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However Long and Hard the Road
"Often in our most difficult times the only thing we can do is endure. We may have no idea what the final cost in suffering or sacrifice may be, but we can vow never to give up. In doing so we will learn that there is no worthy task so great nor burden so heavy that will not yield to our perseverance. We can make it...however long and hard the road."
So writes Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy in The Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter-day Saints. The chapters in this volume, messages of hope and comfort, have been adapted from addresses given and essays written by Elder Holland during the time he served as president of Brigham Young University.
"All of my professional life has been spent with young people," he explains, "and universally they (like the rest of us) have needed support, encouragement, reassurance, and confidence. They have, in short, needed hope--that incentive to keep moving, keep trying, and keep believing until hope's siter virtues of faith and charity can also work their miracles."
Elder Holland illustrates his messages with examples from classical and current literature, from the lives of individuals in the scriptures and in church history, and especially from the life and teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. He explains how others have overcome temptations and feelings of inadequacy and, through repentance, have obtained forgiveness and strength--and how we too may find success in our own searchings...however long and hard the road.
An Invitation to Exaltation
President Thomas S. Monson expounds upon these questions in light of modern revelation and scriptures to help us separate truth from trivia and embrace an eternal perspective of our Heavenly Father's plan. This is a comforting reacquaintance with vital doctrines of the Lord's restored gospel.
Moving in His Majesty and Power
If such a thing were possible, Elder Neal A. Maxwell became even more reflective and tender toward the end of his life. Just before his passing, in July 2004, he completed this final book of thoughts and reflections.
In it are three chapters adapted from landmark talks that have not previously appeared in any book--"The Cosmos," "Free to Choose," and "Unto This Very Purpose."
Using a style reminiscent of his Whom the Lord Loveth, Elder Maxwell also ponders such themes as suffering, dealing with the onslaught of evil in today's world, and preparing to live in a celestial culture.
Filled with original thoughts expressed in his distinctive and lyrical style and celebrating his love of the Lord, this book is vintage Elder Maxwell and a fitting benediction to his vast body of inspirational writings.
All These Things Shall Give Thee Experience
In the midst of deep affliction, the Prophet Joseph Smith was told, "All these things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good." The world at that moment was shown anew that God is aware of man's suffering, and that pain is not without purpose. Such concepts are not always easy to accept, but, as Elder Maxwell observes, "the hardness is usually not in their complexity, but in the deep demands these doctrines make on us."
All These Things Shall Give Thee Experience focuses on some of the "hard doctrines" that members of the Church must grapple with in the latter days. This book will help the Saints prepare for the trials ahead, while assuring them that the power of God's love is constantly available to the faithful.
Not My Will, But Thine
The spiritual life consists of many virtues and activities -- earnest prayer, scripture study, love of fellowman, caring service -- to name a few. Undergirding all, it seems, is attitude toward God.
Here Elder Neal A. Maxwell shows how crucial is that element. For the disciple, he points out, the teaching and example of Jesus Christ shows an inescapable pattern -- submission always to the Father's will. The Savior's greatest test and greatest triumph -- the love-inspired Atonement -- capsulizes and personifies this spirit: "Not my will, but thine." As he bore and "learned . . . obedience by the things which he suffered," so we should bear our infinitely lighter burdens or problems, whether they result from life's vicissitudes or from our Father's deliberate tutor process. We should, as King Benjamin put it, submit to God's will "even as a child doth submit to his father."
The author offers sound advice on the compelling reasons as well as on the "how-to." One reason is that there is no way to go around this life -- we have to go through it. As with the Prophet Joseph, "all these things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good" -- they signify that the Lord finds us worthy, at least potentially, of his tutorial care, which may include some custom-made trials. But there is a glorious promise for those who "endure well" -- no less than eternal life, God's greatest gift.
In this superbly creative style the author explores this important principle of willing, loving submission to our Heavenly Father. He clearly shows this to be not a sacrifice of will but an elevation to a higher purpose and privilege. As such, it offers a life of faith, peace, and joy in the Lord.