Thursday, July 26, 2018

Helaman's Talk on Heavenly Father

Heavenly Father is literally the father of our Spirits. My parents always tell me that they love me because I am their son. This teaches me about how Heavenly Father loves me in the same way. It is not because of the things we do or because of what we are good at. He loves us because we are His children. I know that this is true because when I think about how He loves me the Holy Ghost gives me feelings of peace and comfort.

Because Heavenly Father loves us He gave us the Plan of Salvation so that one day we can live forever with God and share in His glory. He gave us our agency so we can choose throughout our life so in the end we can be where we are most happy. In this world when we make choices that Heavenly Father doesn’t want us to do, he doesn’t stop us because he loves us. He knows that if he controlled our choices we wouldn’t ever be able to become like Him and have the joy he has. So even though we do things that make him sad, he still respects our agency.

Heavenly Father wants us to be able to become like Him, but we make mistakes sometimes. So Heavenly Father gave us a Savior, Jesus Christ. Through the atonement of Jesus Christ we can repent of our sins and become more like God even after we make mistakes. The atonement of Jesus Christ is another way we can know that Heavenly Father loves us.

When I was baptized I also received the gift of the Holy Ghost from Heavenly Father. Through the Holy Ghost Heavenly Father leads me in the right direction when I need to make choices, and comforts me when I am feeling down. Through the Holy Ghost I know that God is always with me and will help me when I need it.  Like my own dad, Heavenly Father wants to prepare me with knowledge and abilities so I can grow up to be a good man. He gives me this advice through the Holy Ghost, through the scriptures, and through the prophets.

Heavenly Father wanted us to have joy on this earth, so he created the beauties of the world. Some of my favorite parts of creation are how beautiful nature is and all the colors of the world. I feel His love through music and the taste of delicious food, like extra juicy peaches or grilled chicken. (Good thing today isn’t fast Sunday!) I feel his love when I watch marine life and birds and other amazing animals. And I especially feel His love when I look at the beautiful night sky.

Heavenly Father has given us the opportunity to communicate with Him through prayer. We can tell Him what we are grateful for and ask Him for help and guidance. He listens to our prayers because He loves us. It is a way to stay close to Him even though He is far away.

Heavenly Father loves and has done so much for us. We didn’t do anything to deserve our blessings, they come simply because of His love for us. We can show our love and gratitude to Him by praying and keeping His commandments. Heavenly Father really loves when we pray to Him so we can communicate and stay in touch. It makes Him happy when He knows that we made a good choice.
Because of my many blessings and opportunities that Heavenly Father has given me, I know that my Heavenly Father loves me. And I know that He loves all of us. And I love Him, too.

Sunday, July 15, 2018

It's all about Joy not Fear

Good morning, Brothers and Sisters. My name is Jinny Valle. I guess I get to introduce our family since I am first today. We moved here recently from California. We've kind of lived all over in California, but we most recently came from a place called Ridgecrest, which is attached to China Lake, out in the Mojave Desert. There is a Naval base there where my husband was doing weapons development for the navy.

We both actually grew up way farther North, in Northern California, North of Sacramento, in a little town called Gridley. I only say the name of the town because it seems like everywhere we go, someone has heard of Gridley. Which is crazy because it is a 5,000 people little cow town. So just in case, we are from Gridley.

And then Omar went to school for the first time at UC Berkeley, so we lived in the Bay Area for a while. I say the first time because he has two degrees. He has a degree in Sociology from UC Berkeley, and was a probation officer in Northern California for a while. He didn't enjoy living in jail... and so went back to school and has a degree in Mechanical Engineering from Chico State.

We've moved a lot and had a lot of life changes in our years of marriage, and I am lucky to have gotten to do all of that with the genius sitting over there.

Omar is a covert to the church, he was raised Catholic. He is Mexican, even though he doesn't look like it. He looks like...I can't tell what you are exactly? But yes, his family came from Mexico. And my family came on the Mayflower and were Mormon Pioneers.  So we have quite a rich background of experiences to draw from in our marriage.

I was raised in the church. We had Family Home Evening every Monday, or almost every Monday. And we had family prayers and scripture study and we went to church every Sunday. And so I was raised being taught the gospel and what the standards expected by the Lord were.

We all have Spiritual gifts. And one of my spiritual gifts is not believing anything anyone says ever, until I figure it out for myself... which can seem more like a curse most of the time... and over-thinking everything. I was a Sociology major at BYU with a critical thinking minor, to give you an idea of the amount of overthinking that I do.

Being raised in the church, and knowing the FACTS of the gospel, and knowing the standards that were expected of me, did not create, for me, a testimony. At all. Until I had a moment of intense divine intervention when I was 15.

For my 15th birthday my parents decided to give me a trip to EFY at BYU. At that point in my life that was the last thing that I was going to want for my birthday. But they sent me off.

The first night that we were there, our counselors challenged us to pray every night while we were there. We were in a dorm room, with a stranger, and the challenge was to pray OUT LOUD on your knees every night.

I was in a dorm room with someone I had never met before, and I hadn't said a personal prayer since I was like 8. The idea of trying an outloud prayer in front of this stranger, there was no way I am going to do that. I would say, maybe if they would let me out of the dorm and I could go find a place by myself I might give it a try. But under these circumstances, there is no way that is going to happen.

Thursday night at EFY there is a testimony meeting. And on the way back to our dorms afterward, walking in dark in the middle of BYU campus, my counselor stopped everyone and said, "I don't normally do this, and you guys aren't supposed to be by yourselves in the dark, but I want everyone to go find a private spot somewhere on campus to go pray for a while."

And that was what I needed to know that God was real.

And so I did. I prayed.

Now there was a lot of things I still needed to learn. There are a lot of things now I still need to learn.  But knowing that there really was a God, a God that knew me personally, was a turning point in my life.

I think for all religion that is kind of the basic question, right? If you are going to believe anything, the first thing that you have to believe is in God. If you believe there is a God you take the religious path and if you don't believe there is a God then there is no reason to care about that.

So knowing that there is a God is the first step for all of us.

In a General Authority training session, someone asked the question, "How do we help people that are struggling with a personal problem?" And President Nelson, who was Elder Neslon at the time, stood up and said, "Teach them their identity and purpose." This is something that really stood out to my mom at General Conference. She has been bringing it up a lot. It didn't hit me the same way, and I had to think about why that mattered. The more I have thought about it, the more I have come to understand that knowing my identity and my purpose are what changed my life, and gave it direction. And they are what allow us to have peace and joy in this life.

So knowing that God exists is one thing, and knowing that we are His children is another. The way that you come to know that is by praying and by asking if it is true.

There are some things in this life that you can know scientifically and by studying and thinking about it. And there are some things that you can only know in your heart. Like, I don't know that Omar loves me because I have studied it out and have lists that explain it. People can tell you facts, but you won't know it the same way that you know something in your heart. That's why the Holy Ghost talks to us in that way.

So to know that you are truly a child of God, and someone that He loves, it is something you pray about, and ask for the Spirit to testify to you. And because it is true, The Spirit will testify of that to you. It's not something I can tell you and then your whole life will be changed.  You have to know for yourself. And because God respects our agency,  he waits until we ask.

The other thing that has really changed my outlook is understanding God's plan.

Understanding  God's plan helps us to understand the true nature of God. As I began to change my life at 15, and started making different choices, I got to know God's mercy through the repentance process through the Atonement of Jesus Christ. But I still had a lot of misconceptions about what God's plan for us was.

I thought I can repent for what I did before and it's fine because I didn't really know. But know I know so I better do everything right. And sometimes I am going to screw up, and I guess I can repent, but I will have blown it, because I should be doing everything right now, because now I know better.

We talk about life as being a test. We talk about being afraid of hell. We talk about a list version of the gospel: these are the things we need to accomplish to qualify for the Celestial Kingdom. And we look at church assignments and the standards that we are taught as a way to measure ourselves against the perfection that we are supposed to be living.

We all hear about people who have 100% home and visiting teaching. They've never tasted alcohol. They never miss church, even when they are sick. And none of these things are bad. But if that's what we are focusing on, if we are focusing on the check lists, then we are missing the whole point of everything. That is not the gospel. And then when we are focusing on the check lists, we come to church and we hear about how other people are succeeding and it makes us aware of where we are failing, and it makes us feel like we are not measuring up. That we are not Celesital. That we are never going to be good enough.

My mom is the Stake Relief Society President in her stake now. For a long time she hated going to Relief Society. Because she would go and just feel depressed. She would hear how great everyone else was doing at everything and come home feeling like a failure every week. I dont' think it was necessarily what people were trying to do when the taught or commented. But she was still learning about what the Atonement and the gospel really looked like.

This misunderstanding of the Atonement and of the gospel also makes us terrified of the mistakes of our loved ones. So when people that we care about are making choices we know are going to make them unhappy, it feels like the end of the world. It feels unconquerable.

And it makes us afraid of the world. We start talking about how "the world" is attacking us, and "the world" this and "the world" that. But the world that we are talking about is really just our neighbors. People. That we don't have to be afraid of. That are trying to good in other ways. So we end up being isolationist or the tribalism they keep talking about in conference. And all of this is coming from fear. It doesn't come from a desire to be bad people, but it comes from fear, and a misunderstanding of the nature of God.

Our whole life, even back when we were dating, and Omar was still Catholic, he kept telling me that my idea of God was crazy. That I had this idea of a mean God, but God was really a loving God. That I was always worried too much, and needed to calm down and trust Him more. Which made me feel afraid for him, because I didn't think he was worried enough!

But my understanding of the Plan of Salvation and the Atonement of Jesus Christ has changed a lot over the last 8 years.  Because life got hard. And in my wondering mind, I needed to find answers. And so I did lots of research, and read lots of things. And all of a sudden, this whole world of joy and peace opened up, that I didn't have an understanding of before.

In April 2017, President Uchtdorf gave a talk titled, "Perfect Love Casteth Out Fear". He talks about the problem with fear.

"...who among us has never been compelled by fear to eat better, wear a seat belt, exercise more, save money, or even repent of sin?

It is true that fear can have a powerful influence over our actions and behavior. But that influence tends to be temporary and shallow. Fear rarely has the power to change our hearts, and it will never transform us into people who love what is right and who want to obey Heavenly Father.

People who are fearful may say and do the right things, but they do not feel the right things."

My understanding of the Plan of Salvation that changed was what we are supposed to be doing in this life. Which was becoming like God. Sometimes we talk about life as a test, but the most useful kinds of tests are ones that are for assessment and improvement.

In this last General Conference there was a talk about a Physics teacher at BYU who let his students retake the test as many times as they needed to get the answers right. That is the kind of test we are doing in this life.

Twice in the last three General Conferences someone has said that "repentance is not a backup plan" just in case our plan (or His plan for us) to live perfectly fails."

And I think that is the biggest thing that changed in my understanding, is that God sent us here knowing full well that we were going to keep making mistakes. And that was the whole point. You learn better by experiencing things and making those mistakes. And then the consequences of those mistakes are repentable. Which means you learn and realize something you hadn't before.  Your heart changes and you become more like God.

If he had just forced our choices there is no becoming.  And He wants us to become like Him becasue He wants us to have everything that He has. The glory that God has, the power that God has, the joy that God has, are all consequences of who He is. And He wants all of that for us.

Being a parent has changed my perception of God, also. You want to protect your kids from everything, but at certain points you have to let them struggle, and you have to let them suffer. A simple example that we have been talking about with some friends that are visiting this week is babies falling down when they are learning how to walk. If we protected babies from every falling down, and always held their hands, then they would never learn how to walk.

If we had stayed in God's presence and we were always with Him, or He was always showing us exactly what was right, we would never actually become like Him for ourselves. Our hearts have to become like His heart. And that's what we are doing in this life.

The standards that we learn, and the assignments we are given at church, and all of those things, are really about becoming. They are about teaching us what Godliness looks like in the practical mundane moments of our lives. But if I keep the standards without my heart changing to love people like God, then they are not helping me become like Him. We cannot use the standards to measure our righteousness. He wants us to keep the standards because they help us to become like Him. Without our hearts, without understanding why we are doing things, they don't have any power to change us to become more like Him.

A few years ago I read a book called "The God Who Weeps". For a long time the church didn't publish, through Deseret Book, any books that were philosophy of religions type of books. They do now, and this was the beginning of that change. It is written by husband and wife, Terryl and Fiona Givens. The things I read about the Plan of Salvation were mind blowing to me because it was different than my perception of God and the gospel had been to that point. And then once I had this new understanding, I would go back and look at Conference talks, and it was what they had been saying all along. That repentance isn't a backup plan, and life is about joy and changing your heart.

The title of the book, The God Who Weeps is taken from Moses chapter 7 where Enoch is having this great vision of the Lord. Enoch was alive back when the city of Zion was translated back in the Old Testament. In the Book of Moses he is having visions and talking to God. In verse 28 it starts:

"And it came to pass that the God of heaven looked upon the residue of the people, and he wept; and Enoch bore record of it, saying: How is it that the heavens weep, and shed forth their tears as the rain upon the mountains?"

Enoch goes on to say, You are perfect, and you have all glory, and all power, how is that you are crying?

God's response starts in verse 32:
"The Lord said unto Enoch: Behold these thy brethren; they are the workmanship of mine own hands, and I gave unto them their knowledge, in the day I created them; and in the Garden of Eden, gave I unto man his agency;

33 And unto thy brethren have I said, and also given commandment, that they should love one another, and that they should choose me, their Father; but behold, they are without affection, and they hate their own blood...

37 ...Satan shall be their father, and misery shall be their doom; and the whole heavens shall weep over them, even all the workmanship of mine hands; [and here's the part that stand out] wherefore should not the heavens weep, seeing these shall suffer?"

God gave us our agency and allows us to make choices that cause Him to weep and suffer, because He loves us so much. He wasn't weeping because He felt like a failure, He was crying at their suffering.

It reminds me of the story in the New Testament when Lazarus had died, and Jesus wept. Jesus knew that Lazarus would live again in a few minutes. And even if that wasn't the case, Eternally everything was fine because of the Plan of Salvation. But Jesus wept because they were sad.

I've learned about how God's heart is upon us. How His joy and His heart are tied up into us. In the Book of Moses God goes on to talk about how there is hope for the people, and they will find peace eventually for Jesus Christ, and everything will be okay. But even so, the suffering they were choosing caused God to weep.

Understanding that, God looked again at the vision he was having. "Enoch knew, and looked upon their wickedness, and their misery, and wept and stretched forth his arms, and his heart swelled wide as eternity; and his bowels yearned; and all eternity shook."

That yearning, that understanding about God's love for us, and then seeing that for everyone else, is what makes us good ministers. It's what makes us good missionaries. It's what makes us participate in the gathering. Once we understand who we are and what our divine potential and purpose is, once we have that joy and peace, we want everyone else to know, too. You can see their suffering, and you don't want anyone to suffer. It's not about numbers, or completing tasks on a check list. It's about becoming like God and wanting everyone else to get there with you, too. Because that IS who God is. It's not about joy and glory for myself, it's about joy and glory for all mankind.

What I learned was the gospel is a gospel of joy and not a gospel of fear. That God truly loves us. That through the atonement of Jesus Christ I don't have to be afraid of mistakes, because I am constantly making mistakes. The more I learn to be like God the more I learn I am not like God at all. I am so grateful for my Savior, who makes it possible for me to keep learning, and keep changing my hear, and become more like God.

I testify that God lives. That He is our Father and that He loves us. Everything we do to be more like Him will bring us joy. That is the gospel. That is the Plan of Salvation. That is the truth of it all.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Repentance in the Plan of Salvation

If you’ve been paying attention at church for the last couple of weeks you can probably guess what my topic is, because it is the same topic that every lesson and talk has been about for several weeks. I want you to know that I volunteered to give this talk. I did not volunteer to be the last speaker on the topic, so bear with me if you’ve already heard some of the things that I have to say today.

I volunteered because it is my family’s last week here, and if there is one thing that I wanted to leave you with it is my testimony of my Savior and His atonement. If there is one thing I would want to be able to share with you it is the JOY of repentance. And so, for that reason, I volunteered to talk.
My specific topic is Repentance in the Plan of Salvation. So I’m going to back way up and we are going to talk about before we ever born, and we were Spirits that lived with our Heavenly Parents. It is important to know that we have Heavenly Parents, and we are literally their children, for any of the rest of this to make sense.

The whole reason that any of this life happened is because we have Heavenly Parents that love us. For those of you that are parents, or older siblings, or have loved anyone, you want every good thing the people that you love. And as parents you want your children to become the amazing people you see that they have the potential to be. And when you are being your best self (and not needing to repent) as a parent, the things that you do are all to help them reach that potential.

Our Heavenly Parents love us in that way; we are like Them in that way. So because They love us, They wanted us to have everything that they have, every bit of power and of Joy in the universe. And so they called a grand council in Heaven, with all their children, and presented a plan. The plan was for us to grow, and learn to be like God so that we could have what They have, which is joy. The whole point of this life is for us to become like our Heavenly Parents so that we could have they joy that They have as a result of Who they are. Because They love us.

Now for those of that are parents, we know that for real growth to happen, we have to take our hands off and let life be hard for our kids sometimes. And that’s what the plan was for us to become like God. We had to leave His presence, we had to leave His glory, and we had to leave His peace, and figure out how to do things on our own without any of that. And so there was a forgetting. Because if we really could remember God in all His glory we wouldn’t truly be able to choose. So there wouldn’t be any growth, and we couldn’t progress.

An important part of the plan is for us to have our agency in this life. Agency is one of those Mormon words we use where we know what we are talking about and nobody else does. And I’m afraid that sometimes we don’t really think about what we are talking about. So we are going to define agency as the ability to act for ourselves with accountability and responsibility, to be agents unto ourselves to act and not be acted upon.

Now because we have choices to make, and we are not yet like our Heavenly Father, part of the plan was that this life was going to be a disaster. Every bad thing that exists in this world is part of Heavenly Father’s plan for us to grow. We had our agency to make those choices. We make bad choices, other people make bad choices, and that was all part of the plan. And because of all those mistakes that we were going to make, God told us that we would need a Savior.

At this point, Satan stood up and said, “Your plan stinks. I have a better plan. And I should get to be God now because my plan is better. What I am going to do is just force everyone to be good. And because I will do this, I get to have your glory.”

Jesus Christ said he would do things according to God’s plan and volunteered to be our Savior, because he loved us. He volunteered to come live a perfect life, not making any mistakes, to set an example so we would know what to do. He volunteered to be the Jehovah of the Old Testament, that gave us commandments and taught us what living like God looked like and how to make those better choices. And most importantly he volunteered to perform the Atonement; to suffer our consequences, and fix the things that we could not fix from the bad choices we were going to make.

There was a war in Heaven, and a third of the hosts of heaven were too terrified, and didn’t have the faith in Christ to come down to earth, accepting the Father’s plan. It wasn’t worth it to them. But the fact that you are alive today means that you chose Heavenly Father’s plan, and that you had faith in Jesus Christ that he could and would do what He said He would do. That he really could save us, and that all that God has really was available to us through Him. He would earn it, and then he would share it with us. It took courage, and most of all it took faith.

So we come down, and we forget. And life is a mess. We make choices. And for our agency to truly exist, choices have consequences. Every time we make a choice we also choose the consequence. The simplest example is a child told not to touch a hot stove. If he doesn’t touch the hot stove, he doesn’t get burned and if he touches the hot stove he does get burned. He can’t choose to touch the hot stove without also choosing the consequence of getting burned. This is how choices always are. There is always a consequence to every choice we make, and we don’t get to choose things without also choosing those consequences.

The choices that we make don’t always burn our hand, but the wrong choices that we make damage us spiritually. There are things that we do to ourselves that we cannot fix. Through the Savior’s atonement, we are allowed to repent.

I want to reemphasize the point that God knew that we would come down here and make mistakes and bad choices. All of us were going to screw up constantly all of the time. We knew that, too. Repentance is how we use our agency to access the power of Christ’s atonement to fix those choices. This was the whole point of life. The whole point of life was to “taste the bitter that they may know to prize the good,” as God tells Adam in Moses chapter 6. The whole point of life was for us to come down here and make mistakes and learn from them. Repentance was the plan.

God loves us. And because God truly loves us and wants us to grow, we have to use our agency to choose to access the Atonement of Jesus Christ, through repentance. He doesn’t force salvation on us any more than he forces any other choice. Repentance is a choice that we make to access the Atonement of Christ.

So just what is repentance? I found a quote from Elder Burton of the 70 from a Conference Talk that I love. He said:

Just what is repentance? Actually, in some ways it is easier to understand what repentance is not than to understand what it is.
As a General Authority, I have prepared information for the First Presidency to use in considering applications to readmit repentant transgressors into the Church and to restore priesthood and temple blessings. Many times a bishop will write, “I feel he has suffered enough!” But suffering is not repentance… A stake president will write, “I feel he has been punished enough!” But punishment is not repentance… A husband will write, “My wife has confessed everything!” But confession is not repentance. Confession is an admission of guilt that occurs as repentance begins. A wife will write, “My husband is filled with remorse!” But remorse is not repentance. Remorse and sorrow continue because a person has not yet fully repented. Suffering, punishment, confession, remorse, and sorrow may sometimes accompany repentance, but they are not repentance. What, then, is repentance?

I want to pause here and say that I think sometimes our confusion with repentance being suffering and punishment is because of a bigger confusion about what we are doing here on earth. Sometimes we talk about life as though what we are doing is trying to earn our way into the Celestial Kingdom. I think the confusion about repentance comes because we feel like we have to be punished, that’s part of earning it, that’s what is fair, or just. We are not here to earn our way into Heaven, we are here to learn to become Heavenly. Sometimes we share the confusion of the Saints in the early church that thought Zion was a location that they were trying to find instead of understanding that Zion was who they were trying to become as a people.

The Celestial Kingdom is Celestial, full of peace and joy, because the people that dwell there are peaceful, joyful people, who make the choices that allow that to happen. What we are doing in this life is trying to become Celestial, trying to become like our Heavenly Father, so that we can have all the joy that He has. Sometimes suffering helps us realize we have made a mistake, but God’s plan is not to punish us and then say, “okay, you’ve suffered enough, now I will give you a blessing.” The blessings that come to us are consequences of the right choices that we make.

What repentance is is a change of mind and heart that gives us a fresh view about God, about ourselves, and about the world. Repentance includes turning away from sin, and turning to God for forgiveness. It is motivated by love for God and a sincere desire to follow His plan for our eternal joy.
Repentance is a change of mind and heart that gives us a fresh view about God. Most of the time when we sin in this life, it’s not an act of open rebellion against God. And even when we do sin knowingly, our ability really know things is severely clouded in this world. We are influenced by culture, and habits, and the way we have been taught, and misunderstanding we have about the gospel, and questions we just don’t have answers to. Very few of us that have ever lived (this is when you get into the sons of perdition) would have the ability to even choose, with full understanding and knowledge, to rebel against God. For most of us, we are just confused. We are doing stuff wrong, or we haven’t understood something, and repentance is when we gain that clearer vision of “this is why this doesn’t work. This is painful. This is what I need to change. This is why God wants something else for me.” We turn away from our mistakes, and our wrong-headed thinking, and our ignorance, and we come closer to being like God. Repentance is the process of becoming more like God.

Repentance is not just for big sins (although it certainly is for big sins. There is nothing beyond the reach of Christ’s atonement). But, it is also for the daily process of self-evaluation and improvement. It is literally the process for becoming like God through our experiences in this life.
It is an important point that his is not done alone. A recognition of God’s goodness combined with our best efforts to align our behavior to God’s will, brings Grace into our lives. We use our agency to repent and to accept grace. And then through Christ’s infinite power, He can change us.
Grace is a divine means of help or strength, given through the bounteous mercy and love of Jesus Christ, to do good works that we would otherwise not be able to maintain if left to our own means.
As we repent we replace our old unrighteous behaviors, weaknesses, imperfections and fears with new behaviors and beliefs, that draw us closer to the Savior, and help us become more like Him. And becoming like the Savior is becoming like Father, as He told us throughout His whole life. And that is the whole point of the plan.

We realize that we messed up, or that we were wrong. We are sad about that, we want to do better. We fix what we can and then we rely on the Savior to fix what we cannot. We learn, and we do better.
Repentance is not a backup plan just in case our plan to live perfectly fails. Repentance is the plan of happiness. Repentance is not God’s contingency plan for Adam and Eve’s transgression in the Garden of Eden. Repentance, made possible through the atonement of Jesus Christ, our Savior from before the world began, was always the plan.

This week, on Facebook, Sister Litton posted a quote by Neil Gaiman I liked. It said:
“I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes. Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things, trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, changing yourself, changing your world. You're doing things you've never done before, and more importantly, you're doing something.”
We hear quotes like this, that feel so inspirational, all the time. And we apply it, lots of times to business, and art, and school, and trying new things. But we forget that this is what we are doing in this life, and we get down on ourselves when we make mistakes. We are afraid to try things. And we’re afraid to admit to ourselves, or admit to each other, that we’ve messed up. I believe that one of Satan’s greatest tools to stop our progress in this life is shame. Until we are ready to embrace ourselves in our imperfections, and really authentically live our lives trying to accomplish something—once we know that we are here trying to be like God, and we are authentically moving towards that—then we can make choices to repent and choices to do better. But shame makes us want to hide our imperfections and compare ourselves to everyone else. We start to think that everyone else at church is perfect and we are the only one sinning. And everyone gets up and says, I’m so far from perfect and we all internally roll our eyes.

The truth is, we are all super far from perfect. I love all of you so much. And I know you’re not perfect. The more I get to know you the more wonderful I know you are, and the more I know you’re not perfect. And that’s totally fine. I wish we could all live more authentically, and not be afraid to let each other see that about ourselves. Because there is power in making those choices. Rebecca calls it living mindfully (actually she calls it deliberate but I can never think of that word!). You live your life on purpose, you do the things that you are doing on purpose. And understanding that we are going to mess up, and not being afraid of that, is very freeing to me.

Understanding the place of repentance in the plan of salvation, what it changes for me, is knowing who I am, what I am doing, and why I am doing it. It lets me live mindfully. It give me courage to try, and peace in the pain of failure. Failing stinks, and it is painful and it is hard. And that is part of the growing process of life. It gives me hope instead of fear. It gives me hope for me, peace when I make mistakes, and freedom from worrying about things that don’t really matter, like money and popularity. When I am really worrying about living the plan, and trying to be like my Savior, and repenting as I mess up, it gives me freedom from worrying about those things.
It gives me purpose in my trials. I understand that life wasn’t meant for me to feel happy all of the time, and that it wouldn’t do me any good if it was.

And it gives me peace, and space for other people to be imperfect. Once we understand that everybody is imperfect, and we are all trying, it is easier to be forgiving. The atonement is real in our life, but it is also real in the life of the people we love and worry about. It gives us freedom to love them, instead of reacting to them out of fear. You don’t have to be afraid!
I come from Pioneer Stock, and was raised in the church. But, growing up, I knew the technical answer to religious questions, but it wasn’t real to me, in my heart. I didn’t know, on a spiritual level, that I was daughter of God. And I didn’t understand, on a spiritual level, what the purpose of life was.  And so there have been times in my life, before I really knew those things, where it was easy for me to be distracted by the things the world tells you to care about. And I was the kind of teenager that my parents had to worry about a great deal. I have to use Christ’s atonement to repent every day, and there have been times in my life where I have had to use the Atonement of Jesus Christ to repent of big sins, with the help of church leaders.

I want you to know for yourselves, that the Atonement of Jesus Christ is real. That when Christ says that he can cleanse your sins, it’s true. That through Him you truly can become a new person. That is absolutely 100 percent true.

Please also know that for the people that you love. You don’t have to react to their mistakes or confusion in anger, and you don’t have to react in fear. You get to choose to react in love. Because Jesus’ Christ’s atonement, and their ability to repent, is also real.

As we have faith in Christ, and move forward learning to love each other better—that is the becoming like God, God is love—then this world becomes more of a Celestial place for us. Not that life is ever going to be easy, because it would be pointless if it was, but we can have peace now because of our faith in the Savior. We can choose to do hard things, like we did before the world even began, trusting Him, still.

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