"And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart."
Jeremiah 29:13
I was perusing the September issue
of the Ensign magazine earlier this week, expecting a pleasant experience but
nothing super special. To my surprise, what began as a casual read soon became
a lovely spiritual feast--one of those exceptional meals that delights with
every bite and leaves one feeling springy and renewed. Each story, sermon and
essay opened some invisible hatch to heaven for me. I was bathed in exquisite,
comforting warmth again and again. These were my favorite bits:
Henry B. Eyring's thoughts on
prayer. I love how he writes--so simply. He makes every word matter. Every
sentence feels so intentional, natural, gentle and true. He especially inspired
me to continue a culture of fervent prayer with my kids. Each morning we say an
opening prayer over breakfast to bless the day with kindness and patience and
joy. Some days I feel like maybe what I'm doing doesn't matter. But when I read
President Eyring's words, God told me that it matters more than I can possibly
comprehend. I also felt endowed with the energy and strength to be more genuine
in prayer and more receptive to God's loving counsel. I felt assured that He is
there.
I loved the suggestions given on
marriage from an anonymous therapist. She talks about how many people may have
stable marriages but oddly few couples actively try to better them. I loved
that she said to talk to your companion about what you hope your relationship
can become in five, ten or twenty years. I saw a flash of what I hope to be
like for Marc and that made me see areas in my behavior that I can ask for
heavenly help to change. I noticed spiritual gifts to seek out. My favorite
thing she said was actually a quote by President Howard W. Hunter. I don't have
it in front of me at the moment but it went something like "everything
that Jesus puts his hands on lives...if he puts his hands on your marriage, it
lives...if he puts his hands on your family, it lives..." That rang true
to me. Especially in the sense that when we keep our covenants, the divine
nature enters our relationships and makes them holy. Suddenly I saw that being
sealed to someone for time and all eternity means being able to enjoy a
perfect, God-like relationship because of keeping covenants that let the Lord
bless it into that kind of living organism.
I also loved an article written by a
temple sealer on marriage. Someone asked him why the temple endowment dwells so
much on Adam and Eve if it is supposed to be about Christ. He responds that it
is the story of two people accepting the atonement. It shows us how to accept
it and make it an active agent in our lives. He references the temple's use of
altars as symbols of sacrifice. His words really opened my mind up to
appreciate the temple and what it can teach me about the purpose of life and
partnership and parenting and the process of being refined by the spirit.