I'm so grateful to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I'm so grateful for missionaries... and that my brother is preparing to serve the Lord and spread the gospel to all the ends of the world. His excitement reminds me of what a great and marvelous work we are part of.
I love that the talks are online now from General Conference. I love reading the inspired words of a living prophet and modern day apostles. I had quite a few favorite talks (don't we all enjoy most of them?) but one that stood our in particular was Elder Holland's. He is a powerful speaker and always reaches right to my soul. You can read the entire talk here.
"To which Jesus responded (and here again I acknowledge my nonscriptural elaboration), perhaps saying something like... What I need, Peter, are disciples—and I need them forever. I need someone to feed my sheep and save my lambs. I need someone to preach
my gospel and defend my faith. I need someone who loves me, truly,
truly loves me, and loves what our Father in Heaven has commissioned me
to do. Ours is not a feeble message. It is not a fleeting task. It is
not hapless; it is not hopeless; it is not to be consigned to the ash
heap of history. It is the work of Almighty God, and it is to change the
world. So, Peter, for the second and presumably the last time, I am
asking you to leave all this and to go teach and testify, labor and
serve loyally until the day in which they will do to you exactly what
they did to me.
My beloved brothers and sisters, I am not certain just what our
experience will be on Judgment Day, but I will be very surprised if at
some point in that conversation, God does not ask us exactly what Christ
asked Peter: “Did you love me?” I think He will want to know if in our
very mortal, very inadequate, and sometimes childish grasp of things,
did we at least understand one commandment, the first and
greatest commandment of them all—“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and
with all thy mind.”13
And if at such a moment we can stammer out, “Yea, Lord, thou knowest
that I love thee,” then He may remind us that the crowning
characteristic of love is always loyalty.
“If ye love me, keep my commandments,”14
Jesus said. So we have neighbors to bless, children to protect, the
poor to lift up, and the truth to defend. We have wrongs to make right,
truths to share, and good to do. In short, we have a life of devoted
discipleship to give in demonstrating our love of the Lord. We can’t
quit and we can’t go back. After an encounter with the living Son of the
living God, nothing is ever again to be as it was before. The
Crucifixion, Atonement, and Resurrection
of Jesus Christ mark the beginning of a Christian life, not the end of
it. It was this truth, this reality, that allowed a handful of Galilean
fishermen-turned-again-Apostles without “a single synagogue or sword”15 to leave those nets a second time and go on to shape the history of the world in which we now live.
To all within the sound of my voice, the voice of Christ comes ringing
down through the halls of time, asking each one of us while there is
time, “Do you love me?” And for every one of us, I answer with my honor
and my soul, “Yea, Lord, we do love thee.” And having set our “hand to
the plough,”17
we will never look back until this work is finished and love of God and
neighbor rules the world. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen."
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