Friday, September 7, 2012

On Becoming One with God



In my readings this morning of Catherine Thomas's book, Light in the Wilderness, I rediscovered a favorite passage defining in a beautiful way what it means to become one with God, as we all are striving to do.  She first talks about the Savior and his relationship with the Father to illustrate what she means:

"Here we confront the mystery of identity.  Jesus is reffered to in scritpure as both Father and Son.  What is the nature of Jesus's identity if he is both Son and Father?  The annalogy of the water vessel helps.  As the vessel with water, the Lord's body contains His spirit.  The "vessel" itself has its own physical DNA, and the spirit its own eternally personal components.  That is, there are fundamental principles or parts in His soul that will endure in Him in their unique form forever, as there are in each of us.  But it appears that as He allows His own spirit to be mixed with an additional spirit, His spirit takes on the attributes, the consciousness, and the identity of that spirit being added to His.  In the scriptures, then, "Son" identifies the physical part of Him, the vessel part, with its unique components, personal history, and ministry; and "Father" identifies the predominant spirit that fills Him, making Him both the Father and the Son."

     I am in the Father, and the Father in me, and the Father and I are one-- [I am] the Father because he gave me of his fullness. (D&C 93:3)

"In the tabernacle of his body the Son voluntarily gave the predominance to His Fahter's spirit... This is not only the pattern for the Gods, but also for each person, as modeled by our Savior.  So we might say, as the Natural must yield to the Spiritual, so the Son yields his will to the Father's, so also must the Seeker put off his natural man and yield to the Son, ultimately giving the Lord the predominance in his soul (Mosiah 3:19).  As we see, this relationship of oneness between the Father and Son is not an anomaly, but a model for Man.  Here we behold a great chain of linked beings, reaching into eternity. 

Therefore, following this model, as a person fully yields his will to God's, he retains not only his own identity, but also takes on the identity of that Eternal Being that fills him.  This person comes alive in Christ (see 2 N 25:25), is empowered by Him to speak and to act in the living stream of godliness, of revelation, and heavenly empowerment, this loving current of highter Life.  Elder F. Enzio Busche describes this relationship with the Savior:

     With this fulfillment of love [of our Heavenly Father] in our hearts, we will never be happy anymore just by being ourselves or living our own lives.  We will not be satisfied until we have surrendered our lives into the arms of the loving Christ, and until He has become the doer of all our deeds and He has become the speaker of all our words"  (Truth Is the Issue, Ensign, Novemember 1993, 25).
                           

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

The Light of His Countenance


I often return to the beautiful account of the Savior blessing the Nephite children in 3 Nephi Chapter 17. This chapter touches on the soul’s deepest-seated needs in an unforgettable way. There are things our spirits must have known before birth, such as our Father’s presence, the visitation of angels and surely other things that are unspeakable. Here, we see that Jesus Christ is able to fully meet those yearnings, which often go unrecognized, but which are present, I believe in all of us. His presence and love have become a complete and unspeakable surrogate for that of the Father, until we can actually re-enter that presence forever. In Jesus’ presence, our bodies and souls are healed from the deformities and traumas of mortality. Those who we most love are also healed of their infirmities. Our children and our children’s children are blessed with the promises of Abraham, and other things which cannot even be written. Our minds and hearts are opened up to behold that which “eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath entered into the heart of man.”

Having received the fullness of the Father, he imparts unto us that which is utterly incomprehensible to the mortal mind and we are transformed into celestial beings fit for the eternities, partaking as heirs with Him of the Father’s fullness. Many of these gifts and truths are evidently not withheld from men in mortality, as is demonstrated by this remarkable account.  These ordinary people were blessed, I’m sure, as much as any have ever been blessed. I cannot deny the feeling that all those who wait upon the Lord will find Him in like manner—be it in this life or in the next. We read in D&C 88 the parable of a master who abides with his twelve servants, each in their turn. I must believe that all those who live and hope for such a communion with Jesus Christ will find Him, each in turn, and will receive as these Nephites did, more than their hearts could have dared to seek.

In the Gospel of John, we read about the Lord abiding with all those who love Him and keep His commandments, both through His own presence and through another comforter, which is the Holy Ghost. It is sweet to remember that the Nephites, after having tasted of this intimate and glorious time with the Lord desired the gift of the Holy Ghost above all things. Thus, our souls may be equally as filled as theirs were, and our yearnings equally as met as we partake continuously of the very same gift. As promised to us so very many times in the scriptures, we may hope for our turn in His presence and prepare diligently for the very same communion with Him--but as we wait upon Him, the light of His countenance may shine upon us as it did upon them, and we may be pure as His disciples, because the gift of the Holy Ghost is ours to receive in fullness (See chapter 19). 

-Ben

Sunday, September 2, 2012

On Being Born of God




"Marvel not", declares Alma, "That all mankind, yea, men and women, all nations, kindreds, tongues and people, must be born again; yea, born of God, changed from their carnal and fallen state, to a state of righteousness.... And thus they be come new creatures" (Mosiah 27:25-26).

I love the process and final reward that President Kimball describes for this mighty change that we must all achieve:

"I have learned that where there is a prayerful heart, a hungering after righteousness, a forsaking of sins, and obedience to the commandments of God, the Lord pours out more and more light until there is finally power to pierce the heavenly veil and to know more than man knows.  A person of such righteousness has the priceless promise that one day he shall see the Lord's face and know that he is."  (D&C 93:1)