Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Our Meek Willingness

The Triumph of Hope

Hope is a living gift, a gift that grows as we


In times of difficulty, we choose to trust the Lord in faith. We quietly pray, “Not my will but thine be done.” We feel the Lord’s approval for our meek willingness, and we await the promised peace the Lord will send in His chosen timing.

Sunday, August 20, 2023

Trust the Doctrine of Christ

 

Trusting the Doctrine of Christ

Shake it Off

Come, Follow Me

Acts 22–28

How Can the Savior Deliver Me from Trials?

Liahona Aug 2023, 46. 


 While Paul laid sticks on a fire, “there came a viper out of the heat, and fastened on his hand” (Acts 28:3). But he “shook off the beast into the fire, and felt no harm” (verse 5). We all face challenges, temptations, and weaknesses in mortality, and like Paul, with faith in Jesus Christ and by obedience to His commandments, we can “shake off” our trials and find relief by trusting in God’s power to deliver us.

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Turn to the Savior Right Away

Is the Plan Working?

Friday, April 8, 2022

Trust in His Promises

 

Living “as Though” God’s Promises Have Been Fulfilled

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Disappointment and Betrayal

Do Not Leave the Savior

Elder Kevin W. Pearson
Of the Seventy
From a devotional address, “The Lens of Truth,” delivered at Brigham Young University–Idaho on March 7, 2017. For the full address, go to web.byui.edu/devotionalsandspeeches.

Some of Satan’s most effective weapons are distraction, deception, and spiritual desensitization. Each erodes faith, obscures vision, and skews perspective. Together they constitute the great challenge of our time. Satan uses them not simply to undermine Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon, Church doctrine, and Church leaders but also to attack the Savior and the Father’s plan. It has always been so....

When you are encompassed and overwhelmed by doubt, difficulty, and temptation, trust Him. When life isn’t what you expected and those you trusted disappoint and betray you, continue to trust in Him completely. May you respond as Nephi of old in equally distressing times: “Nevertheless, I know in whom I have trusted. … O Lord, I have trusted in thee, and I will trust in thee forever” (2 Nephi 4:19, 34).


#aang

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Lean Not

The warning comes in the words “lean not”—“lean not unto thine own understanding.” In English the word lean has a connotation of physically listing or moving to one side. When we physically lean toward one side or another, we move off center, we are out of balance, and we tip. When we spiritually lean to our own understanding, we lean away from our Savior. If we lean, we are not centered; we are not balanced; we are not focused on Christ.

May I suggest three ways to increase our knowledge of and trust in the Savior.

First, we can come to know the Lord and trust Him as we “feast upon the words of Christ;

More scriptures enlighten our minds, nourish our spirits, answer our questions, increase our trust in the Lord, and help us center our lives on Him.

Second, we can come to know the Lord and trust Him through prayer. 

Third, we can come to know the Lord and trust Him as we serve others. 

I share the following story with permission from Amy Wright, who came to understand the principle of serving even amid a terrifying and life-threatening illness. Amy wrote:
“On October 29, 2015, I found out I had cancer. My cancer has a 17 percent survival rate. The odds weren’t good. I knew that I would be in for the fight of my life. I was determined to give it everything I had not just for myself but, more important, for my family. In December, I began chemo. I was familiar with many of the side effects of cancer-fighting drugs, but I did not know that it was possible for someone to be so sick and still be alive.
“At one point, I declared chemotherapy a human rights violation. I told my husband that I was done. I quit! I was not going back to the hospital. In his wisdom, my sweetheart patiently listened and then responded, ‘Well, then we need to find someone to serve.’”
What? Did he miss the fact that his wife had cancer and couldn’t take one more bout of nausea or one more moment of excruciating pain?
Amy goes on to explain: “My symptoms gradually worsened to where I generally had one or two ‘OK’ days a month [when] I could somewhat function as a living, breathing human being. It was those days when our family would find ways to serve.”
On one of those days, Amy’s family distributed chemo comfort kits to other patients, kits filled with items to cheer and to help relieve symptoms. When Amy couldn’t sleep, she would think of ways to brighten someone else’s day. Some ways were big, but many were just small notes or text messages of encouragement and love. On those nights when her pain was too great to sleep, she would lie in bed with her iPad and search for ordinances that needed to be completed on behalf of her deceased ancestors. Miraculously the pain would subside, and she was able to endure.
“Service,” Amy testifies, “saved my life. Where I ultimately found my strength to keep moving forward was the happiness I discovered in trying to relieve the suffering of those around me. I looked forward to our service projects with great joy and anticipation. Still to this day it seems like such a strange paradox. You would think that someone who was bald, poisoned, and fighting for [her] life was justified in thinking that ‘right now it is all about me.’ However, when I thought about myself, my situation, my suffering and pain, the world became very dark and depressing. When my focus turned to others, there was light, hope, strength, courage, and joy. I know that this is possible because of the sustaining, healing, and enabling power of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.”
Though the storm clouds may gather, though the rains may pour down upon us, our knowledge of the gospel and our love of our Heavenly Father and of our Savior will comfort and sustain us … as we walk uprightly. … There will be nothing in this world that can defeat us.”

Trust in the Lord and Lean Not

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Do Your Best

 “If you do your best, it will all work out. Put your trust in God, and move forward with faith and confidence in the future. The Lord will not forsake us.”

Teachings: Gordon B. Hinckley, 339.

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Trust and Get Understanding

As we trust in and rely on the Lord, a greater measure of understanding comes from Him into our heart.

I have personally observed the heartbreak and personal havoc wrought upon those whose focus is on worldly “getting” and not on the Lord’s “understanding.” It seems that those who lean unto their own understanding or rely on the arm of the flesh are more likely to develop a disproportionate focus or obsession for material gain, prestige, power, and position. But keeping the “getting” in accordance with this scriptural guidance of “understanding” will temper your temporal appetite. It will allow the proper context for your activities as a productive member of society and of the Lord’s kingdom.

With All Thy Getting, Get Understanding

Gary E. Stevenson
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
From a devotional address, “Lean Not unto Thine Own Understanding,” given at Brigham Young University on January 14, 2014. For the full address, go to speeches.byu.edu.
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Friday, August 14, 2015

Bless Our Fellow Travelers

As we seek to become even as He is, with a sincere desire to bless “our fellow travelers,” we will be provided opportunities to forget self and lift others. These opportunities may often be inconvenient, testing our true desire to become more like the Master, whose greatest service of all, His infinite Atonement, was anything but convenient....

We may see needs around us but feel inadequate to respond, assuming that what we have to offer is not sufficient. As we seek to become even as He is and as we see needs in our fellow travelers through spiritual eyes, we must trust that the Lord can work through us, and then we must act.

Elder W. Christopher Waddell, "Pure Religion," Ensign, Apr 2015, 46-47.


Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Your Trust in God Must Be Powerful and Enduring

“This life is an experience in profound trust—trust in Jesus Christ, trust in His teachings, trust in our capacity as led by the Holy Spirit to obey those teachings for happiness now and for a purposeful, supremely happy eternal existence. To trust means to obey willingly without knowing the end from the beginning (see Proverbs 3:5-7). To produce fruit, your trust in the Lord must be more powerful and enduring than your confidence in your own personal feelings and experience. . . .
“As you trust Him, exercise faith in Him, He will help you.”


Elder Richard G. Scott, “Trust in the Lord,” Ensign, Nov. 1995, 17. 

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Trust God

 “The issue for us is trusting God enough to trust also His timing. Is we can truly believe He has our welfare at heart, may we not let His plans unfold as He thinks best?”


Elder Neal A. Maxwell (1926-2004), Even As I Am (1982), 93.