President Eyring started out with a story about being prepared to use the priesthood to bless (literally) others:
When the call came, I was ready. The preparation was far more than having consecrated oil close at hand. It must begin long before the crisis which requires priesthood power. Those who are prepared will be ready to answer.
The preparation begins in families, in Aaronic Priesthood quorums, and mostly in the private lives of young men. The quorums and the families must help, but the preparation that counts will be made by the young men making choices to rise to their great destiny as priesthood servants of God.
The destiny of the rising generation of priesthood holders is far more than to be ready to bring God's power down to heal the sick. The preparation is to be ready to go and do whatever the Lord wants done as the world is preparing for His coming. None of us know exactly what those errands will be. But we know what it will take to be ready, so each of us can prepare.
He then talked about "two of the things you will need and the preparation it takes to be ready."
The first is to have faith. So you must have faith that God lives and that you have won the confidence to allow you to use the power for His purposes.
He also added a caution: Not all of the youth choose to prepare. That choice must be their own. They are responsible for themselves. That is the Lord's way in His loving plan. But many young men have little or no support from those who could help as they prepare. Those of us who can help will be held accountable by the Lord.
The second thing they will need is confidence that they can live up to the blessings and the trust which God has offered them.
Young men need to listen to the Spirit, even when their peers and others around them are suggesting they choose sin: If young men choose sin, those messages from God will become more faint. We can help them even more by our example of a faithful and inspired servant.
President Eyring then talked about his bishop and how he watched out for President Eyring and the other young men in their ward:
The bishop had a system. Every adviser of every quorum was to contact every young man he had not spoken to that Sunday. They were not to go to bed until they had either talked to the boy who had been missing, to his parents, or to a close friend. The bishop promised them that he would not turn out his light until he had heard a report about every boy. I don't think he gave them an order. He simple made it clear that he did not expect their lights to go out until they had given that report.
He and those who served under him were doing far more than watching over us. They were showing us by example what it means to care for the Lord's sheep. I have no idea whether they thought any one of us was going to be anything special. But they treated us as if they did by being willing to pay any personal price to keep us from losing faith.
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To be ready we need to have faith & confidence. Faith is something that is earned over time as we study and serve. It doesn't just suddenly appear. Confidence also takes time. I know I need to work on giving more positive feedback to others so that they can feel the confidence in themselves that I see, but don't always express very well.
ReplyDelete2 things & the preparation (to receive a priesthood blessing or calling)
ReplyDelete1. Have faith- "you must have faith that God lives & that you have won His confidence to allow you to use His power for His purposes." On the receiving end of a priesthood blessing-that it will work; calling: inspiration to serve others (need to have practice for it to work well.)
2. "confidence that (you or kids) can live up to the blessings and the trust which God has offered them. "we can help them choose to prepare by loving them, warning them, and by sowing confidence in them." (and our example. I think I forget about the showing confidence parts & should work on that.