing to give away all his sins to know God (Alma 22:18),
I must be willing to give away all my petty preferences in order
to know the godliness in Nancy’s soul. I don’t lecture her or
condescend to her. I may explain my method, but when it is clear
that she is not going to be a conscientious paste-herder, I
simply buy a clip to clamp on my tidy folds.
Of course this applies to toothpaste,
dirty socks, and messy kitchen counters ― and much more!
Maybe nothing in the universe would hurt us more than knowing
that our partners had flirted with another person. Perhaps the
deepest pain we could experience in mortality was finding that
our partners had been unfaithful. Perhaps name-calling and insults
would injure us seemingly beyond repair. Maybe having a partner
who no longer seems to appreciate us might wound us such that
we think the relationship is doomed.
At that critical juncture ―
and all others ― consecration invites us to hold nothing
back but put everything we have on the altar. We are willing
to minister to a mixed-up spouse. We are willing to love a failing
partner. We bless those who belittle us. We pray for those who
have despitefully used us. [ii]
Consecration has everything to
do with marriage. It is much more than “staying together for
the kids.” It is acting to redeem our partners and our covenants
with everything we have and everything we may draw from
Heaven. We do all of this in order to establish Zion in our
homes.
It took decades for me to realize
the significance of the covenant I made with God and Nancy.
On that January day more than 30 years ago, I promised God that
I would always look for the good in Nancy. I promised that my
attitude would always be redemptive ― that no sacrifice
would be too great. I promised God that I would be His partner
in protecting, blessing, comforting, and saving Nancy’s precious
soul. After all, there is none of God’s work I will ever do
that will be more important than blessing my covenant partner.
I wish I had realized all that
I was promising as part of my covenants on that blessed day.
Maybe I would have been a better ― a more consecrated
― partner all along the way.
Following Christ’s Example
Recently
a good man wrote to me with a great insight:
I
have realized that much of my unhappiness in marriage is due
to my expectation of love to be shown in a certain way and my
withholding love when not feeling loved myself. I have also
realized that although I rarely overtly expressed myself, my
thoughts and feelings towards my wife have sometimes been overly
judgmental and critical. [iii]
This
kind and earnest man demonstrates yet again that the natural
spouse is an enemy to marriage. We enter marriage expecting
our needs to be met. We even decide how they should be met.
Then, when our partners are unable to meet all of our needs,
we become resentful. Our distance and resentment are communicated
in subtle — or direct — ways. But the message is clear: “You
are not a very good spouse. You are a disappointment. Until
you make some major changes, I cannot really love and appreciate
you.”
It is common for discontented partners
to lament, “I just can’t tolerate the loneliness [conflict,
pain, etc.] in this marriage. I must get out in order to thrive.”
I think that is how Jesus felt
in the Garden of Gethsemane. “Is there any way out? I don’t
think I can bear it!” Yet He did bear it. And in bearing it,
He saved us. Had He not honored His covenant over His peace
and comfort, all of us would be everlastingly lost.
The same is true in mortal marriage.
No partner on the face of the earth can meet all our needs.
In mortality, we will live with disappointment. We can dwell
on our discontent or we can celebrate the points of connection.
Kent Brooks of the BYU faculty of Church History and Doctrine
observed:
Our capacity to
love a spouse deeply and our ability to experience great joy
in marriage are commensurate with the degree to which we are
willing to suffer and hurt, to labor and toil, and to persevere
through moments of unhappiness, stress, disappointment, and
tests of our patience and love for our partners. (Brooks, 2004,
p. 104)
And here is another irony. Those
who will bear whatever is necessary in order to honor their
covenants will be made glorious. They will enjoy eternal joy.
They are, after all, those who have honored eternal things above
temporal things.
This truth is portrayed powerfully
in James Farrell’s book, The Peacegiver. Farrell shows
that most of our discontents are caused by our shriveled, narrow
views of our partners. When we have the mind of Christ, there
is no one we cannot fully love nor gladly serve. [I recommend
the book
or CD
to all saints!]
We can follow Christ’s example
and act to serve and redeem our partners, or we can crab and
complain that we have not gotten what we deserve.
Giving Gladly and Wholeheartedly
There is a popular trend toward
encouraging equity in marriage. The emphasis is on sharing household
duties in fair ways. There is a lot of merit in having men contribute
more to the many household tasks that make a house run smoothly.
In most cases women are badly overloaded and men are under-involved
at home. Remedying the imbalance is worthy.
The problem with equity is in the
inevitable scorekeeping that accompanies efforts toward it.
Seeking equity encourages people to think about and value their
own contributions. At the same time, humans almost always under-notice
and under-appreciate the efforts of others. Anything that encourages
this natural man tendency is destructive.
There is a better way. We can gladly
offer our best efforts. We appreciate all that our partners
offer. When we have unmet needs, we humbly invite: “I could
sure use a hand with putting the kids to bed tonight. Is this
something you could help me with?” We give gladly and we receive
graciously.
So the gifts of
God are to be received in the same unstinting and joyful spirit
in which they are given ― freely, magnanimously, never
counting the cost. (That was Brigham Young's motto: When
the work of the Lord is to be done, never count the cost.) (Collected
Works of Hugh Nibley, Vol.9, Ch.5, p.146, emphasis added)
Rather than carefully tracking
every investment in our marriage, we give gladly and wholeheartedly.
We give everything we have and are. And we ask God to increase
our capacity so we can give yet more.
John Gottman’s research on marriage
shows that partners who exchange equal numbers of positives
and negatives are not those who are happily married. Though
it may sound like a 50-50 relationship, they are at high risk
of divorce. In contrast, the best indicator that a relationship
would be loving and enduring was five positives for each negative!
Rather than act as a careful investor, happy marriage partners
throw open the doors of the storehouse and give kindness, help,
and goodness.
Our Whole Souls as an Offering
Brigham Young described the way
some of the saints lived the law of consecration. Each of us
might consider if our offerings in marriage are of the same
broken-down quality as the pioneer offerings he described.
Some were disposed
to do right with their surplus property, and once in a while
you would find a man who had a cow which he considered surplus,
but generally she was of the class that would kick a person's
hat off, or eyes out, or the wolves had eaten off her teats.
You would once in a while find a man who had a horse that he
considered surplus, but at the same time he had the ringbone,
was broken-winded, spavined in both legs, had the pole evil
at one end of the neck and a fistula at the other, and both
knees sprung. (Journal of Discourses, Vol.2, p.307)
Do we bring our greatest generosity
and richest forgiving to our marriages? Do we offer our whole
souls and our best efforts
as an offering (See Omni 1:26)? Or do our partnerships get half-hearted,
occasional, and wobbly efforts? Our marriages are ideal places
to practice the law of consecration.
The Consecration in Commitment
Consecration has dimensions of
both depth and length. We offer our whole souls — depth. We
also continue to serve and love patiently over time — length.
God has always recommended enduring to the end.
While some may argue that they
do not care to be sealed eternally to the spiritual pygmies
who are their partners, those who understand the things of God
know that their imperfect partners will one day be made glorious.
One day we may feel honored to have known the people we now
disdain.
Even science shows the blessing
of persistence. Research found that 86 percent of those who
reported being unhappy in their marriages, but who did not divorce,
five years later described their marriage as either “very happy”
or “quite happy” (See Brooks, 2004, p. 104).
The Blessings of Consecration
I suspect that God designed consecration
to move us from peevish, self-serving humanness to sweet, redemptive
godliness. I remember when I was the junior companion to my
grandfather on our assigned home teaching route. Grandpa Percy
had been a prominent man in the community and the Church. He
had served as bishop or stake president for more than 30 years.
But, by the time we were home teaching companions, I thought
of him as merely an old man.
I remember home teaching visits
to the Ramseyer family. It seemed to my 16-year-old soul that
Grandpa told the same tired, old stories every time we went
visiting. It was predictable and uninteresting to my teen sensibilities.
My mind wandered off to things of greater interest to me.
Grandpa died the summer after I
graduated from high school. Now, decades later, I yearn to know
more about Grandpa’s life. I have collected his papers and photos
and I have studied them. I cannot say how much I would pay to
hear those “tired, old stories” just one more time. I yearn
to hear the jokes, the inflection,
the laughter, the tenderness. I would love to record them, transcribe
them, memorize them.
But they are gone.
Appreciating the “Everyday”
in Marriage
This is much like mundane marriage.
It may seem tedious and trivial. Our minds ― and our hearts
― wander. But those who consecrate themselves to their
marriage by bringing their whole souls as an offering to the
everyday events of a relationship are building a storehouse
of sweet memories. They are building an eternal relationship
one brick at a time.
The Lord is speaking to each of
us when He says:
Verily, verily, I say unto you,
ye are little children, and ye have not as yet understood
how great blessings the Father hath in his own hands and prepared
for you;
And ye cannot bear all things
now; nevertheless, be of good cheer, for I will lead you along.
The kingdom is yours and the blessings thereof are yours,
and the riches of eternity are yours.
And he who
receiveth all things with thankfulness shall be made glorious;
and the things of this earth shall be added unto him, even an
hundred fold, yea, more. (D&C78: 17-19)
Consecration is a covenant that
moves us from asking how we can get our needs met to asking
how we can bless and serve. We become more grateful. Rather
than wondering if this marriage is a good investment [iv] we
ask for heavenly grace that we may love and serve as Jesus served.
As Michael Novak observed, dedication
to marriage not only blesses our partners but enlarges our souls:
Marriage is an
assault upon the lonely, atomic ego. Marriage is a threat to
the solitary individual. Marriage does impose grueling, humbling,
baffling, and frustrating responsibilities. Yet, marriage is
not the enemy of moral development in adults. Quite the opposite.
Being married and having children has impressed on my mind certain
lessons, for whose learning I cannot help being grateful. My
bonds to [my family] are, I know, my liberation. They force
me to be a different sort of human being, in a way in which
I want and need to be forced. (Michael Novak in Harper’s
Magazine, April 1976)
President Hinckley said it directly
and elegantly: “I am satisfied that a happy marriage is not
so much a matter of romance as it is an anxious concern for
the comfort and well-being of one’s companion” (Hinckley, 1991,
p. 73)
Consecration in marriage is not
simply about receiving our entrance card to the Celestial Kingdom.
It’s also about becoming qualified for the life
we will presumably be living there, which requires a transformation
of character. In serving and giving to those within our family
stewardship as well as demonstrating patience and continually
forgiving our spouses for all the ways they might not meet our
expectations, we have the opportunity to emulate Christ, thus
transforming ourselves.
We witness one of the many gospel
ironies. Those who relentlessly demand something better ―
more attentive partners and better family life ― will
be disappointed. Those who give up everything — their time,
talents, and expectations in service of their families — are
the ones who get Everything— Eternal Life and Glory.
When we see our challenges within
marriage as customized invitations to greater goodness,
we will rejoice in His perfect purposes. When we understand
our marriages to be the best opportunity we will ever have to
show our generosity of spirit, we will be ready to be the kind
of partners God would have us be. When we recognize consecration
as the training that prepares us for Heaven, we will finally
know this:
Consecration
is a blessing.
Applications:
Are you willing to exercise full-fledged
faith in God — faith that He led you to this relationship and
will bless and refine you in it? Will you, with Isaac, “do all
that the Lord spoke to thee with joy and cheerfulness of heart”?
Before we married, most of us expected
marriage to be much like the Garden of Eden. Having been cast
out of that unreasonable expectation, what sacrifices are you
willing to bring to the altar of your relationship?
Are you willing to try a 30-day
experiment? For 30 days are you willing to show nothing but
kindness and appreciation to your partner? Are you willing to
set aside complaints and disappointments and see the good intentions
and best efforts in your partner? Rather than count the cost,
will you consider seeing the investment as Paul did?: “I consider
everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing
Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things.
I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ” (Philippians
3:8 NIV).
References:
Benson, E. T. (November 1982).
Fundamentals of enduring family relationships. Ensign.
Benson, E. T. (1988). The Teachings
of Ezra Taft Benson. Salt Lake City, UT: Bookcraft.
Brooks, K. R. (2004). Ministering
in marriage. In D. E. Brinley & D. K. Judd (Eds.), Living
in a Covenant Marriage. Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book.
Farrell, J. L. (2004). The Peacegiver:
How Christ Offers to Heal our Hearts and Homes. Salt Lake
City, UT: Deseret Book.
Hinckley, G. B. (May 1991). What
God hath joined together. Ensign.
Maxwell, N. A. (1997). The Neal
A. Maxwell Quote Book. Salt Lake City, UT: Bookcraft.
[i] Many thanks
to Barbara Keil for her insightful observations and helpful
recommendations!
[ii] No partner
should have to tolerate physical violence. In such cases, counseling
should be sought.
[iii] Used
with permission of the author.
[iv] There
are rare relationships that are destructive and should be ended.