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Brothers & Sisters,
As has been tradition, I have always included the Transcript of all the General Conference Talks that we talk of every fourth Sunday, and now I am endeavoring to include the video of the talk as well, thus (If you are getting this through email) you see the invitation to visit the blog because I have that included. Below this paragraph, embedded in the page, will be the video, afterwhich will be posted the transcript. Prayerfully ponder this message as often as you can prior to Sunday, so that you can all participate in the discussion so that we can qualify for the blessings of edifying each other. God bless you all!
Video: [Embedded Link]
Transcript:
The central purpose of all scripture is to fill our souls with faith in God the Father and in His Son, Jesus Christ.
On
October 6, in the year 1536, a pitiful figure was led from a dungeon
in Vilvorde Castle near Brussels, Belgium. For nearly a year and a
half, the man had suffered isolation in a dark, damp cell. Now outside
the castle wall, the prisoner was fastened to a post. He had time to
utter aloud his final prayer, “Lord! open the king of England’s eyes,”
and then he was strangled. Immediately, his body was burned at the
stake. Who was this man, and what was the offense for which both
political and ecclesiastical authorities had condemned him? His name
was William Tyndale, and his crime was to have translated and published
the Bible in English.
Tyndale, born in England about the time Columbus sailed to the new
world, was educated at Oxford and Cambridge and then became a member of
the Catholic clergy. He was fluent in eight languages, including
Greek, Hebrew, and Latin. Tyndale was a devoted student of the Bible,
and the pervasive ignorance of the scriptures that he observed in both
priests and lay people troubled him deeply. In a heated exchange with a
cleric who argued against putting scripture in the hands of the common
man, Tyndale vowed, “If God spare my life, ere many years I will cause a
boy that driveth the plough, shall know more of the Scripture than
thou dost!”
He sought the approval of church authorities to prepare a
translation of the Bible in English so that all could read and apply
the word of God. It was denied—the prevailing view being that direct
access to the scriptures by any but the clergy threatened the authority
of the church and was tantamount to casting “pearls before swine” (Matthew 7:6).
Tyndale nevertheless undertook the challenging work of translation.
In 1524 he traveled to Germany, under an assumed name, where he lived
much of the time in hiding, under constant threat of arrest. With the
help of committed friends, Tyndale was able to publish English
translations of the New Testament and later the Old Testament. The
Bibles were smuggled into England, where they were in great demand and
much prized by those who could get them. They were shared widely but in
secret. The authorities burned all the copies they could find.
Nevertheless, within three years of Tyndale’s death, God did indeed
open King Henry VIII’s eyes, and with publication of what was called
the “Great Bible,” the scriptures in English began to be publicly
available. Tyndale’s work became the foundation for almost all future
English translations of the Bible, most notably the King James Version.1
William Tyndale was not the first, nor the last, of those who in
many countries and languages have sacrificed, even to the point of
death, to bring the word of God out of obscurity. We owe them all a
great debt of gratitude. We owe perhaps an even greater debt to those
who faithfully recorded and preserved the word through the ages, often
with painstaking labor and sacrifice—Moses, Isaiah, Abraham, John,
Paul, Nephi, Mormon, Joseph Smith, and many others. What did they know
about the importance of scriptures that we also need to know? What did
people in 16th-century England, who paid enormous sums and ran grave
personal risks for access to a Bible, understand that we should also
understand?
Not long before his death, the prophet Alma entrusted the sacred
records of the people to his son Helaman. He reminded Helaman that the
scriptures had “enlarged the memory of this people, yea, and convinced
many of the error of their ways, and brought them to the knowledge of
their God unto the salvation of their souls” (Alma 37:8). He commanded Helaman to preserve the records so that through them God might “show forth his power unto future generations” (Alma 37:14).
Through the scriptures, God does indeed “show forth his power” to
save and exalt His children. By His word, as Alma said, He enlarges our
memory, sheds light on falsehood and error, and brings us to
repentance and to rejoice in Jesus Christ, our Redeemer.
The Scriptures Enlarge Our Memory
The scriptures enlarge our memory by helping us always to remember
the Lord and our relationship to Him and the Father. They remind us of
what we knew in our premortal life. And they expand our memory in
another sense by teaching us about epochs, people, and events that we
did not experience personally. None of us was present to see the Red
Sea part and cross with Moses between walls of water to the other side.
We were not there to hear the Sermon on the Mount, to see Lazarus
raised from the dead, to see the suffering Savior in Gethsemane and on
the cross, and we did not, with Mary, hear the two angels testify at the
empty tomb that Jesus was risen from the dead. You and I did not go
forward one by one with the multitude in the land Bountiful at the
resurrected Savior’s invitation to feel the prints of the nails and
bathe His feet with our tears. We did not kneel beside Joseph Smith in
the Sacred Grove and gaze there upon the Father and the Son. Yet we
know all these things and much, much more because we have the
scriptural record to enlarge our memory, to teach us what we did not
know. And as these things penetrate our minds and hearts, our faith in
God and His Beloved Son takes root.
The scriptures also enlarge our memory by helping us not forget
what we and earlier generations have learned. Those who either don’t
have or ignore the recorded word of God eventually cease to believe in
Him and forget the purpose of their existence. You will remember how
important it was for Lehi’s people to take the brass plates with them
when they left Jerusalem. These scriptures were key to their knowledge
of God and the coming Redemption of Christ. The other group that “came
out from Jerusalem” shortly after Lehi had no scriptures, and when
Lehi’s descendants encountered them some 300 or 400 years later, it is
recorded that “their language had become corrupted; . . . and they
denied the being of their Creator” (Omni 1:15, 17)
In Tyndale’s day, scriptural ignorance abounded because people
lacked access to the Bible, especially in a language they could
understand. Today the Bible and other scripture are readily at hand,
yet there is a growing scriptural illiteracy because people will not
open the books. Consequently they have forgotten things their
grandparents knew.
The Scriptures Are the Standard for Distinguishing Truth and Error
God uses scripture to unmask erroneous thinking, false traditions,
and sin with its devastating effects. He is a tender parent who would
spare us needless suffering and grief and at the same time help us
realize our divine potential. The scriptures, for example, discredit an
ancient philosophy that has come back into vogue in our day—the
philosophy of Korihor that there are no absolute moral standards, that
“every man prosper[s] according to his genius, and that every man
conquer[s] according to his strength; and whatsoever a man [does is] no
crime” and “that when a man [is] dead, that [is] the end thereof” (Alma 30:17–18).
Alma, who had dealt with Korihor, did not leave his own son Corianton
in doubt about the reality and substance of a divine moral code.
Corianton had been guilty of sexual sin, and his father spoke to him in
love but plainly: “Know ye not, my son, that these things are an
abomination in the sight of the Lord; yea, most abominable above all
sins save it be the shedding of innocent blood or denying the Holy
Ghost?” (Alma 39:5).
In a complete reversal from a century ago, many today would dispute
with Alma about the seriousness of immorality. Others would argue that
it’s all relative or that God’s love is permissive. If there is a God,
they say, He excuses all sins and misdeeds because of His love for
us—there is no need for repentance. Or at most, a simple confession
will do. They have imagined a Jesus who wants people to work for social
justice but who makes no demands upon their personal life and
behavior.2 But a God of love does not leave us to learn by sad experience that “wickedness never was happiness” (Alma 41:10; see also Helaman 13:38).
His commandments are the voice of reality and our protection against
self-inflicted pain. The scriptures are the touchstone for measuring
correctness and truth, and they are clear that real happiness lies not
in denying the justice of God or trying to circumvent the consequences
of sin but in repentance and forgiveness through the atoning grace of
the Son of God (see Alma 42).
Scripture tutors us in principles and moral values essential to
maintaining civil society, including integrity, responsibility,
selflessness, fidelity, and charity. In scripture, we find vivid
portrayals of the blessings that come from honoring true principles, as
well as the tragedies that befall when individuals and civilizations
discard them. Where scriptural truths are ignored or abandoned, the
essential moral core of society disintegrates and decay is close behind.
In time, nothing is left to sustain the institutions that sustain
society.
The Scriptures Bring Us to Christ, Our Redeemer
In the end, the central purpose of all scripture is to fill our
souls with faith in God the Father and in His Son, Jesus Christ—faith
that They exist; faith in the Father’s plan for our immortality and
eternal life; faith in the Atonement and Resurrection of Jesus Christ,
which animates this plan of happiness; faith to make the gospel of
Jesus Christ our way of life; and faith to come to know “the only true
God, and Jesus Christ, whom [He has] sent” (John 17:3).
The word of God, as Alma said, is like a seed planted in our hearts that produces faith as it begins to grow within us (see Alma 32:27–43; see also Romans 10:13–17).
Faith will not come from the study of ancient texts as a purely
academic pursuit. It will not come from archaeological digs and
discoveries. It will not come from scientific experiments. It will not
even come from witnessing miracles. These things may serve to confirm
faith, or at times to challenge it, but they do not create faith. Faith
comes by the witness of the Holy Spirit to our souls, Spirit to
spirit, as we hear or read the word of God. And faith matures as we
continue to feast upon the word.
Scriptural accounts of the faith of others serve to strengthen our
own. We recall the faith of a centurion that enabled Christ to heal his
servant without so much as seeing him (see Matthew 8:5–13)
and the healing of a Gentile woman’s daughter because that humble
mother would accept, as it were, even the crumbs from the Master’s
table (see Matthew 15:22–28; Mark 7:25–30). We hear the cry of suffering Job: “Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him” (Job 13:15)—and
professing, “I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand
at the latter day upon the earth: . . . [and] yet in my flesh shall I
see God” (Job 19:25–26).
We hear and take courage from the determination of a tender boy
prophet, hated and bitterly persecuted by so many adults: “I had seen a
vision; I knew it, and I knew that God knew it, and I could not deny
it, neither dared I do it” (Joseph Smith—History 1:25).
Because they expound the doctrine of Christ, the scriptures are
accompanied by the Holy Spirit, whose role it is to bear witness of the
Father and the Son (see 3 Nephi 11:32).
Therefore, being in the scriptures is one way we receive the Holy
Ghost. Of course, scripture is given through the Holy Ghost in the first
place (see 2 Peter 1:21; D&C 20:26–27; 68:4),
and that same Spirit can attest its truth to you and me. Study the
scriptures carefully, deliberately. Ponder and pray over them.
Scriptures are revelation, and they will bring added revelation.
Consider the magnitude of our blessing to have the Holy Bible and
some 900 additional pages of scripture, including the Book of Mormon,
the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price. Then consider
that, in addition, the words of prophets spoken as they are moved upon
by the Holy Ghost in settings such as this, which the Lord calls
scripture (see D&C 68:2–4),
flow to us almost constantly by television, radio, Internet,
satellite, CD, DVD, and in print. I suppose that never in history has a
people been blessed with such a quantity of holy writ. And not only
that, but every man, woman, and child may possess and study his or her
own personal copy of these sacred texts, most in his or her own
language. How incredible such a thing would have seemed to the people
of William Tyndale’s day and to the Saints of earlier dispensations!
Surely with this blessing the Lord is telling us that our need for
constant recourse to the scriptures is greater than in any previous
time. May we feast continuously on the words of Christ that will tell
us all things we should do (see 2 Nephi 32:3).
I have studied the scriptures, I have pondered the scriptures, and on
this Eastertide, I bear you my testimony of the Father and the Son, as
They are revealed in the holy scriptures, in the name of Jesus Christ,
amen.
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Lubbock Texas Stake Announcements:
Sunday, August 22nd 8:30a.m. Branch Council
Saturday, August 28th 10:00a.m. Primary Activity Day
Sunday, August 29th Combined Priesthood/Relief Society
Sunday, August 29th 1:15p.m. BYC
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Plainview Branch Elders & High Priest Lessons By Date:
8-22-10 Conference Talk "The Blessing Of The Scriptures" (By D. Todd Christofferson)
8-29-10 Joint Meeting (5th Sunday Agenda)
9-5-10 September First Presidency Meeting (Ensign)
9-12-10 "The Church of Jesus Christ Today" (Gospel Principles, Chapter 17 - Page 95)
9-19-10 "Faith in Jesus Christ" (Gospel Principles, Chapter 18 - Page 101)
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