Thursday, March 25, 2010

Prison Temple


"Most of us, most of the time, speak of the facility at Liberty as a 'jail' or a 'prison'—and certainly it was that. But Elder Brigham H. Roberts (1857–1933) of the First Council of the Seventy, in recording the history of the Church, spoke of the facility as a temple, or, more accurately, a 'prison-temple.' Elder Neal A. Maxwell (1926–2004) used the same phrasing in some of his writings. Certainly this prison-temple lacked the purity, beauty, comfort, and cleanliness of our modern temples. The speech and behavior of the guards and criminals who came there were anything but temple-like. In fact, the restricting brutality and injustice of this experience at Liberty would make it seem the very antithesis of the liberating, merciful spirit of our temples and the ordinances performed in them."So in what sense could Liberty Jail be called a 'temple,' and what does such a title tell us about God's love and teachings, including where and when that love and those teachings are made manifest? In precisely this sense: that you can have sacred, revelatory, profoundly instructive experiences with the Lord in any situation you are in. Indeed, you can have sacred, revelatory, profoundly instructive experiences with the Lord in the most miserable experiences of your life—in the worst settings, while enduring the most painful injustices, when facing the most insurmountable odds and opposition you have ever faced."

Jeffrey R. Holland, "Lessons from Liberty Jail," Ensign, Sept. 2009, 28

Topics: Faith

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Man is a mystery to himself...

“Man is a mystery to himself, and but few of the inhabitants of the earth inquire into their own organization . . . A man cannot find out himself without the light of revelation; he has to turn round and seek to the Lord his God, in order to find out himself” (Brigham Young, JD 7:1, 4:271).

I hope that each of us, especially those who claim to be "spiritual" or "religious" spend time each day, if not in every moment, inquiring as to our "own organization." What am I? Who am I? This question is not to be asked once and then forgotten but should pervade our waking consciousness. In time, one will find that while his physical body sleeps, he begins to awaken in the dream state as well.