Sunday, March 8, 2015

A Sure Foundation

I'm pretty sure everybody remembers that little children's song about the wise man who built his house upon a rock, and the foolish man who built his house upon the sand, right?

"And the rains came down, and the floods came up;
The rains came down, and the floods came up;
The rains came down, and the floods came up;
And the house on the rock stood firm."

It comes from the Sermon on the Mount, from Matthew chapter 7.

I've had a couple of experiences recently that have reminded me of that little song. First, someone asked me what it would take to shake my faith in God, in Jesus Christ, and in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormon Church)--and I couldn't think of anything that would besides a very clear personal revelation from God. Which is, needless to say, pretty ironic. The second happened when one of my sons lost his new little baby girl due to birth defects. He said, "It was like being thrown off a cliff into a dark abyss, only to realize that I was standing on solid ground."

I've been off that cliff a few times myself for various reasons, usually sin and death, which are really just other names for rains and floods, or "shafts in the whirlwind," or "hail and mighty storm" (see Helaman 5:12). But I always found solid ground, the "rock" that stood firm beneath me even when I couldn't see a thing in the darkness.

So, what is the rock?

Helaman says the rock is our Redeemer, Jesus Christ, the Son of God. For me, it is also the things that I absolutely know are true through vivid personal experience. I can't know for certain what happened in other places and other times. But, given the way I have chosen to experience the world ("epistomology," if you will: you can look it up if you want. Or just read my last blog post), there are some things I absolutely know.

Here they are:

I know God lives and that he is a personal God who loves me, because he speaks to me. He usually speaks to my mind and heart, but I even heard his voice once. (Lucky for me and my children. I was pregnant with my first baby and about to be hit by a speeding truck.) Either way, what he says is unusually clear, and it is new to me, a "revelation" in every sense of the word. This actually happens really often.

I know that Jesus is my Savior, and he has taken upon him both sin and death. I know this because I have been healed by his power, many times, when I was in the deepest despair. This instantaneous transformation from despair to love and hope is very hard to describe unless you have experienced it yourself. But it is very powerful, real, and permanent, and it comes obviously and directly from Jesus Christ.

I know that the Book of Mormon is true. I know this because of direct revelatory experiences I have had (many times--are you seeing a pattern here?) every single time I read it. It answers my questions now and always, no matter how many times I read it, and continually offers me spiritual food.

I know that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the kingdom of God on the earth. Not because it is perfect or because its leaders are perfect; precisely the opposite. I have seen God use the imperfect people he has called to perform miracles in the world and in people's lives, over and over again. This is a church of miracles, and God's power is here.

I know that the temple is the House of the Lord, just like it says it is on the outside, because I have met God inside. Many times.

What forms your foundation? What do you absolutely know, through your own personal experience, is true? The experiences I have described above have happened in my life many times, over and over again. Because of them I can handle rain, floods, sin, death, loss, cognitive dissonance (look that one up, too) and weird historical stories  because I have my rock to cling to. I'd love to hear what yours is. I hope you will comment and tell me.




4 comments:

  1. I remember one of your great talks when we were teenagers. You said, "You can't live on borrowed light." I still think about that and strive to have my own light that I can share until someone has their own light kindled.

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  2. One of my sure foundations is the "faith precedes the miracle" principle. My faith has been tried and tested and even left hanging from time to time. I have been left wondering what on earth God is doing with me and how my life could ever possibly work itself back into something peaceful and beautiful, and yet every time, without fail, at some point the light has returned, clarity has been restored, and I have become well acquainted with a God who never fails.

    The intimate and personal relationship I have with Him now has only come about by the trials of my faith. Somehow, even when things around me have not made sense, I have chosen to believe in Him more than the mirage of this mortal life. The biggest and most important miracle God has performed due to my meager faith is to grant me an even deeper, more solid, and unshakeable faith. It is incredible what God can do with even a desire to believe.

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  3. This post has really made me ponder what my own "rock" is. Definitely the one that first comes to mind is the atonement of Jesus Christ. There have been things that have happened in my life that I could not understand why God would not answer my prayer...am I not important to him...is not this concern of mine a justifiable enough hurt to warrant an answer after many weeks and months of pleading? But as I have continued on in the "Lord's way" and reliedon his strength and his promises that are sure I have had peace and comfort come to me. Maybe not understanding but definitely the peace of "Be Still and Know that I am God" and that he is mindful of me. There are times in my life that I cry that "no on understands" what I'm feeling, going through etc...but as I plead for comfort and help the peaceful impression always comes that there is One that DOES understand as he has suffered all things before we have, even Jesus Christ my Savior. I have felt his compassion, his strength, and his love as I work through things in my life. I know that through the enabling power of his atonement weak things CAN be made strong in our lives as this has happened several times in mine. I'm so grateful for the opportunity to exercise my faith and find my "rock" that I can cling to. thank you for sharing your rock and giving me the opportunity to express mine. Love you!

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  4. Thanks for responding, Sharisa, Mary Jane, and Michelle. Your testimonies help strengthen mine :)

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