The following is such a powerful message that we decided to post it in it's near fulness on this site. What greater witness can we have that from current Prophets and Apostles of the Lord, Jesus Christ? Just as he organized his church in his day - so has it been restored in it's fulness in our day. We are truly blessed to have current revelation on the things that matter most to us - and for our own personal salvation. As Women who love the Lord, Jesus Christ, and strive to follow His example in keeping His commandments and serving our fellowman - we also testify of His reality, His goodness, and His tender mercies towards the children of men. He loves and cares for us and is a real being of flesh and bones. His death and resurrection marked the path whereby we may also overcome all things and enter back into His presence - and that of our Father.
Elder Jeffery R. Holland |
In the Garden of Gethsemane
As
a young missionary, Elder Orson F. Whitney (1855–1931), who later
served in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, had a dream so powerful
that it changed his life forever. He later wrote:
“One
night I dreamed … that I was in the Garden of Gethsemane, a witness of
the Savior’s agony. … I stood behind a tree in the foreground. … Jesus,
with Peter, James, and John, came through a little wicket gate at my
right. Leaving the three Apostles there, after telling them to kneel and
pray, He passed over to the other side, where He also knelt and
prayed … : ‘Oh my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me;
nevertheless not as I will but as Thou wilt.’
“As
He prayed the tears streamed down His face, which was [turned] toward
me. I was so moved at the sight that I wept also, out of pure sympathy
with His great sorrow. My whole heart went out to Him. I loved Him with
all my soul and longed to be with Him as I longed for nothing else.
“Presently
He arose and walked to where those Apostles were kneeling—fast asleep!
He shook them gently, awoke them, and in a tone of tender reproach,
untinctured by the least show of anger or scolding, asked them if they
could not watch with Him one hour. …
“Returning
to His place, He prayed again and then went back and found them again
sleeping. Again He awoke them, admonished them, and returned and prayed
as before. Three times this happened, until I was perfectly familiar
with His appearance—face, form, and movements. He was of noble stature
and of majestic mien … the very God that He was and is, yet as meek and
lowly as a little child.
“All
at once the circumstance seemed to change. … Instead of before, it was
after the Crucifixion, and the Savior, with those three Apostles, now
stood together in a group at my left. They were about to depart and
ascend into heaven. I could endure it no longer. I ran from behind the
tree, fell at His feet, clasped Him around the knees, and begged Him to
take me with Him.
“I
shall never forget the kind and gentle manner in which He stooped and
raised me up and embraced me. It was so vivid, so real that I felt the
very warmth of His bosom against which I rested. Then He said: ‘No, my
son; these have finished their work, and they may go with me; but you
must stay and finish yours.’ Still I clung to Him. Gazing up into His
face—for He was taller than I—I besought Him most earnestly: ‘Well,
promise me that I will come to You at the last.’ He smiled sweetly and
tenderly and replied: ‘That will depend entirely upon yourself.’ I awoke
with a sob in my throat, and it was morning.”
Why an Atonement?
This
tender, personal glimpse of the Savior’s loving sacrifice is a fitting
introduction to the significance of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
Indeed the Atonement of the Only Begotten Son of God in the flesh is
the crucial foundation upon which all Christian doctrine rests and the
greatest expression of divine love this world has ever been given. Its
importance in The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints cannot be overstated. Every other principle,
commandment, and virtue of the restored gospel draws its significance
from this pivotal event.
The
Atonement was the foreordained but voluntary act of the Only Begotten
Son of God in which He offered His life and spiritual anguish as a
redeeming ransom for the effect of the Fall of Adam upon all mankind and
for the personal sins of all who repent.
The literal meaning of the English word Atonement
is self-evident: at-one-ment, the bringing together of things that have
been separated or estranged. The Atonement of Jesus Christ was
indispensable because of the separating transgression, or Fall, of Adam,
which brought two kinds of death into the world when Adam and Eve
partook of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
Physical death brought the separation of the spirit from the
body, and spiritual death brought the estrangement of both the spirit
and the body from God. As a result of the Fall, all persons born into
mortality would suffer these two kinds of death. But we must remember
the Fall was an essential part of Heavenly Father’s divine plan. Without
it no mortal children would have been born to Adam and Eve, and there
would have been no human family to experience opposition and growth, moral agency, and the joy of resurrection, redemption, and eternal life.
The
need for this Fall and for an atonement to compensate for it was
explained in a premortal Council in Heaven at which the spirits of the
entire human family attended and over which God the Father
presided. It was in this premortal setting that Christ volunteered to
honor the moral agency of all humankind even as He atoned for their
sins. In the process, He would return to the Father all glory for such
redemptive love.
This
infinite Atonement of Christ was possible because (1) He was the only
sinless man ever to live on this earth and therefore was not subject to
the spiritual death resulting from sin, (2) He was the Only Begotten of
the Father and therefore possessed the attributes of godhood that gave
Him power over physical death, and (3) He was apparently the only one sufficiently humble and
willing in the premortal council to be foreordained to that service.
The Gifts of Christ’s Atonement
Some
gifts coming from the Atonement are universal, infinite, and
unconditional. These include His ransom for Adam’s original
transgression so that no member of the human family is held responsible
for that sin.
Another universal gift is the Resurrection from the dead of
every man, woman, and child who lives, has ever lived, or ever will live
on earth.
Other
aspects of Christ’s atoning gift are conditional. They depend on one’s
diligence in keeping God’s commandments. For example, while all members
of the human family are freely given a reprieve from Adam’s sin through
no effort of their own, they are not given a reprieve from their own
sins unless they pledge faith in Christ, repent of those sins, are
baptized in His name, receive the gift of the Holy Ghost
and confirmation into Christ’s Church, and press forward in faithful
endurance the remainder of life’s journey. Of this personal challenge,
Christ said,
“For behold, I, God, have suffered these things for all, that they might not suffer if they would repent; “But if they would not repent they must suffer even as I.”
Furthermore,
although the Resurrection of the body is a free and universal gift from
Christ, a result of His victory over death, the nature of the
resurrected body (or “degree of glory” given it), as well as the time of
one’s Resurrection, is affected directly by one’s faithfulness in this
life. The Apostle Paul made clear, for example, that those fully
committed to Christ will “rise first” in the Resurrection. Modern revelation clarifies the different orders of resurrected bodies,
promising the highest degree of glory only to those who adhere to the principles and ordinances of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Of
course neither the unconditional nor the conditional blessings of the
Atonement are available except through the grace of Christ. Obviously
the unconditional blessings of the Atonement are unearned, but the
conditional ones are not fully merited either. By living faithfully and
keeping the commandments of God, one can receive additional privileges;
but they are still given freely, not technically earned. The Book of Mormon
declares emphatically that “there is no flesh that can dwell in the
presence of God, save it be through the merits, and mercy, and grace of
the Holy Messiah.”
By
this same grace, God provides for the salvation of little children, the
mentally impaired, those who lived without hearing the gospel of Jesus
Christ, and so forth: these are redeemed by the universal power of the
Atonement of Christ and will have the opportunity to receive the fulness
of the gospel after death, in the spirit world, where spirits reside
while awaiting the Resurrection.
Suffering and Triumph
To
begin to meet the demands of the Atonement, the sinless Christ went
into the Garden of Gethsemane, as Elder Whitney saw in his dream, there
to bear the agony of soul only He could bear. He “began to be sore
amazed and to be very heavy,” saying to Peter, James, and John, “My soul
is exceeding sorrowful, unto death.” Why? Because He suffered “the pains of all men, yea, the pains
of every living creature, both men, women, and children, who belong to
the family of Adam.”
He experienced “temptations, and pain of body, hunger, thirst,
and fatigue, even more than man can suffer, except it be unto death; for
behold, blood cometh from every pore, so great [was] his anguish.”
Through
this suffering, Jesus redeemed the souls of all men, women, and
children “that his bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the
flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people
according to their infirmities.”
In doing so, Christ “descended below all things”—including every
kind of sickness, infirmity, and dark despair experienced by every
mortal being—in order that He might “comprehend all things, that he
might be in all and through all things, the light of truth.”
The
utter loneliness and excruciating pain of the Atonement begun in
Gethsemane reached its zenith when, after unspeakable abuse at the hands
of Roman soldiers and others, Christ cried from the cross, “Eli, Eli,
lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken
me?”
In the depths of that anguish, even nature itself convulsed.
“There was a darkness over all the earth. … And the sun was darkened.”
“And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain from the
top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the rocks rent,”
causing many to exclaim, “The God of nature suffers.” Finally, even the seemingly unbearable had been borne, and Jesus said, “It is finished.”
“Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.”
Someday, somewhere, every human tongue will be called upon to
confess as did a Roman centurion who witnessed all of this, “Truly this
was the Son of God.”
To the thoughtful woman and man, it is “a matter of surpassing wonder”
that the voluntary and merciful sacrifice of a single being
could satisfy the infinite and eternal demands of justice, atone for
every human transgression and misdeed, and thereby sweep all humankind
into the encompassing arms of His merciful embrace. But so it is.
To
quote President John Taylor (1808–87): “In a manner to us
incomprehensible and inexplicable, He bore the weight of the sins of the
whole world; not only of Adam, but of his posterity; and in doing that,
opened the kingdom of heaven, not only to all believers and all who
obeyed the law of God, but to more than one-half of the human family who
die before they come to years of maturity, as well as to [those] who …
[die] without [the] law.”
As
Elder Whitney felt regarding this majestic gift and the giver of it,
may we so feel: “I was so moved at the [gift] that I wept … out of pure
sympathy. My whole heart went out to Him. I loved Him with all my soul
and longed to be with Him as I longed for nothing else.” Having already
offered the Atonement in our behalf, Christ has done His part to make
that longing a reality. The rest will depend entirely upon ourselves.
Wow, this was a powerful post on the Atonement. This was an awesome talk and I am happy that you used it for this beautiful Easter time. Enjoy your Easter moments and Blessings to you!
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