Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
In word and in deed Jesus was trying to reveal and make personal to us the true nature of His Father, our Father in Heaven.
Of the many magnificent purposes served in the life
and ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ, one great aspect of that mission often
goes uncelebrated. His followers did not understand it fully at the time,
and many in modern Christianity do not grasp it now, but the Savior Himself
spoke of it repeatedly and emphatically. It is the grand truth that in all
that Jesus came to say and do, including and especially in His atoning suffering
and sacrifice, He was showing us who and what God our Eternal Father is like,
how completely devoted He is to His children in every age and nation. In
word and in deed Jesus was trying to reveal and make personal to us the true
nature of His Father, our Father in Heaven.
He did this at least in part because then and
now all of us need to know God more fully in order to love Him more deeply
and obey Him more completely.
As both Old and New Testaments declare, "The first of all the commandments
is . . . thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all
thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first
[and great] commandment."1
Little wonder then that the Prophet Joseph Smith
taught: "It is the
first principle of the gospel to know for a certainty the character of God." "I
want you all to know Him," he said, "and to be familiar with Him."2
We must have "a correct idea of his . . . perfections, and attributes," an
admiration for "the excellency of [His] character."3 Thus the first
phrase we utter in the declaration of our faith is, "We believe in God,
the Eternal Father."4 So, emphatically, did Jesus. Even as He acknowledged
His own singular role in the divine plan, the Savior nevertheless insisted
on this prayerful preamble: "And this is life eternal, that they might
know thee the only true God."5
After generations of prophets had tried to teach the family of man the will
and the way of the Father, usually with little success, God in His ultimate
effort to have us know Him, sent to earth His Only Begotten and perfect Son,
created in His very likeness and image, to live and serve among mortals in
the everyday rigors of life.
To come to earth with such a responsibility, to stand in place of Elohimspeaking
as He would speak, judging and serving, loving and warning, forbearing and
forgiving as He would dothis is a duty of such staggering proportions
that you and I cannot comprehend such a thing. But in the loyalty and determination
that would be characteristic of a divine child, Jesus could comprehend it
and He did it. Then, when the praise and honor began to come, He humbly directed
all adulation to the Father.
"The Father . . . doeth the works," He said in earnest. "The
Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do: for what
things soever [the Father] doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise."6
On another occasion He said: "I speak that which I have seen with my
Father." "I do nothing of myself; but as my Father hath taught
me." "I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the
will of him that sent me."7
I make my own heartfelt declaration of God our
Eternal Father this morning because some in the contemporary world suffer
from a distressing misconception
of Him. Among these there is a tendency to feel distant from the Father,
even estranged from Him, if they believe in Him at all. And if they do believe,
many moderns say they might feel comfortable in the arms of Jesus, but they
are uneasy contemplating the stern encounter of God.8 Through a misreading
(and surely, in some cases, a mistranslation) of the Bible, these see God
the Father and Jesus Christ His Son as operating very differently, this in
spite of the fact that in both the Old Testament and the New, the Son of
God is one and the same, acting as He always does under the direction of
the Father, who is Himself the same "yesterday, today, and forever."9
In reflecting on these misconceptions we realize that one of the remarkable
contributions of the Book of Mormon is its seamless, perfectly consistent
view of divinity throughout that majestic book. Here there is no Malachi-to-Matthew
gap, no pause while we shift theological gears, no misreading the God who
is urgently, lovingly, faithfully at work on every page of that record from
its Old Testament beginning to its New Testament end. Yes, in an effort to
give the world back its Bible and a correct view of Deity with it, what we
have in the Book of Mormon is a uniform view of God in all His glory and
goodness, all His richness and complexityincluding and especially as again
demonstrated through a personal appearance of His Only Begotten Son, Jesus
Christ.
How grateful we are for all the scriptures, especially the scriptures of
the Restoration, that teach us the majesty of each member of the Godhead.
How we would thrill, for example, if all the world would receive and embrace
the view of the Father so movingly described in the Pearl of Great Price.
There, in the midst of a grand vision of humankind
which heaven opened to his view, Enoch, observing both the blessings and
challenges of mortality,
turns his gaze toward the Father and is stunned to see Him weeping. He says
in wonder and amazement to this most powerful Being in the universe: "How
is it that thou canst weep? . . . Thou art just [and] merciful and kind forever; . . . Peace . . . is the habitation of thy throne; and mercy shall go before
thy face and have no end; how is it thou canst weep?"
Looking out on the events of almost any day,
God replies: "Behold these
thy brethren; they are the workmanship of mine own hands. . . . I gave unto
them . . . [a] 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. . . . Wherefore should not the heavens weep, seeing
these shall suffer?"10
That single, riveting scene does more to teach
the true nature of God than any theological treatise could ever convey.
It also helps us understand much
more emphatically that vivid moment in the Book of Mormon allegory of the
olive tree, when after digging and dunging, watering and weeding, trimming,
pruning, transplanting, and grafting, the great Lord of the vineyard throws
down his spade and his pruning shears and weeps, crying out to any who would
listen, "What could I have done more for my vineyard?"11
What an indelible image of God's engagement in
our lives! What anguish in a parent when His children do not choose Him
nor "the gospel of God" He
sent!12 How easy to love someone who so singularly loves us!
Of course the centuries-long drift away from belief in such a perfect and
caring Father hasn't been helped any by the man-made creeds of erring generations
which describe God variously as unknown and unknowableformless, passionless,
elusive, ethereal, simultaneously everywhere and nowhere at all. Certainly
that does not describe the Being we behold through the eyes of these prophets.
Nor does it match the living, breathing, embodied Jesus of Nazareth who was
and is in "the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his
[Father]."13
In that sense Jesus did not come to improve God's view of man nearly so
much as He came to improve man's view of God and to plead with them to love
their Heavenly Father as He has always and will always love them. The plan
of God, the power of God, the holiness of God, yes, even the anger and the
judgment of God they had occasion to understand. But the love of God, the
profound depth of His devotion to His children, they still did not fully
knowuntil Christ came.
So feeding the hungry, healing the sick, rebuking
hypocrisy, pleading for faiththis was Christ showing us the way of the
Father, He who is "merciful
and gracious, slow to anger, long-suffering and full of goodness."14
In His life and especially in His death, Christ was declaring, "This
is God's compassion I am showing you, as well as that of my own." In
the perfect Son's manifestation of the perfect Father's care, in Their mutual
suffering and shared sorrow for the sins and heartaches of the rest of us,
we see ultimate meaning in the declaration: "For God so loved the world,
that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should
not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the
world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved."15
I bear personal witness this day of a personal,
living God, who knows our names, hears and answers prayers, and cherishes
us eternally as children
of His spirit. I testify that amidst the wondrously complex tasks inherent
in the universe, He seeks our individual happiness and safety above all other
godly concerns. We are created in His very image and likeness,16 and Jesus
of Nazareth, His Only Begotten Son in the flesh, came to earth as the perfect
mortal manifestation of His grandeur. In addition to the witness of the ancients
we also have the modern miracle of Palmyra, the appearance of God the Father
and His Beloved Son, the Savior of the world, to the boy prophet Joseph Smith.
I testify of that appearance, and in the words of that prophet I, too, declare: "Our
heavenly Father is more liberal in His views, and boundless in His mercies
and blessings, than we are ready to believe or receive. . . . God does not
look on sin with [the least degree of] allowance, but . . . the nearer we
get to our heavenly Father, the more we are disposed to look with compassion
on perishing souls; we feel that we want to take them upon our shoulders,
and cast their sins behind our backs."17
I bear witness of a God who has such shoulders.
And in the spirit of the holy apostleship, I say as did one who held this
office anciently: "Herein
[then] is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his
Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we
ought also to love one another"18and to love Him forever, I pray.
In the sacred name of Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES
1. Mark
12:2930; see also Matthew
22:3738; Deuteronomy 6:5.
2. History of the Church, 6:305.
3. Lectures on Faith (1985), 38, 42.
4. Articles of Faith 1:1.
5. John 17:3.
6. John 14:10; 5:19.
7. John
8:38, 28; 6:38.
8. See William Barclay, The Mind of Jesus (1961), especially the chapter "Looking
at the Cross" for a discussion of this modern tendency.
9. For example, 1
Nephi 10:18; 2 Nephi
27:23; Moroni 10:19; D&C
20:12.
10. Moses
7:2933, 37.
11. Jacob
5:41; see also vv. 47, 49.
12. Romans 1:1.
13. Hebrews
1:3; see also 2 Corinthians
4:4; Colossians 1:15.
14. Lectures on Faith, 42.
15. John
3:1617.
16. See Genesis
1:2627; Moses
2:2627.
17. Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, sel. Joseph Fielding Smith (1976),
257, 24041.
18. 1 John 4:10.