Come, Let Us Walk in the Light of the Lord
Mary Ellen Smoot
Relief Society General President
Ensign, Nov. 1998, 89
Come,
Ive always loved receiving invitations. Do you? Do you ever like to
imagine someday you will be invited to something grand, some event that will acknowledge
your significance, your immeasurable worth? The anticipation is at least as much fun as
the event itself. Even the mundane tasks add excitement and meaning when you prepare and
plan for an event to which youve been invited. To this day, any envelope arriving in
our mail that even resembles an invitation is the first to be opened.
Unfortunately, all invitations are not of equal value. Some come as enticements or
solicitations. Whether arriving in the mail, through the computer, or on television, they
can lure and temptand actually mislead. But, thankfully, the invitations we receive
from the scriptures, the prophets, and the Holy Ghost are invitations we can count on.
They give us direction, peace, comfort, and joy. A still, small voice speaks to us and
encourages righteous living. We must listen carefully to His beckoning and search our
souls. As we do, clouds of darkness will dispel and the glorious light of God will fill
our beings.
Invitations from the Lord are vital. They guide us back to our Heavenly Father and lead
us in the way of truth and righteousness. Truly they acknowledge our infinite worth as
daughters of God. They are so lovingly personalized. They come from our Heavenly Father.
He speaks to us in a language of invitations: "Come unto me," "Follow
me," "Come ye."
This evening, the Relief Society general presidency would like to extend an invitation
to each of you: "Come ye, and let us walk in the light of the Lord" (Isa. 2:5). Please choose to RSVP, which is
a French term indicating "answer if you please."
Isaiah saw the many people going up to the house of the Lord, learning the ways of God
and living peaceably with each other. He wanted all to take part. And so he invited them,
just as we invite now: "Come ye, and let us walk in the light of the Lord" (Isa. 2:5).
My great-great-grandfather Israel Stoddard accepted an invitation to join the Church in
1842. Then he accepted another invitation to join the Saints, and the family moved from
New Jersey to Nauvoo. When President Brigham Young extended an invitation to follow him
west, they accepted.
As the family crossed the Mississippi River, they looked back and watched as their home
was burned. Because of exposure to harsh elements and hardships their mother died, five
weeks later the infant baby died, and shortly thereafter the father passed away. As my
grandmother wrote, "This left five Stoddard children homeless and almost penniless
but not friendless as the Saints were good to them."
This invitation took the lives of the parents and their small child; however, it bound
them together eternally.
Consider with me, for a moment, what it means to walk in the light of the Lord. First
of all, well have lightlight in our countenances, light in our outlook, light
even when darkness surrounds us. And it also means we will walk with purpose and
direction.
The Savior taught us the way when He delivered the parable of the 10 virgins, the
parable of the talents, and the parable of the sheep and the goats during the last week of
His life. Using these parables in Matthew 25 as my guide, Id like to review three
lessons that Christ taught. As we listen and obey, we become sisters of light and truth.
First, the parable of the 10 virgins teaches us to walk in His light by being
spiritually prepared.
The Savior likened the kingdom of heaven unto 10 virgins who took their lamps and went
forth to meet the bridegroom. Five of the virgins took oil for their lamps and when the
bridegroom came, they were prepared to receive him. While the foolish five were scurrying
to find some more oil, the bridegroom came, and only "they that were ready went in
with him" (see Matt. 25:1-10).
Sisters, are we ready? Are we individually and collectively in the process of preparing
ourselves for the generous gifts that the Lord has promised to all who remain faithful?
Are we prepared to receive His light?
President Kimball has given some direction on how to fill our lamps with oil:
"Attendance at sacrament meetings adds oil to our lamps, drop by drop over the years.
Fasting, family prayer, home teaching [and visiting teaching], control of bodily
appetites, preaching the gospel, studying the scriptureseach act of dedication and
obedience is a drop added to our store. Deeds of kindness, payment of offerings and
tithes, chaste thoughts and actions, marriage in the covenant for eternitythese,
too, contribute
to the oil with which we can [by] midnight [be ready]."
Let me share with you the feelings of a sister about how Relief Society helped her to
spiritually prepare. I was so inspired by her faith that I asked her to write her
testimony and send it to me. Allow me to read a portion of it.
She writes: "What a blessing the Relief Society has been in my life. I was
divorceda single mother of a small daughter. I had also lost a son. I spent hours on
my knees calling for help from my Savior and Heavenly Father. But there was the Relief
Society. It was my organization. All week I struggled trying to provide for my little
daughter and myself on my small wages and minimal education. Every Sunday we went to
church. It seemed to me that going to Relief Society each week helped me become a stronger
and better sister. Not that I missed my other meetings; I didnt. I went because I
knew thats where I was supposed to be. I went and then feasted on the word and
especially Relief Society. It was my relief and my society. I
belonged; I felt a part. I lost myself in lessons, service to others
and to my
little child. I found if I kept my mind and hands busy there was less time to think of the
pain of the past.
But through all those years what I remember most was the
belonging I feltto the organization my Lord and Savior gave to all the sisters, not
just to me."
As sisters in Relief Society we are to assist one another preparing for the day the
bridegroom returns. By actively taking part in the Relief Society organization, our lamps
will be full. Our faith will remain strong.
One of the gifts God has promised to all who earnestly seek Him is faith. Elder Bruce
R. McConkie explained: "Faith is a gift of God bestowed as a reward for personal
righteousness. It is always given when righteousness is present, and the greater the
measure of obedience to Gods laws the greater will be the endowment of faith."
Faith and all spiritual gifts are available to everyone who is willing to live for
them. Many times we think just being a member of the Church will entitle us to all the
Lord has promised. But each blessing requires obedience. The Lord declared, "When we
obtain any blessing from God, it is by obedience to that law upon which it is
predicated" (D&C 130:21). We
gain strength by living the commandments.
So if we desire to walk in the light of the Lord, we put one spiritual foot in front of
the other. We follow the path of spiritual preparedness as it is set forth in scripture
and by our living prophets. We take full fellowship in the Relief Society organization.
This society, established and directed by our prophets through divine inspiration, is not
just a Sunday meeting. It is an organization to bring sisters and their families unto
Christ.
Second, as we work under the direction of and in harmony with priesthood leaders, and
with one another, the Lord would have us walk in His light by developing our talents.
Another parable the Savior shared during the last week of His life was the parable of the
talents. You all know the story and its message. Allow me to review it with you. The Lord
likened the kingdom of heaven to "a man travelling into a far country, who called his
own servants, and delivered unto them his goods.
"And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one" (Matt. 25:14-15).
When the master asked for an accounting of the talents, he was pleased with the one who
had five talents and gained five more. He was also pleased with the servant who had two
talents and gained two more. But he was not at all pleased with the servant who was given
one talent and buried it in the earth. He took the talent from this servant and gave it to
another (see Matt. 25:16-30).
I fully believe that our talents are developed as we are called upon to serve. If we
will faithfully accept the call, hidden talents will be discovered, such as love;
compassion; discernment; being a good friend, peacemaker, teacher, leader, homemaker,
writer, researcherthese are all talents.
As a teenager I attended stake conference with my parents. Elder Harold B. Lee was the
presiding authority and speaker.
My father had been up all night long watering his 10-acre field of strawberries. He was
fighting to stay awake and most of the time losing the battle. But he wouldnt think
of staying away from stake conference, especially knowing that Elder Lee would be
speaking.
We were all a little surprised when Elder Lee stood and started calling some young
women from the audience to share their testimonies. My father, who was usually right about
such things, poked me and said, "Youll be the next speaker." I thought,
Surely he will not call on me. Im sitting in the first row of the recreation hall.
As I looked up the aisle, I realized how far it would be to the pulpit. I was the next to
be called. And sure enough, it was the longest walk Id taken in my life.
I accepted that invitation from Elder Lee, and as I walked back to my seat, dear people
in the audience would squeeze my arm or pat my hand. I was lifted by that experience, and
we will each be lifted as we gain the courage to accept invitations from the Lord and His
leaders. The invitation to walk with the Lord is a long walk.
As 4,200,000 women of the Church form a circle of sisters and use our talents, we can
make a difference in this world. One person can make a difference. Each one of you has
unique gifts. Use your gifts to serve others.
If you are to walk in the light of the Lord, discover your individual strengths and
develop them. You will find great joy as you unselfishly share all that the Lord has given
you.
Third, in the last of the three parables, the Savior extends an invitation to walk in
the light of the Lord by serving the individual. He gives the parable of the sheep and the
goats, and to the sheep on His right hand He says:
"Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world:
"For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I
was a stranger, and ye took me in:
"Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye
came unto me.
"
Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least
of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me" (Matt. 25:34-36, 40).
When we walk in the light of the Lord, we do not walk alone. We take the hand of our
sisters and brothers. We teach our families and strengthen them. We love and serve our
ward families, reaching out to individual members.
The Prophet Joseph Smith invited: "Nothing is so much calculated to lead people to
forsake sin as to take them by the hand, and watch over them with tenderness. When persons
manifest the least kindness and love to me, O what power it has over my mind, while the
opposite course has a tendency to harrow up all the harsh feelings and depress the human
mind."
We all can be edified by a speech Eliza R. Snow gave as part of the original
organization of the Relief Society. She said: "God is looking down upon you, the
angels are recording your secret acts.
Let us pray daily, and try to become more
refined and visionary and bring up our children to be polite and refined, that they may be
useful monuments to society." And then she continued: "Endeavor to make home
happy, keep your children from various company; and while you study to dress them neatly,
do not neglect to adorn them much with those principles which will tend to elevate and
ennoble them, and prepare them for future usefulness in the kingdom of our God."
When we wholeheartedly accept the Lords invitation to walk in His light, we
become spiritually prepared, we develop our talents, and we reach out to Gods
family.
As we walk in His light, we become women of courage and conviction. We become women of
vision, women of destiny, and women of eternal value.
Join with us to build spiritual strength, to radiate truth to the world and to
celebrate the family.
We are a worldwide circle of sistersa circle of safety and protection. We are the
Relief Society organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Please accept our invitation to come home, home to the arms of the Lord and to your
sisters who love you and need you.
Isaiah saw us in our day. He saw people of all nations going to the house of the Lord
and walking in His light. He knew that the Lord would need you to be an incredible force
for good and a powerful instrument of the priesthood of God. Under the direction of the
royal priesthood, the Relief Society will help establish the kingdom of God on the earth.
For most assuredly, the kingdom will be established and Christ will reign personally. All
those who accept this invitation will feel His embrace and relish the sweet tones:
"Well done, [my] good and faithful servant.
Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you" (Matt. 25:23, 34).
To our sisters all over the world, I bear testimony of the truthfulness of the gospel
of Jesus Christ. His arms are open to each of us. His truths are plain and clear, and His
invitation is sure. I pray we will realize the vital role of our Relief Society
organization, under the direction of and in harmony with the priesthood, in preparing
women and families for exaltation. May we be exemplary women and stand boldly for truth.
In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.