Anne C. Pingree
Second Counselor in the Relief Society General Presidency
Faith, the spiritual ability to be persuaded of promises that are seen "afar off" . . . , is a sure measure of those who truly believe.
I will never forget a sauna-hot day in the lush rain
forest of southeastern Nigeria. My husband and I had traveled to one of the
most remote locations in our mission so he could conduct temple recommend
interviews with members in the Ikot Eyo district. Some in this growing district
had been Church members less than two years. All the members lived 3,000
miles away from the nearest temple in Johannesburg, South Africa. None had
received their temple endowment.
These members knew the appointed day each month we would come to their district,
but even we didn't know the exact hour we would arrive; nor could we call,
for telephones were rare in that part of West Africa. So these committed
African Saints gathered early in the morning to wait all day if necessary
for their temple recommend interviews. When we arrived, I noticed among those
waiting in the searing heat were two Relief Society sisters dressed in bold-patterned
wrappers, white blouses, and the traditional African head-ties.
Many hours later, after all the interviews were completed, as my husband
and I drove back along that sandy jungle trail, we were stunned when we saw
these two sisters still walking. We realized they had trekked from their
villagea distance of 18 miles round tripjust to obtain a temple recommend
they knew they would never have the privilege of using.
These Nigerian Saints believed the counsel of
President Howard W. Hunter: "It
would please the Lord for every adult member to be worthy ofand to carrya
current temple recommend, even if proximity to a temple does not allow immediate
or frequent use of it."1 In her hand, carefully wrapped in a clean handkerchief,
each sister carried her precious temple recommend. I carry their examples
of faith carefully wrapped in my heart.
These two covenant Relief Society sisters embody
the meaning of Alma's teaching "concerning
faithfaith is not to have a perfect knowledge of things; therefore if
ye have faith ye hope for things which are not seen, which are true."2
Faith is the most personal reflection of adoration
forand devotion toour Heavenly Father and His Only Begotten Son,
Jesus Christ. Anchored by this
first and all-important principle of the gospel, we look to our Savior, knowing "Jesus
[is] the author and finisher of our faith."3
My great-great-aunt, Laura Clark Phelps, was the first member of the Clark
family who joined the Church. She was a woman who uniquely demonstrated a
faith in the Lord that stands fast, nothing wavering.4
Laura's legacy teaches much about the doctrine
of faith as "the substance
of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."5 She received
her patriarchal blessing from Joseph Smith Sr. In it she was counseled to
be faithful and she would have an inheritance in Zion. She was further told
to "call upon God in faith, and if thou wilt thou shall have all of
the desires of thine heart."6
Laura and her husband knew the Prophet Joseph Smith. On one occasion, the
Prophet and his brother Hyrum came running to their farm outside Far West,
Missouri, where Laura hid them behind the clothes curtain. She calmly faced
the mob leaders who rushed in shortly afterwards in search of the Prophet.
Laura experienced the joys and privations of the early Church members in
this dispensation. Her faith deepened as she was driven from her homes and
separated from her husband on various occasions. As an efficient midwife,
she worked and traveled day and night in all kinds of weather to help provide
for her family. This overexertion and exposure took their toll. She died
at the young age of 34, leaving behind her husband and five children. She
did not live to see her children, her grandchildren, or her great-grandchildren
following her in faith. She did not experience the blessings of receiving
her own temple endowment in this earth life, blessings I believe she would
have cherished.
Laura's faithful life bears witness of this verse
from Hebrews: "These
all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them
afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that
they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth."7 Faith lived in Laura,
and Laura lived her faith.
I love my great-great-aunt Laura and carry her
example in my heart. She, like those Relief Society sisters in Nigeria,
reminds me "all things
are possible to [them] that [believe]."8
Faith, the spiritual ability to be persuaded
of promises that are seen "afar
off" but that may not be attained in this life, is a sure measure of
those who truly believe. Elder Bruce R. McConkie expressed this truth in
these words: "Faith in its full and pure form requires an unshakable
assurance and . . . absolute confidence that [God] will hear our pleas and
grant our petitions"9 in His own due time. Believing that, we too can "stand
fast in the faith"10 today and tomorrow.
It matters not where we live or what our individual
circumstances may be. Each day our righteous living can demonstrate a faith
in Jesus Christ that
sees beyond mortal heartaches, disappointments, and unfulfilled promises.
It is a glorious thing to possess a faith that enables us to look forward
to that day "when all that was promised the Saints will be given."11
As they walked with faith in every footstep along
that sandy jungle trail in West Africa, those valiant Nigerian sisters
could not have imagined that
the walls of a holy temple of God would one day rise in their own nation.
They could not have imagined that the inspired words of another prophet of
God, President Gordon B. Hinckley, would bring the promised blessings they
hoped for and had seen "afar off." They only knew that the Lord
restored His gospel in these times, that a testimony of that gospel burned
in their hearts, that faith lit their way in life. Then they acted on a prophet's
counsel to be worthy and to carry a temple recommend.
My husband and I tenderly recalled these sisters
and so many other West African Saints on that remarkable day in April 2000
when President Gordon
B. Hinckley said, "We announce at this conference that we hope to build
a house of the Lord in Aba, Nigeria."12 Brothers and sisters, I testify
that sometimes "miracles . . . confirm . . . faith."13 The temples
of Africa are a magnificent representation of miracles wrought by the faith
of so many Saints in the small villages and large cities spread across that
vast continent.
I am deeply grateful that I have seen the faith that brought two pioneers
in Africa many miles to a temple recommend interview. I rejoice that the
temple in progress in Nigeria will bring these women, their families, and
thousands more the opportunity to use their recommends as both a symbol and
embodiment of their faith.
Sometimes those blessings in our lives that we have yet to receive lie beyond
the scope of mortal eyes. I testify that it is always faith that allows us
to see "afar off" with spiritual vision all that God intends for
His children.
Just as surely as the sisters knewwho walked
along that sandy jungle trailI know that God lives. He loves each of
us on every continent and
desires to bless us one by one. I know that our faith in Jesus Christ can
sustain us each day as we "do all things that lie in our power," knowing
with the "utmost assurance"14 that those promises we may see "afar
off" will one day bring all the blessings we hope for. In the name of
Jesus Christ, amen.
NOTES:
1. "A
Temple-Motivated People," Liahona, May 1995, 5; Ensign, Feb.
1995, 5.
2. Alma 32:21; emphasis added.
3. Hebrews 12:2.
4. See 1
Corinthians 16:13; James 1:6.
5. Hebrews 11:1.
6. Morris Calvin Phelps, Life History of Laura Clark (Archives of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, n.d.), microfilm, 3.
7. Hebrews 11:13.
8. Mark 9:23.
9. A New Witness for the Articles of Faith (1985), 187.
10. 1 Corinthians 16:13.
11. "Now Let Us Rejoice," Hymns, no. 3.
12. "A
Time of New Beginnings," Liahona, July 2000, 107; Ensign, May 2000, 87.
13. Bible Dictionary, "Faith," 669.
14. D&C
123:17.