A
Portion of President James E. Faust talk “The Virtues of
Righteous Daughters of God,” Ensign, May 2003, 108
"I
encourage you to strengthen the
virtues you have already acquired and
resolve to develop many others.
Tonight
I would like to speak of some of those
virtues. Many people do not fully
understand the meaning of
virtue. One
commonly understood meaning is to be chaste or morally clean, but
virtue in its
fuller sense encompasses all traits of righteousness that help us form
our character. An old sampler found in a museum in Newfoundland,
stitched in 1813, reads: “Virtue
is the chiefest beauty of the mind, the noblest ornament of humankind.
Virtue
is our safeguard and our guiding star that stirs up reason when our
senses err.”
May I
suggest 10 virtues
that each of you can pursue in your quest for excellence and
happiness:
1. Faith
I list
the virtue
of faith first because it is the most important. The Prophet Joseph
Smith taught that faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is “the foundation of
all righteousness.”
I promise you sweet young ladies if you will strive to
live the commandments, your faith will continue to grow. In exercising
faith, we become cheerful and optimistic, charitable and courageous,
because faith is the moving cause of all of these
virtues.
2. Honesty
A young
woman on a university volleyball team tells of the time when she and
her friend Muki were playing together in a championship match:
“I
remember it being a close game. … Gracie [on our opponents’ team]
rounded her approach, jumped, and smacked the ball as hard as she
could. … The line judges signaled out, and the head official raised
his finger to show a point for [our team]. We began giving our usual
high fives when we noticed that Muki was hand-motioning to the
official that she touched the ball on her block. Muki was calling her
own touch. The line judges … were … signaling out, [indicating] that
there was no touch.
“The
quiet, withdrawn Muki had showed an act of integrity and honesty like
I had never seen before. Gracie Shute was so impressed that she talked
with Muki after the match. … Muki later gave Gracie a Book of Mormon.
I don’t know if Gracie has read the book … , but I do know that Gracie
was touched by Muki’s example, as we all were.”
You
cannot be honest with others unless you are honest with yourself.
3.
Chastity
In “The
Family: A Proclamation to the World,” we read, “The sacred powers of
procreation are to be employed only between man and woman, lawfully
wedded as husband and wife.”
Furthermore, the Lord says in the Book of Mormon, “I, the
Lord God, delight in the chastity of women.”
Those who engage in physical intimacies with someone
outside of marriage are likely to suffer feelings of guilt as well as
deep emotional and physical hurt. Intimate relationships between men
and women outside the bounds the Lord has set bring great misery,
shame, degradation, and unhappiness to those involved.
In
contrast, when these sacred gifts are exercised as the Lord intended
within the bounds of a temple marriage, they bring us our greatest joy
and happiness. We become co-creators with God in having family and
posterity. Chastity before marriage followed by fidelity after
marriage is a sacred passport to self-respect and happiness for
everyone. President N. Eldon Tanner gave some good advice that I would
like to repeat: “Always remember that you can go much further on
respect than on popularity.”
I refer you to the excellent counsel on sexual purity
contained in the pamphlet For the Strength of Youth.
4.
Humility
Humility is all about keeping one’s balance. For example, when you
receive a compliment, receive it graciously, but don’t let it go to
your head. You young ladies have learned much, but you have more to
learn. A person who is humble is teachable. Indeed, the Lord has
promised, “For my Spirit is sent forth into the world to enlighten the
humble and contrite.”
7 One of my favorite sayings is this: “Learn to say, ‘I
don’t know.’ If used when appropriate, it will be often.”
5.
Self-Discipline
You
must have the strength to discipline yourselves so that you can
accomplish your goals and enhance your natural strengths. Habits of
self-discipline formed while you are young will become part of the
makeup of your character for the rest of your lives. The character
thus formed from self-discipline will rise with you in the
Resurrection.
The
principle of work is part of self-discipline. Now, my dear young
sisters, I have lived a good many years longer than you, but even back
in Grandpa’s time there was something to make you want to lie down and
go to sleep—they called it work.
6.
Fairness
We need
to be fair and compassionate in our dealings with other human beings.
The Savior gave us the parable of the unjust servant who owed a large
sum of money. His master forgave him the debt, but that same servant
went out and had a fellow servant put into prison for a much smaller
debt. Their master rebuked him for not showing the same compassion
that he had himself received, and then sent him to the same fate as
his fellow servant.
If you
will be fair to other people, they will more likely be fair to you.
The story is told of a Sunday School teacher who was teaching this
principle. She told her class, “Remember, we are here to help others.”
A girl in her class asked, “Then what are the others here for?”
7.
Moderation
Part of
the spirit of the Word of Wisdom is moderation in all things, except
those things specifically forbidden by the Lord. It is well to avoid
extremes in dress, hairstyles, makeup, conduct, speech, and music.
Extremes may attract the attention of some, but they are more likely
to turn off those you really want to impress.
When I
was a young man, my friends and I went to an amusement park, where we
rode the flying saucer. It was shaped something like an upside-down
plate that went round and round. Most of us tried to get to the middle
so we wouldn’t be thrown off by the centrifugal force as the saucer
picked up speed. Sometimes those on the edge would grab a friend who
was closer to the middle, but that would pull them both completely off
the saucer. I soon recognized that the centrifugal force was far less
powerful in the middle. I was quite safe in the center even though the
saucer was still spinning. But it was risky when someone on the fringe
latched on to me. I learned that safety comes from staying close to
the center.
8.
Cleanliness
Years
ago, President Howard W. Hunter, Sister Faust, and I visited with some
BYU students when the study abroad program in Jerusalem was housed in
a kibbutz, an Israeli hostelry. On the door of two of the students was
a notice that read, “If cleanliness is next to godliness, welcome to
purgatory!”
President Hinckley gave some excellent counsel when he said: “Be clean
in dress and manner. … The age in which we are living now has become
an age of sloppy dress and sloppy manners. But I am not so concerned
about what you wear as I am that it be clean. … Be sure of your
personal cleanliness.”
Remember that you and the Church will be judged in part by
your cleanliness and neatness in appearance.
9. Courage
You
precious young ladies will need a lot of courage—courage to stand up
to peer pressure, to resist temptation, to withstand ridicule or
ostracism, to stand up for the truth. You will also need courage to
face the challenges of life. One young woman who was a cross-country
runner wrote: “I am often tempted to give up and quit during a race.
During my first race this year, when I was just about to be
overpowered and stop running, the words to the third verse of ‘How
Firm a Foundation’ filled my mind. The words gave me the courage to
finish the race.”
Fear not,
I am with thee; oh, be not dismayed,
For I am thy God and will still give thee aid.
I’ll strengthen thee, help thee, and cause thee to stand, …
Upheld by my righteous, omnipotent hand.
10. Grace
We are
told in the Doctrine and Covenants that we are to “grow in grace.”
Grace is a God-given
virtue. It is a disposition to be kind
and to do good. It is a charming trait or accomplishment, “a
pleasingly graceful appearance.”
Charm is attractiveness which comes from a feeling of
personal dignity, an inner beauty that comes from a feeling of
self-worth. It has been said that your expression is the most
important thing you can wear. A fine young single man I know has a
list of qualities he is looking for in his future wife. Cheerfulness
is at the top of the list.
We
frequently find that the influence of good women is underrated. It is
an influence that is often subtle but yet has tremendous consequences.
One woman can make a great difference for a whole nation. I cite two
examples from the scriptures, one for evil and one for good.
In the
book of Ether, Jared’s beautiful daughter enticed Akish to marry her
through a seductive dance. Akish was to pay for her hand in marriage
by murdering her grandfather, King Omer, so that her father could
become the king. At her urging, Akish formed oath-bound secret
combinations which caused the destruction of the Jaredite nation.
On the
other hand, Esther, a Jewess in the Old Testament, saved her people.
When the Jews were in captivity, Esther was married to King Ahasuerus.
The king signed a decree that all Jews were to be put to death.
Esther’s cousin Mordecai urged her to intercede with the king on
behalf of her people by saying to her, “Who knoweth whether thou art
come to the kingdom for such a time as this?”
Esther, at the peril of her own life, pled with the king
that her people should be spared. The king listened to her entreaty,
and they were saved. One woman can make a great difference, even for a
nation.
These
are challenging times. I believe your spirits may have been reserved
for these latter days; that you, like Esther, have come to earth “for
such a time as this.” It may be that your most significant,
everlasting achievements will be your righteous influence on others,
that your divine feminine inner beauty and intuition will find
expression in your quiet strength, gentleness, dignity, charm,
graciousness, creativity, sensitivity, radiance, and spirituality.
Enhance these sublime feminine gifts. They will make you appealing and
even irresistible as you serve others as the handmaidens of God.
I
testify that if you practice these
virtues, you will be able to “press
forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of
hope, and a love of God and of all men.”
In the name of Jesus Christ, amen
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