Sunday, August 25, 2013

Come Follow Me

This week was another good week for us in Bata.  We were able to get a bunch of work done.  We were also able to have another baptism and another candidate be interviewed for baptism for next week.  This means that we have had the wonderful opportunity to baptize every single week this month.  We are still lining them up for September.  We are very excited about the direction of the work here in Bata.

I had a great experience this week in my personal study.  I decided that I wanted to more fully study our Savior's invitation to "Come Follow Me."  What I expected to be wrapped up on Tuesday, ended up going clear until Friday.  It was an extremely spiritual experience for me.  I would like to share a little of what I wrote as a conclusion in my study journal.

So I have come to notice in life, and especially on my mission, that when things are going good I better get ready . . . meaning usually some type of trial is coming my way! My study this week started with a question as to why trials always seem to happen to followers of Christ.  Sometimes more so than those who aren't attempting to keep His commandments.  Anyways, that question turned into this.  I know it is kinda like a talk, but I copied it straight from my study journal.  I hope this can help you guys in some way.  It will be better if you read the scriptures with it.

One well known story in the Bible is in Matthew 4:19.  The Savior calls two fishermen, Simon Peter and his brother, Andrew, to "follow me and I will make you fishers of men."  I have thought a lot about this invitation and about how we can apply it to ourselves as followers of Christ.  What also is interesting to me is the reaction of the two men, which in the next verse states that "they went straightway and left their nets and followed Him."  It is simply amazing to me that these two men had such incredible faith from the very start, in a man that they had never before seen or heard.  They followed him, even though they had absolutely no idea how hard that path they chose to follow would be.  They also had no idea how great the reward would be for walking such a hard path.

The Savior's invitation to "follow me" is extended to all of us.  As members of His Church, we have accepted the call to follow him no matter where that path leads.  One part of the covenant we make at baptism is to endure to the end.  I feel like a small subcategory of that commandment is given in the hymn, Come Follow Me (#116).  It says, "Come follow me, the Savior says.  Then let us in, His footsteps tread . . ."

Let us in His footsteps tread.  Now I understand I am taking some liberty in saying this is a commandment, but I believe that is what the Savior implied when He made the invitation to Peter and Andrew, and to us (2 Nephi 31:10).  I truly believe that we must follow the Savior through all the aspects of His life.  So I want to examine just exactly where this path that we must follow the Savior will lead.

Very little is told about the early life of Jesus.  However, in Luke 2:40, it says our Savior "grew and waxed strong in the spirit and in wisdom."  We must do this also.  We must grow in spiritual knowledge and in wisdom.  We will be successful in following the Savior in this part of His life by doing as the Sons of Mosiah did in Alma 17:2-3.  Diligent scripture study, fasting, and prayer is the only way to do this.  We must also " . . .Feast upon the words of Christ . . . " (2 Nephi 32:3), if we desire to be successful in the attempt to gain much needed spiritual knowledge.

Next, our Savior was baptized by someone holding the proper priesthood authority.  John the Baptist was the only one on Earth at that time who, by virtue of lineage, held the right of the Aaronic Priesthood.  Jesus went to him to be baptized, showing us that we too must be baptized by someone holding the proper authority if we wish to receive the blessings that come to all those who have been baptized--namely receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost.  And so, those who want to fully follow our Savior must be baptized into this church, which is the only church that holds that restored priesthood authority.

Now I want to look at a point in the Savior's life that, unfortunately, I knew very little about before my mission.  After being baptized, Jesus went into the wilderness where He fasted for 40 days.  At the close of this fast, the Devil himself--that angel that was cast out of Heaven--came to tempt our Lord.  I want to pause and make something clear--it is not a sin to be tempted!  Our Savior was tempted and He was perfect.  If being tempted is a sin, then even our Savior wouldn't be perfect.  However, what is a sin is acting on such temptation.  Jesus asks us to do as He did when faced with temptation--to resist.  At all costs we need to resist temptation!  Three times our Savior resisted the temptation for food, for a miraculous proclamation of his Messiahship, and for all the kingdoms and principalities in the world.  His greatest desire for us as we "follow Him" is to say as He said to the Master Tempter, "Get thee hence Satan."  I promise that the best way to resist temptation is to stay worthy to have the Holy Ghost with you.  Be very clear on this--THE HOLY GHOST WILL NOT FOLLOW YOU ACROSS ENEMY LINES.  He will not even come close to it.  So don't cross them either.  Stay out of situations that don't feel right.  Stay out of situations that make it hard to live the standards of the Gospel.  Because if you enter into the Devil's territory, you will be all alone.

These following scenes of the Savior's life are my focus.  The path that our Savior walked was not easy, nor was it meant to be.  Much too quickly Jesus found himself in Gethsemane, suffering for the sins of a wicked world.  We cannot, and I promise we never will, understand what that experience was like for Him.  As I try to draw comparisons to our lives, I want to reiterate that any trial, sorrow, or heartache that we feel in this life is infinitesimally small compared to what our Savior felt in that sacred garden,  But the sad fact of the matter is, that we will all walk through our own Gethsemanes.  We will all feel pain, sorrow, and heartache.  Most times because of our own mistakes, but sometimes because of the mistakes of others.  Even harder, sometimes because it is the will of the Father.  Heavenly Father gives us trials to test us and to prove us (Mosiah 23:21)  This life was made as a test!  It isn't supposed to be easy.  It wasn't for Jesus Christ and it won't be for those who follow him.  But in these terrible and difficult situations, we must find the courage from within to say as the Savior said in Matthew 26:39.  We need to say, in effect, "If at all possible Father, stop this from happening.  Don't make me go through this, but not as I will but as though wilt."

Next is a place called Calvary.  Jesus Chris was accused of a lie, unfairly tried in a night trial (which was outlawed by Jewish Law), and sentenced to death by crucifixion (a Roman method for killing criminals).  The parallel I want to draw here is a small variation from the last one, because none of us will be asked to suffer death by such an inhuman method.  After all our Master had gone through, as weak and physically exhausted as He was, all the tortures of Gethsemane came back.  For three hours while hanging on the cross, our Savior suffered for the sins of everyone.  And this time, He did it alone.  Even He was shocked when all Heavenly help left Him.  He was being asked to go through this as a man--a very mortal, very alone man.  This caused Him to make a very humble and heart-wrenching plea to the Father.  "Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? or "My God, My God, why hast though forsaken me (Matthew 27:46)?"  I do not want to cheapen the experience of our Savior in any way, but we will all at some point or another want to ask our Father in Heaven why He has forgotten us.  Prayers may go unanswered, trials may push us past what we feel like is our breaking point.  But please remember, everything our Heavenly Father does has a purpose.  Christ needed to experience that by himself, so that in our times of struggle we can be assured that He has felt our pain and that He knows how to succor us.  I want to finish this with a quote by Jeffrey R. Holland, "If at times you feel like your prayers aren't being answered, take heart.  One greater than you once exclaimed "Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?'"

The last stop on the tour of our Savior's life, and the path we all must walk, starts in a garden tomb where our Lord received a perfect resurrected body.   A body that will never again be subjected to pain, death, or sickness.  This body is as real, as tangible, and perfect as we could possibly imagine.  And, the best part, we will all receive a body like this.  Whether we are wicked or righteous, because of our Savior's love, we will all receive resurrected bodies.  What happens next is where the invitation to "Come follow me" reaches its final destination.  Yes, that invitation leads to the Celestial Kingdom of Heavenly Father.  Jesus Christ has received His throne, which sits adjacent to our Father's throne in Heaven.  And not only has His place been made ready for Him, He is making and preparing our places as well (John 14:2).  We have this promise from our resurrected Savior from D&C 58:3-4.  He knows first hand that the glory of eternity only follows after much tribulation.  His invitation leads to more glory than we, like Peter and Andrew before us, can even imagine.

I know that Jesus Christ lives.  I know that for my self, independent of any other person's testimony.  I know that He prepared the way for us to return to our Father's presence.  I know that His invitation to "Come follow me," will lead each of us through our own Gethsemanes and our own Calverys.  But, without the temptations in the wilderness, without His suffering in the Garden and subsequent death on the cross, which was followed by His glorious resurrection, without those bitter lows in the life of Jesus Christ, He wouldn't be our Savior at all.  It was because He did the things He didn't particularly want to do, but did because of His undying love for us, that all of us may follow Him into the kingdom of our Father.  He is our Savior!  We all must follow Him through the highs and lows that this life throws at us if we want to become worthy of eternal glory.  I testify of this in Jesus Christ's name, Amen.

Cherlyn Mae--One of the cutest 9 year olds ever!

Raffy and Rose Ann--Raffy leaves Friday on his mission.  



Cole and Elder May

Cole and Elder Stagg

Cole & Sister Maloata--one of the coolest sisters there!

Elder Zobell, Cole, Elder Stagg, and Elder May

Elder Stagg and Cole

The Zone

Always great to see him happy!!!!

Cole & Elder Stagg at the "Taj Mahal" of the Philippines

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