| Contributed by: Ann True
At All Times
New Era, Feb. 1999, 46-49
by Elder F. Melvin Hammond
of the Seventy
An
accident had left me weak and discouraged. But watching those beavers rebuild their dams
time after time taught me a great lesson.
I
was 17 years old and on top of the world. I had a university basketball scholarship, money
in the bank from a hard summers work, a motorcycle and a pickup truck to drive, and
all the aspirations of a typical teenager. Two months later I lay in a hospital bed with
my body broken and my dreams shattered.
It was a motorcycle wrecka head-on collision. No one was at
fault. It was a stormy night. The driver of the car never saw my motorcycle coming. For
two months I lay in bed. Then for six months I moved about on crutches. Weak and
discouraged after months of inactivity and desperately needing money to continue my
education, I began searching for summer employment.
I took a job with the railroad. Our crew was to patrol and repair
a 15-mile stretch of track in a remote area called Little Warm River. Pine trees covered
the mountains. Dozens of small streams meandered through the meadows. Large culverts had
been placed under the railroad tracks to allow the streams to run freely, but beaver
colonies would dam up each stream at the head of the culvert, creating a large reservoir
with enough water pressure to wash out the tracks.
Volunteers were asked to crawl through the culvert and tear away
the beaver dam, allowing the water to flow freely again. I always volunteered because no
one else would, and, frankly, I rather enjoyed it. It was thrilling as I picked away at
the dam, knowing that at any moment the water would break through and sweep me along with
it head over heels, finally dumping me unceremoniously into the stream 15 yards away.
There were times when I thought I would surely drown as I bumped along, submerged in that
mighty flow of water and debris.
The next morning, as we would make our daily inspection, we could
see that the beavers had already started to rebuild their dams. Within a short time, they
would be totally reconstructed. It didnt matter how many times we destroyed those
dams, the beavers never seemed discouraged but steadily kept at their task. Those animals
taught me a great lesson about never being discouraged, especially with things I could not
control.
Steady and
constant
I
loved that summer. The work was hard and sometimes I was homesick, but I recovered from
the effects of that terrible motorcycle wreck. My body became strong once again. In the
evening after work I walked those timbered mountains. I sat near those beaver dams with no
other human being within miles to disturb my meditation. I had many solitary moments to
think about the importance of being steady and constant.
We are all faced with challenges that test our courage and
strength. Perhaps it is the awfulness of drugs. Some are caught in the web of immorality.
Others struggle just to be honest. There may even be times when we feel that our parents
contribute to our problems. Maybe in our eyes they dont measure up to our personal
standards of righteousness. On the other hand, they might be so committed to the Lord and
His church that we feel they overlook our desires and needs.
I am reminded of a group of young men. Their parents had
covenanted with God that they would never take up arms, even at the expense of their own
lives. Finally when freedom and life were threatened by invading armies, the young men,
who had not made the same covenant, volunteered to fight in place of their parents. Led by
the prophet Helaman, they fought ferociously, vanquishing every foe. Every one of them was
wounded, but not one was killed.
"And they were all young men, and they were exceedingly
valiant for courage, and also for strength and activity; but behold, this was not
allthey were men who were true at all times in whatsoever thing they were
entrusted" (Alma 53:20).
I am impressed with the words "true at all times."
Helaman did not have to worry if they would show up. He was not concerned about some of
them surrendering before the battle began. They did not blame their righteous parents for
causing them to suffer injury and pain. Rather, they "did think more upon the liberty
of their fathers than they did upon their lives" (Alma 56:47). Although the fighting was
awful and they were terribly outnumbered, those young men could be counted upon.
An agonizing
decision
I
know of young people today who demonstrate a similar commitment. Tara had recently moved
from the United States to a foreign land. She was petitioned by the local high school
coach to come out for the basketball team. It was not likely she would get much playing
time as the team was already formed, but it would give her experience for next season.
Then one of the regular players was injured, and Tara was thrust into a more prominent
role. The schedule of games was presented to the team. To Taras dismay one of the
most important games was scheduled on Sunday. Tara discussed the problem with her parents.
They assured her of their trust and told her this was her decision.
The next day she approached the coach and explained that as a
member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints she was counseled not to
participate in school activities on Sunday. The Sabbath was a sacred day for worshiping
God. Could she be excused from playing that one game? The coach was sympathetic but
wondered why an exception could not be made for the good of the team.
It was an agonizing time. As the new girl, it was important to be
accepted. The team knew she could make a difference. What could she do?
All night long Tara wrestled with the decision. She knew who she
was and how much she loved the Savior. There was really only one decision. She would not
play on the Sabbath. In the morning she told her parents. They assured her all would work
out for the bestand it did. The coach accepted her decision. He understood how
important her convictions were to her. Tara would be excused from playing on that Sunday,
but they needed her for all the rest of the games. She was an important part of the team.
Tara had proven to herself what it means to be "true at all
times."
Shiblons
example
Every
mission president prays he will have missionaries who are steady and true. One such
missionary anciently was a young man named Shiblon. His father Alma said to him, "And
now, my son, I trust that I shall have great joy in you, because of your steadiness and
your faithfulness unto God; for as you have commenced in your youth to look to the Lord
your God, even so I hope that you will continue in keeping his commandments" (Alma 38:2).
This great missionary son had already brought joy to his father
for his work among the Zoramites. It also appears that Shiblon never did disappoint Alma,
but continued constant to the end. "And he was a just man, and he did walk uprightly
before God; and he did observe to do good continually, to keep the commandments of the
Lord his God" (Alma 63:2). What a
grand tribute!
Becoming the
solution
John
the Revelator wrote these words of the Lord, "I know thy works, that thou art neither
cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and
neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth" (Rev. 3:15). To be lukewarm is to be
someone on whom we cannot depend. To be hot or cold, on the other hand, is to be
predictable.
In the mission field, the most dependable missionary is not the
"flash" who runs hard one day and the next is too exhausted to leave the
apartment. Nor is it the missionary who teaches 50 discussions one week and then coasts
for the rest of the month. It is the steady, hard-working missionary who makes the
difference, the one who can be counted on day after day to give his alllike Shiblon.
The miracle is that nearly all of the wonderful young men and women called to serve in the
mission field fit this model.
Think of the power in the Church if every member were to attend
every meeting every Sunday. Think of the faith produced if every member were to worthily
partake of the sacrament. Think of the knowledge obtained if every young person graduated
from seminary. Think of the peace obtained if we always controlled our temper. Think of
the strength generated if every young man and young woman honored the priesthood and
prepared for the temple. Think what it would mean if we were the solution to the problem
rather than the problem.
How important it
is to make our own decisions for right, to be steady, constant, and true at all times. Not
only can we make such decisions, but we will! I know we will!
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