
By H. Wallace Goddard
It
is cause for serious reflection that Latter-day Saints have
been as gullible with respect to self-esteem as the world
in general. It has been taught by well-meaning teachers in
Primary, Sunday School, Aaronic Priesthood,
Young Women and Relief Society. The latter-day exception may
be Melchizedek Priesthood Quorums which seem to have been
relatively uninterested in self-esteem.
Did
we ever wonder how to reconcile the dogmas of self-esteem
with such clear messages from Jesus as:
If any man will come after me, let him deny himself,
and take up his cross, and follow me. For whosoever will save
his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for
my sake shall find it. Matthew 16:24-25
The
instinctive response to assaults on the self-esteem movement
is commonly shock: “So, does God want us to hate ourselves?”
No. He wants us to forget ourselves and follow Him.
Consider
the following contrasts:
The
self-esteem dogma: You cannot love anyone until you love yourself.
God’s
doctrine: You cannot love anyone (with heavenly charity) until
you love & are filled with God.
The
self-esteem dogma: When you love yourself, then you can be
of service.
God’s
doctrine: When you forget yourself, then you can be of service.
The
self-esteem dogma: Remember your great worth.
God’s
doctrine: Remember God’s goodness and the great worth of all
souls to the Father of All.
God
has not left us in a self-system vacuum. He has given us a
program of gifts. Tucked away in the Doctrine and Covenants
are profound lessons on spiritual gifts. We have failed to
appreciate these psychological gems. As we study section 46
for Father’s program of “self-esteem,” it becomes immediately
clear that Father understands healthy human development. He
provides at least five points:
1.
“...to every [person] is given a gift by the Spirit of God.” (v.11)
I
take the statement so literally as to believe that even God’s
most handicapped children still have remarkable and God-given
gifts. Everyone has a gift.
Our
society has tended to be narrowly focused on IQ, attractiveness,
and sociability. Recent psychologists challenge us to think
more broadly. Gardner (1983) and Sternberg (1988) have written
persuasively about multiple intelligences. Cal Taylor (1986)
has argued for multiple talent orientations for decades. He
believes that everyone excels in at least one gift.
It
is worth noting that God uses here the term “gift” rather
than “talent.” Behind every gift is a gracious Giver. “For
what doth it profit a man if a gift is bestowed upon him,
and he receive not the gift? Behold,
he rejoices not in that which is given unto him, neither rejoices
in him who is the giver of the gift” (D&C 88:33, emphasis
added). We should always remember that our gifts, our opportunities
to use them---even life itself!---are
all gifts from Him.
How
do we cultivate an awareness of gifts in those around us?
Jesus’ sets the example as He regularly provides supportive
hints about our divine gifts. We should do the same for others.
That is part of the commandment to love one another as He
loves us. Under inspiration of heaven we might reflect: “I
love your cheerful spirit.” “Your sensitivity has touched
my heart.” “Surely your determination is a gift from God.”
“I warm my hands by the glow of your testimony.”
In
homes and classrooms we uniquely honor our baptismal covenant
when we speak without guile of the divine that we see in others:
“comfort those that stand in need of comfort, and to stand
as witnesses of God at all times and in all things, and
in all places that ye may be in” (Mosiah 18:9, emphasis
added). We testify of the Divine we see in each other.
2.
“To some is given one, and to some is given another...” (v.12)
The
human tendency to try to be all things to all people may be
a subtle form of idolatry. God insists that no one has every
gift. Joseph Smith had different gifts from Brigham Young.
Peter had different gifts from Paul.
. . . deny not the gifts of God, for
they are many; and they come from the same God. And there
are different ways that these gifts are administered; but
it is the same God who worketh all in all; and they are given
by the manifestations of the Spirit of God unto men, to profit
them. Moroni 10:8
Susan
Harter, a psychologist who has intensely studied self-esteem,
recognized years ago (1983) that one of the faults of traditional
self-esteem was the assumption that it is global. The idea
that you feel good about yourself or you don’t has been discredited.
People need to have a more articulated sense of specific strengths.
“For there are many gifts, and to every man is given a gift
by the Spirit of God” (D&C 46:11).
When
I talk with groups of teenagers about gifts, I invite each
of them to name his or her favorite food. Then I ask them
to picture a big mixer with all the favorite foods mixed together.
How many would be delighted with the resulting mix of pizza,
ice cream, nachos, lasagna, and cookies? If God has designed
us to be cookies, we should be great cookies. If God, has designed us to be pizza, we should fill the measure
of that spicy creation. “Now, seeing that I know these things,
why should I desire more than to perform the work to which
I have been called?” (Alma 29:6).
Rather
than envy each other’s gifts, we should celebrate the gift
we are given and rejoice in the gifts that are given to others.
If we fail to use our gifts because we consider them inferior
to someone else’s gifts then we are unwise servants. When
we pit our gifts against others’ gifts in anxious competition,
we challenge the wisdom and goodness of God. There is really
only one reason for us to have gifts:
3.
“And all these gifts come from God, for the benefit of the
children of God.” (26)
God
has not given us gifts so that we may win trophies and impress
our neighbors. He has given us gifts so “that all may be profited
thereby” (v.12).
A
team of researchers (Allen, Philliber, Herrling, & Kuperminc,
1997) discovered that when they involved high-risk teens in
community service, their rates of pregnancy and dropping out
of school declined in spite of the fact that there was no
part of the intervention that was targeted at those outcomes.
The researchers were mystified. They concluded that when people
are involved in service they are growing in healthy ways.
They are less vulnerable to psychological sickness.
God
has always recommended the growth-promoting and soul-healing
benefits of serving and loving. When our gifts are woven together
in a tapestry of caring, we are filling the measure of our
creation. We are becoming more like Him.
Prophets
of every era have counseled us to serve and bless one another.
It is essential to our growth. When we draw family members
or ward members into gladly delivering cookies, picking up
litter, or praying for the struggling then we are ministering
to their eternal well-being and joining God’s divine work.
4.
“Seek ye earnestly the best gifts, always remembering for
what they are given;” (v.8)
The
Lord counsels us to keep growing. Carol Ryff’s (1989) definition
of psychological well-being identifies personal growth as
a vital dimension. Latter-day Saints believe in eternal progress.
That can apply to things as diverse as looking up answers
to questions in the encyclopedia, cultivating charity, and
praying for greater patience.
5.
“ye must give thanks unto God in
the Spirit for whatsoever blessing ye are blessed with.”
(v.32)
Gratitude
opens the windows of heaven. “O how you ought to thank your
heavenly King!” (Mosiah 2:19). The appreciation that all gifts
are a divine bestowal intended to bless all of our brothers
and sisters makes the Lord’s program of gifts very different
from the world’s self-esteem programs.
The
Lord’s program of gifts, nestled in an under-appreciated section
of the Doctrine and Covenants, offers us a remarkable program
of growth. It points us toward becoming new creatures in Christ.
Assuredly, that is good.
References
Allen, J. P., Philliber, S., Herrling, S., & Kuperminc, G. P. (1997).
Preventing teen pregnancy and academia failure:
Experimental evaluation of a developmentally based approach.
Child Development, 64, 729-742.
Gardner, H. (1983). Frames of mind: The theory of
multiple intelligences. New York: Basic Books.
Harter, S. (1983). Developmental perspectives on the self-system.
In E. M. Hetherington (Ed.), P. H. Mussen (Series Ed.), Handbook
of child psychology, Vol. 4, Socialization, personality and
social development (pp. 275-385). New York: Wiley.
Ryff, C. D. (1989). Happiness is everything, or is it?
Explorations on the meaning of psychological
well-being. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
57(6), 1069-1081
Sternberg, R. J. (1988). The triarchic mind: A new
theory of human intelligence. New York: Viking Press.
Taylor, C. W. (1986). The growing
importance of creativity and leadership in spreading gifted
and talented programs world-wide. Roeper Review,
VIII,(4), 256-263.