Having
the Spirit as a Guide:
Our
Greatest Duty --- to Preach the Gospel
By
Peggy Proctor
“After
all that has been said, the greatest and most important
duty is to preach the Gospel.”
[Joseph
Smith, Discourses of the Prophet Joseph Smith,
p. 172]
We
read in the Doctrine and Covenants that one by one as
members of the Church came to Joseph Smith and asked
that he approach the Lord for answer to the query, “What
is the Lord’s will concerning me?” The answer most often,
though personally addressed to each of them, was--- “Go
and preach my Gospel to the inhabitants of the earth.”
Brigham
Young said, “There is neither man nor woman in this Church
who is not on a mission. That mission will last as long
as they live, and it is ----to do good, to promote righteousness,
to teach the principles of truth, ----and to prevail
upon themselves and everybody around them to live those
principles that they may obtain eternal life.” [Discourses
of Brigham Young, p. 322]
This
has been the charge of the members of Christ’s church
and kingdom throughout the ages. His charge carries a
great sense of urgency in our day to prepare a pure people
for the glorious return of our Savior, Jesus Christ,
as Lord of Lords and King of Kings---to reign in “peace
on earth” a thousand years.
“The
Salvation of Jesus Christ is very real and the price
he paid is very terrible. You’re here to testify that
Jesus is the Christ and that the Gospel has been restored
to prepare for His Second Coming. Now, that’s our mission.
I went
to the mission field testifying that the restoration
was our whole mission. No, that’s incidental. The divinity
of Jesus Christ is our main message, ----and the fact
that he has now spoken to prophets, they’re walking the
earth, the priesthood is back. That’s our good news.
We’re preparing for the second Christmas, when there
will be a thousand years of peace on earth, good will
toward men.
I only
pray that God will bless every one of us to fulfill our
callings with valiance, ----that the spirit can testify
to thousands that Jesus is the Christ. [I pray] that
they can feel our testimony, ---that they can enjoy the
fruits of the Gospel, like many others, hundreds and
then thousands. That’s my prayer, -----that our Heavenly
Father will not be disappointed in our efforts.
One
of the great things that have to be done between now
and the Second Coming is that the Gospel needs to be
taken to all the nations of the earth. ---We haven’t
done anything, ---compared with what needs to be done
with missionary work... I think we will become much more
effective... We’re going to see a tremendous break through,
the like of which we never imagined. ---One reason I
say that is because of the work we must yet do in perfecting
the saints and redeeming the dead, etc.” [W.Cleon Skousen,
tape, A Personal Search for the Meaning of the Atonement]
In
Alma 26:22, Ammon, speaking of his brethren about their
conversions, says, ----He that repents and exercises
faith and brings forth good works, and prays continually
without ceasing, ---he will be given to know the mysteries
of God. Unto him shall be given to bring thousands of
souls to repentance, just like it has been given unto
us to bring these, our brethren, to repentance.
Ammon,
and his brethren brought ten’s of thousands of people
into the church. The people they went among were a wild
and ferocious people, -- but by searching the scriptures,
mighty prayer and great fasting, we like the sons of
Mosiah, can pull down the powers of God and be the means
of bringing great numbers of individuals to the Father,
through Christ.
President
Kimball, in a meeting with mission presidents and General
Authorities, said in the opening prayer, “Oh Lord, thou
hast promised us that the day would come when individual
missionaries would bring thousands of individuals into
the church. Now, oh Lord, we know that thou canst not
lie, therefore, we pray that thou wilt hasten the day
when individual missionaries in this church and kingdom
will bring thousands...”
Pres.
Hinckley, in a regional conference said, “I wish I could
awaken in the heart of every man, woman, boy and girl
here this morning, the great consuming desire to share
the Gospel with others. If you do that, ----you live
better, ---you try to make your lives more exemplary---
because you know that those you teach will not believe
unless you back up what you say by the goodness of your
lives.” [Gordon B. Hinckley, Alaska Anchorage Regional
Conference, June 18. 1995 emphasis added]
Necessary
Qualities
First,
we “need an awareness of the great power that
we have to do this thing. Second, a desire. I
think many of us realize that we could do it, but we
lack the desire. Let every man single out another, a
friend. Let him get on his knees and pray to the Lord
to help him bring that man into the church. I am as satisfied
as I am of anything that with that kind of prayerful,
conscientious, directed effort, there isn’t a man in
this Church who could not convert another...Third, the faith to
try. It is simple.” [Gordon B. Hinckley, Improvement
Era, July 1961, p.58]
I wish
to add another word here, the word courage. Courage
is implied in “the faith to try,” as indicated by our
Prophet. Recently I heard a talk in which the speaker
said that love is, or is manifest in, ---work
and courage. I thought of the prophets who were full
of courage, because of being filled with love, and were
consequently willing to preach and teach to people who
didn't want to hear and who persecuted the prophets and
sometimes as a result. I realized that often
we lack courage in our own homes, to fight “the holy
war” on the battlefield of the family room on family
night or the embattled halls at scripture reading time.
Fighting the good fight here will build courage and desire
to open our mouths outside our homes, to others.
True,
it is not complex as President Hinckley said, but first,
in order to share the gospel, ---we must be living the
gospel.
In
an area missionary training meeting, Elder Yoshihiko
Kikuchi said that he had seen a lot of programs come
and go, but there has only been one consistent common
denominator for ward missionary success: --- that is
the personal righteousness of the ward members. To be
blessed in missionary work the members and ward missionaries
must qualify themselves for the blessing by increasing
their personal righteousness. Until they are reading
and praying consistently, ---every day, they will not
have the presence of the Spirit, and therefore,
no true desire to share the gospel.
The
Lord taught that we should --“Seek not to declare my
word but first seek to obtain my word, then if you desire
ye shall have my Spirit and my word, yea, the power of
God unto the convincing of men.”
The
Savior cursed the barren fig tree. “He that abideth in
me, and I in him, ...bringeth forth much fruit: --- for
without me ye can do nothing. [John 15:5] Fruitfulness
comes from obedience and unfruitfulness from disobedience.
Work
through the Auxiliaries
The
missionary program should be integrated into all programs
of the Church. To be truly effective we need more than
an occasional Sacrament meeting talk or Missionary Fireside.
What is needed? --- Since most members don’t actually
know how to share the gospel they should be taught how
on a weekly basis. Follow up and brief missionary tips
could be given weekly in Priesthood, Relief Society,
YMYW, and Primary during the first few minutes of opening
exercises. Follow up on the previous week, address members
concerns, and issue challenges.
When
members know they will be accountable, missionary performance
improves. Individuals are free to share the gospel in
whatever way they desire, --- relying on the Spirit in
finding ways to approach people with the gospel. The
goal is for members to share the gospel with all they
come in contact with, --- all of the time. They also
know that they will be asked about their individual efforts
each week.
Improve
the Sunday Moments
Ward
missionaries should arrive at church early and stay late.
Begin by greeting new people and following up with those
present about sharing the gospel! Ask how their efforts
are going, find out what their experiences have been
and offer supplemental materials and help. Be a real
friend and make every person feel warmed and welcome.
Keep
the foyer well stocked with missionary resources, such
as:
Joseph
Smith Pamphlets
Pass-along
cards
Copies
of the Book of Mormon
Family
Resources and so forth
Finding
and Teaching with the Spirit
Members
who are now followed up on weekly will be finding ways
to work the gospel into conversations with those they
come in contact with during the week, at school at work,
in the grocery store, the post office, etc. They will
be looking for opportunities to bear their testimony
with others on a daily basis. They will pray daily and
earnestly for the way to be opened before them.
When
our missionary daughter returned from serving in Mexico,
she went off to BYU and even though most who attend are
members, she determined to bear her testimony to someone
everyday, even if it was to her roommate and she did. She
was keeping or creating the habit of opening her mouth
and allowing the Spirit to fill it.
Members
overcome fears by doing. Having a real desire and asking
for our Father’s help calls down the powers of heaven
and will make the shy person bold and confident. One
of the great deterrents to finding is not so much that
we are busy, but that we are comfortable. Nothing will
happen until we get out of “comfort zones.”
“The
Screwtape Letters,” by C. S. Lewis, point to one of the
ways that we are kept from our duties. Old Scratch and
his demons work merely to keep us distracted—so we never
get around to these important responsibilities.
Seneca,
a Roman statesman, once said, “It is not because things
are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do
not dare that they are difficult.” Or as was taught me
in the missionary training center years ago, “If you
work at it easy, it’s hard, but if you work at it hard,
it’s easy.” At the time, that statement seemed contradictory
and irrational, but I have come to realize that truer
words were never spoken.
Returned
missionaries are full of great ideas for contacting people;
make a list then let the Spirit guide.
Remember,
your mission is never over; it has only just begun. The
great Spirit that you felt in the mission field will
not fade and vanish, if you are reading scriptures, praying,
serving [even when inconvenient], exercising faith, and
continuing in bearing testimony. Swallow pride [the
great deterrent] and the way will open up.
The
best article you may ever find about teaching with the
Spirit is Teaching, Preaching, HEALING, by
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, in the January Ensign 2003.
It sums up what has been put forth here about teaching
with the Spirit, “The scriptures say, ‘The Spirit shall
be given unto you by the prayer of faith; and if ye receive
not the Spirit ye shall not teach’ [D&C 42:14] This
teaches not just that you won’t teach or that you can’t
teach or that it will be pretty shoddy teaching. No,
it is stronger than that. It is the imperative form of
the verb. “Ye shall not teach.” Put a thou in
there for ye and you have Mount Sinai language.
This is a commandment. These are God’s students, not
yours, just like it is Christ’s Church, not Peter’s or
Paul’s or Joseph’s or Brigham’s.
Take
heart. Let the Spirit work in you in ways that you may
not be privileged to see or even recognize. More will
go on than you think if you are honest in your heart
and trying to live as purely as you can.”