| Contributed by: Ann The
Price of Discipleship
Ensign, Apr. 1999, 2-4
By President James E. Faust
Second Counselor in the First Presidency
Many years ago, when I was engaged in the private practice of the law, a lawyer in
Texas engaged me to take care of a legal problem for him in Utah.
This legal matter was satisfactorily adjusted by the payment of a sum of money, in the
form of a check to our office. I forwarded the check to my friend in Texas without first
cashing it, with the understanding that a portion of it would be returned to settle part
of the obligation through our office.
After I sent the check, I heard nothing more from my friend. Letters, telegrams, and
telephone calls went unanswered for many months. I became concerned because it was not my
money and if he did not keep his word I was honor bound to make good the loss. The obvious
solution was to file a complaint against him. There lurked in my mind, however, the
possibility of a far more subtle approach.
I recalled how, as a boy, I had been taught by my mother the words of the Savior, as
recorded by Matthew, that tell us that true Christians are supposed to pray for those who
despitefully use them (see Matt. 5:44).
I certainly felt that I had been despitefully used.
I happened to be serving as a bishop in the Church at that time, and I chastised myself
because I was something less of a Christian than I ought to be. I had not first considered
the direction of the Master. At an appropriate place and time, I went to my knees and
uttered a simple but sincere prayer for the well-being of this man in Texas. I am ashamed
to say that this was the first time in my life when the sole and only purpose of a prayer
was in the interest of one who, in my opinion, had not done well by me. The prayer seemed
to have been almost instantaneously heard and brought dramatic results. In the time that
it takes for an airmail letter to come from Texas, there arrived a communication from this
man containing the promised money. In the letter was an explanation that he had been
seriously ill, had been in the hospital, and had had to close his office but now was doing
better. He asked our pardon and apologized for the inconvenience that this caused.
I relate this experience without apology to anyone who might think that I was weak,
inadequate, or foolish for having humbly sought to follow a commandment of the Savior for
a solution to a practical problem. The price of discipleship is obedience. In many
languages, the word disciple has the same root as the word discipline.
Self-discipline and self-control are consistent and permanent characteristics of the
followers of Jesus.
The disciples of Christ receive a call not only to forsake the pursuit of worldly
things but also to carry the cross. To carry the cross means to follow His commandments
and to build up His Church upon the earth. "If any man will come after me," said
Jesus of Nazareth, "let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow
me" (Luke 9:23). "And
whosoever doth not bear his cross, and come after me, cannot be my disciple" (Luke 14:27).
True followers of the Savior should be prepared to lay down their lives, and some have
been privileged to do so. Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, "When Christ calls a man, He bids
him to come and die." The Doctrine and Covenants counsels us:
"Let no man be afraid to lay down his life for my sake; for whoso layeth down his
life for my sake shall find it again.
"And whoso is not willing to lay down his life for my sake is not my
disciple" (D&C 103:27-28).
For most of us, however, what is required is not to die for the Church but to live for
it. The price of discipleship may mean leaving behind many things. Some have learned how
dear a price it is to leave loved ones in order to be baptized. Yet Jesus taught,
"Every one that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother,
or wife, or children, or lands, for my names sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and
shall inherit everlasting life" (Matt.
19:29).
Living a Christlike life every day may for many be even more difficult than laying down
ones life. We learned during wartime that many men were capable of great acts of
selflessness, heroism, and nobility with regard to life. But when the war was over and
they came home, they could not bear up under the burdens of living the eternal every day
and became enslaved by tobacco, alcohol, drugs, and debauchery that in the end caused them
to forfeit their lives.
The price of discipleship is to forsake evil transgression and enjoy what President
Spencer W. Kimball has called "the miracle of forgiveness." It is never too
late. But there can be no remission of sin without a godly sorrow being abundantly
manifested in the mind, in the heart, and in the actions of the offender. A major step
toward purging oneself of wrongdoing is for the transgressor to confess the transgression
to the common judge in Israel, who is the inspired bishop or branch president of the
offender. While forgiveness comes only from the Lord, confession is necessary, among other
reasons, to eliminate the deceit inherent in wrongdoing.
The matter of restitution must also be considered as a key element of repentance and as
an important requisite for the restoration of spiritual understanding. In its simplest
terms, restitution means making right that which we have done wrong. There comes a time
when each can know that his sins have been washed away. This assurance comes by having the
"peace of conscience" spoken of by King Benjamin in the Book of Mormon (Mosiah 4:3). But this healing
forgiveness comes only when we have done all within our power to rectify the wrongs we
have done.
Most of us think that the price of discipleship is too costly and too burdensome. For
many it involves the giving up of too much. But the cross is not as heavy as it appears to
be because we acquire through obedience a much greater strength to carry it:
"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
"Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye
shall find rest unto your souls.
"For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light" (Matt. 11:28-30).
What is the cost of discipleship? It is primarily obedience. It is the forsaking of
many things. But since everything in life has a price, it is a price worth paying,
considering that the great promise of the Savior is for peace in this life and eternal
life in the life to come. It is a price we cannot afford not to pay.
Jesus is the head of this Church. It is His work, and He is watching over it. I know
that God speaks; He has spoken to me, and He will speak to you, for He is no respecter of
persons. May we live so that this will be possible, and may we render obedience and
faithfulness unto His commandments and to His living prophets, so that we fully and
willingly pay the price required of His disciples and move forward His work in all the
world.
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