| Contributed by: Ann How Near
to the Angels
Ensign, May 1998, 95-97
General Young Women Meeting
President James E. Faust
Second Counselor in the First Presidency
It is a joy for me to be in the presence of all you special young
ladies. We are especially honored this evening to have President Gordon B. Hinckley and
President Thomas S. Monson with us. I commend Sister Nadauld, Sister Thomas, and Sister
Larsen for their excellent messages. The music by the young women choir has been
outstanding. We appreciate those who have participated in the video and the hundreds who
have responded to the General Young Women Presidencys request to write to them about
how you serve your families.
I believe that because of your righteousness in premortality your
spirits were reserved to come forth in this time when women have so many opportunities for
expression. In this audience I see some of my beloved granddaughters, and Im
reminded that most of you are about their age. Im also reminded of what someone once
said about grandparents: they are people who are "overindulgent, overanxious, and
over fifty." This evening I speak to all of you as if you were my granddaughters. As
I look into your lovely faces, I see the fascinating mystique of budding womanhood.
You precious young women, to begin with you must practice virtue in
its highest sense. Virtue has many definitions, such as moral excellence, right action and
thinking, goodness of character, or chastity in women. The First Presidency has said:
"How glorious and near to the angels is youth that is clean; this youth has joy
unspeakable here and eternal happiness hereafter. Sexual purity is youths most
precious possession; it is the foundation of all righteousness." This implies that
the virtue of young women should be equal to the angels. You cannot become great
women if you are not also good women, "women whose virtue makes them shine in
a crowd." You will become great women if you are united in the angelic cause of doing
good and if you hunger and thirst after righteousness. The Savior said, "Seek ye
first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness." If we do not, then nothing else
really matters.
You are constantly bombarded by explicit scenes of sexual immorality
from the screen, books, music, magazines, the Internet, and radio. The world seems to have
forgotten the proverb "Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above
rubies." I remind you precious young women that you are daughters of God. He loves
you. You are His noblest creation. Your own dignity and self-respect should help you to
remember that, as President David O. McKay once said, every "woman should be queen of
her own body."
Young women should realize that young men they date will not honor
and respect them if they have been involved in moral transgression. Now, for those who may
have transgressed, please be assured that God will "remember [their sin] no
more" if they repent. The path of repentance and forgiveness begins by going to your
parents and to your bishop.
I hope that each of you girls will become an individual of
significant worth and a person of virtue who contributes both now and in eternity. As a
woman you have been born with many unique endowments that are not common to men.
President Spencer W. Kimball, in speaking of the separate roles of
men and women, said: "Remember, in the world before we came here, faithful women were
given certain assignments while faithful men were foreordained to certain priesthood
tasks. While we do not now remember the particulars, this does not alter the glorious
reality of what we once agreed to. You are accountable for those things which long ago
were expected of you just as are those we sustain as prophets and apostles.
This
leaves much to be done by way of parallel personal developmentfor both men and
women."
This statement suggests that before we were born, male and female,
we made certain commitments and that we agreed to come to this earth with great, rich, but
different gifts. We were called, male and female, to do great works with separate
approaches and separate assignments.
You say, "Where do I begin?" Rather than beginning with a
wish list of all the things you want in life, the real question may be what you are not
willing to do without. Select two or three of lifes experiences you are absolutely
sure you want to have. Do not leave important things to chance. Then think about what you
can contribute to society by serving your family, the Church, and the community. Also
think of what life will demand from you. Everything has a price. Much is expected of us.
Becoming like men is not the answer. Rather, the answer lies in being who you are and
living up to your divine potential by fulfilling eternal commitments.
You cannot trust the many conflicting voices that clamor about what
women should or should not do in todays society. Some of the loudest voices are
echoes of those others who are out of harmony with themselves and out of tune with life in
general rather than being unhappy with their role as women.
Do not be deceived in your quest to find happiness and an identity
of your own. Entreating voices may tell you that what you have seen your mothers and
grandmothers do is old-fashioned, unchallenging, boring, and drudgery. It may have been
old-fashioned and perhaps routine; at times it was drudgery. But your mothers and
grandmothers have sung a song that expressed the highest love and the noblest of womanly
feelings. They have been our nurturers and our teachers. They have sanctified the work,
transforming drudgery into the noblest enterprises.
Homemaking is whatever you make of it. Every day brings satisfaction
along with some work which may be frustrating, routine, and unchallenging. But it is the
same in the law office, the dispensary, the laboratory, or the store. There is, however,
no more important job than homemaking. As C. S. Lewis said, "A housewifes work
is the one for which all others exist."
Karen Graham, who now serves as a stake Young Women president,
writes of the importance of homemaking skills in her life:
"In my senior year in high school, when I was a 17-year-old
Laurel, I arrived home from school one day to find that my mother had died very suddenly
and unexpectedly of a cerebral hemorrhage. My two older sisters were married and living
away from home. This left me the oldest at home to take care of the house, my grieving
father, and two younger brothers ages 12 and 13.
"For the next two and a half years, I took care of the house,
did all the laundry, bought groceries and fixed the meals.
Can you imagine letting
a 17-year-old be in charge of the grocery budget? This sweet father of mine never said an
unkind word. He never complained when I turned all his white shirts pink in the laundry or
when dinner miserably failed. All my friends in high school were planning for their
after-graduation lives. Some were going to Utah State University.
I had considered
going to Ricks College, but in light of the family circumstances I chose to stay at home
and continue to help.
"Two years after Mothers passing, I started dating a
return[ed] missionary, Garry. On our second date, he asked me what I had done with my
Saturday.
He was a little surprised when I told him that Id dusted and
vacuumed and grocery shopped and done laundry all day. He thought I was just a real
homebody. Six months later, this wonderful man took me to the temple and we started our
life together. He was thrilled to have a wife that knew how to cook and handle the budget.
"One evening, the first year we were married, we had some
newlywed friends over for dinner. Several of the couples started talking about what a hard
time they had had adjusting to marriage. Garry and I looked at each other in disbelief.
Adjusting to marriage? What was that? Our first year had gone so smoothly! As we
talked about it later, we determined that the reason was that I had come into the marriage
with homemaking skills.
I didnt have the stress of experimenting with and/or
burning dinner, ruining laundry, or budgeting grocery money. Id done all that
experimenting on a sensitive, patient, wise father. Now Garry and I could concentrate on
just our relationship, and it was wonderful. Putting my interests aside and thinking about
the needs of my family had truly been a blessing for me later."
Her service to her father during this difficult time was a part of
the angelic cause of doing good, that great preparation you are making to become great
women.
Women today are encouraged by some to have it all: money, travel,
marriage, motherhood, and separate careers in the world. For women, the important
ingredients for happiness are to forge an identity, serve the Lord, get an education,
develop your talents, serve your family, and if possible to have a family of your own.
However, you cannot do all these things well at the same time. You
cannot eat all of the pastries in the baking shop at once. You will get a tummyache. You
cannot be a 100-percent wife, a 100-percent mother, a 100-percent Church worker, a
100-percent career person, and a 100-percent public-service person at the same time. How
can all of these roles be coordinated? I suggest that you can have it sequentially.
Sequentially is a big word meaning to do things one at a time at
different times. The book of Ecclesiastes says: "To every thing there is a season,
and a time to every purpose under
heaven." There are ever-increasing demands
on women that challenge their traditional role of caregivers. But as women, the roles of
wife and mother are in the center of your souls and cry out to be satisfied. Most women
naturally want to love and be loved by a good man and to respond to the God-given, deepest
feelings of womanhoodthose of mother and nurturer. Fortunately, most women do not
have to track a career like a man does. They may fit more than one interest into the
various seasons of life.
I would encourage you sisters to develop all of your gifts and
talents to move forward the work of righteousness in the earth. I hope you acquire all of
the knowledge you can. Become as skillful as you can, but not exclusively in new careers
at the expense of the primary ones, or you may find that you have missed one of the great
opportunities of your lives.
Sister Faust and I urged our daughters to get an education, not only
to help them in their homemaking but also to prepare them to earn a living if that became
necessary. Going to college or a vocational school is a wonderful experience, and the
dollars, the effort, and the time prepare the student to have a marketable skill.
I cannot tell you young women what educational skills you should
acquire. That is for each of you to decide. You have your agency. Each of you will have to
work very hard to learn all you can and develop your talents. It is not easy to achieve
anything really worthwhile. I want only to tell you what will bring you identity, value,
and happiness as a person. I also challenge you to reach your potential, to become a
person of great worth, to become a great woman. Because most of you have the examples of
great women in your family, each of you has a model to emulate.
As young women, you have the privilege of working on projects as
part of the Young Womanhood Recognition Award. Anna Nichols of Centerville, Utah, writes
about a special experience she has had:
"I did a Laurel project last year that has brought me closer to
my grandma who[m] I never knew. She passed away when my mom was about five years old from
a severe type of cancer. My mom has a collection of old slides and letters that she had
kept. I went through these and picked out pictures of her and her family and letters that
she had written to her sister sharing her feelings and thoughts before she died.
"I put all these in a scrapbook in memory of her and I gave it
to my grandpa. To watch his face as he turned each page was the most awesome feeling as he
told me the stories of each picture. We cried together. I could tell that he misses her so
much and how with this book she is partly back into his life again.
"Because of this book I have a personal relationship with my
grandma. I feel her spirit with me. I know she has protected me and helped me when I am in
need. Now when I go and visit my grandpa we always talk about her and share stories. I
always look forward to this time I get to spend with him."
Now I reemphasize, whatever you do, learn to seek first the kingdom
of God and His righteousness. Accept without reservation the Savior for what He was,
Joseph Smith for what he was, and President Gordon B. Hinckley for what he is. God will
not ennoble a person, man or woman, who refuses to uphold by faith, prayer, and works
those whom God has called and ordained to preside over them. So, my dear young sisters,
sustain the priesthood authority in the Church and in your home.
Some women may feel it undermines their agency to be directed by the
power of the priesthood. This feeling comes from misunderstanding. Priesthood authority
should exercise no compulsion, duress, or unrighteous dominion. President Stephen L
Richards stated: "Our accord comes from universal agreement with righteous principles
and common response to the operation of the Spirit of our Father. It is actuated by no
fear except one. That is the fear of offending God, the Author of our work."
Following the priesthood of the Church is an expression of faith in
the Lords continuing guidance of His Church. It is willing acceptance of the
principle of divine agency.
All of you will have to sometime answer to your natural womanly
instincts, which the Prophet Joseph said are according to your natures. He said, "If
you live up to your privileges, the angels cannot be restrained from being your
associates." You should respond generously to those instincts and promptings to do
good. Hold your soul very still, and listen to the whisperings of the Holy Spirit. Follow
the noble, intuitive feelings planted deep within your souls by Deity in the previous
world. In this way you will be responding to the Holy Spirit of God and will be sanctified
by truth. By so doing, you will be eternally honored and loved. Much of your work is to
enrich mankind with your great capacity for care and mercy.
Lastly, how do I think you may become great women? You should
cultivate and employ generously your noble, womanly instincts of care and mercy, first to
your family and then to others. May you always hunger and thirst after righteousness
within the framework of the revealed gospel of Jesus Christ. May you have an eternal
perspective as you go about your angelic cause of doing good so that it will not only lead
you to become great women but ultimately to become queens in the eternities.
I ask the Lord to bless each of you precious young sisters that you
will, as the Psalmist said, be "his angels, that excel in strength, that do his
commandments, hearkening unto the voice of his word." I pray that you may enjoy the
righteous desires of your heart, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
Quote 1:
"The tenor of our times is
permissiveness. A most popular feature of one of the leading newspaper Sunday supplements
portrays the idols of the movie screen, the heroes of the athletic fieldthose whom
many young people long to emulateas flouting the laws of God and rationalizing away
sinful practices, seemingly with no ill effect. Dont you believe it! There is a time
of reckoning, even a balancing of the ledger.
Its called judgment day, even
the big exam of life. Are we prepared? Are we pleased with our own performances?"
(Thomas S. Monson, "The Lighthouse of the Lord," New Era, July 1980, p. 18).
Quote 2:
Statement by President N. Eldon
Tanner:
"To mothers, daughters, and
women everywhere, let me stress the fact that because of your great potential and
influence for good in the lives of all of us, Satan is determined to destroy you. You
cannot compromise with him. You must have the courage, the strength, the desire, and the
determination to live as the Lord would have you livegood clean lives. Girls, keep
yourselves virtuous and worthy of a fine young man who has likewise kept himself clean, so
that together you can go to the House of the Lord to be sealed in the holy bonds of
matrimony for time and all eternity, and prepare a home where God will be pleased to send
his spirit children" (in Conference Report, Oct. 1973, p. 126; or Ensign, Jan. 1974,
p. 8).
Quote 3:
Statement by President Spencer W.
Kimball:
"I sincerely hope that our
Latter-day Saint girls and women, and men and boys, will drink deeply of the water of life
and conform their lives to the beautiful and comprehensive roles the Lord assigned to
them.
"
What satisfying
personal lives we can live! What beautiful families we can nurture and train! What a
heavenly future is ours!" ("The Lords Plan for Men and Women,"
Ensign, Oct. 1975, p. 5).
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