Title: The Jonah Reflex
1The Jonah Reflex
2The Last Photo I ever took Contest
3August 13th, 1856
- A little less than four weeks travelling brought
us to the Missouri river. We crossed it on a
steam ferry-boat, and encamped at the town of
Florence, Nebraska, six miles above Omaha, where
we remained about a week, making our final
preparations for crossing the plains. - The elders seemed to be divided in their
judgment as to the practicability of our reaching
Utah in safety at so late a season of the year,
and the idea was entertained for a day or two of
making our winter quarters on the Elkhorn, Wood
river, or some eligible location in Nebraska but
it did not meet with general approval. A monster
meeting was called to consult the people about
it. - The emigrants were entirely ignorant of the
country and climatesimple, honest, eager to go
to Zion at once, and obedient as little
children to the servants of God. Under these
circumstances it was natural that they should
leave their destinies in the hands of the elders.
These men with one exception, favoured going
on. They prophesied in the name of God that we
should get through in safety. Were we not Gods
people, and would he not protect us? Even the
elements he would arrange for our good, etc. - But Levi Savage used his common sense and his
knowledge of the country. He declared positively
that to his certain knowledge we could not cross
the mountains with a mixed company of aged
people, women, and little children, so late in
the season without much suffering, sickness, and
death Savage was accordingly defeated, as the
majority were against him. He then added
Brethren and sisters, what I have said I know to
be true but, seeing you are to go forward, I
will go with you, will help you all I can, will
work with you, will rest with you, will suffer
with you, and, if necessary, I will die with you.
May God in his mercy bless and preserve us.
Amen.
4Elder Bednar
- You and I may know the right things to
do that is knowledge. By if you and I are
intelligent, we will consistently do the right
things. It is one thing to know what to do, but
intelligence is consistently doing the right
thing. - It important and good and necessary to know that
the gospel is true. Intelligence is consistently
being true to the gospel
5J. Golden Kimball
- An acquaintance met J. Golden on the street one
day and in conversation asked, "Do you believe
that Jonah was swallowed by the whale?" - "When I get to heaven I'll ask Jonah," J. Golden
answered. - "But," said the man, "what if is not there?"
- "Then you will have to ask him," Golden quickly
replied.
6Jonah, Chapter 1
- Now the word of the Lord came unto Jonah, the son
of Amittai, saying, - Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry
against it for their wickedness is come up
before me. - But Jonah rose up to flee unto Tarshish from the
presence of the Lord, and went down to Joppa and
he found a ship going to Tarshish so he paid the
fare thereof, and went down into it, to go with
them unto Tarshish from the presence of the Lord.
WOE to the bloody city! Nineveh is all full of
lies and robbery the prey departeth not The
noise of a whip, and the noise of the rattling of
the wheels, and of the pransing horses, and of
the jumping chariots. The horseman lifteth up
both the bright sword and the glittering spear
and there is a multitude of slain, and a great
number of carcases and there is none end of
their corpses they stumble upon their corpses
Because of the multitude of the whoredoms of the
well-favoured harlot, the mistress of
witchcrafts, that selleth nations through
her whoredoms, and families through her
witchcrafts (Nahum 31-3).
7The Jonah Travel Plan
Tarshish
Nineveh
8Question
- Why did Jonah run?
- I fled before unto Tarshish for I knew that thou
art a gracious God, and merciful, slow to anger,
and of great kindness, and repentest thee of the
evil. - Do we cheer for the day when the wicked will get
theirs rather than pray for their repentance?
9Neal A. Maxwell
- Surely, as Latter-day Saints we must
avoid the Jonah reflex. Moreover, knowing
of and believing in the prophecies does not
relieve us of the responsibility to do all we can
to avoid the conditions which, unchecked, will
bring them to pass. - Jesus . . . prophesied that in the last days,
because of iniquity, the love of many would wax
cold (Matthew 2412). Yet we must not regard
iniquity or human hardening and coarsening with a
sense of inevitability
10Jeffrey R. Holland
- In the story of the Prodigal Son, we can
miss, if we are not careful, the account of an
elder son, for the opening line of the
Saviors account reads, A certain man had two
sonsand He might have added, both of whom
were lost and both of whom needed to come home. - This older son is not so much angry that the
other has come home as he is angry that his
parents are so happy about it. - No, he who has virtually everything, and who has
in his hardworking, wonderful way earned it,
lacks the one thing that might make him the
complete man of the Lord he nearly is. He has yet
to come to the compassion and mercy, the
charitable breadth of vision to see that this is
not a rival returning. It is his brother. As his
father pled with him to see, it is one who was
dead and now is alive. It is one who was lost and
now is found. - Who is it that whispers so subtly in our ear that
a gift given to another somehow diminishes the
blessings we have received? Who makes us feel
that if God is smiling on another, then He surely
must somehow be frowning on us? You and I both
know who does thisit is the father of all
liesIt is Lucifer, our common enemy, whose cry
down through the corridors of time is always and
to everyone, Give me thine honor.
11Elder Holland Cont.
- One observer has written In a world
that constantly compares people, ranking
them as more or less intelligent, more or
less attractive, more or less successful, it is
not easy to really believe in a divine love
that does not do the same. - When I hear someone praised, he says, it is
hard not to think of myself as less praiseworthy
when I read about the goodness and kindness of
other people, it is hard not to wonder whether I
myself am as good and kind as they and when I
see trophies, rewards, and prizes being handed
out to special people, I cannot avoid asking
myself why that didnt happen to me. - Most thou shalt not commandments are meant to
keep us from hurting others, but I am convinced
the commandment not to covet is meant to keep us
from hurting ourselves.
12Psalm of Jonah
- I cried by reason of mine affliction unto the
Lord, and he heard me - out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou
heardest my voice. - For thou hadst cast me into the deep, in the
midst of the seas and the floods compassed me
about all thy billows and thy waves passed over
me. - Then I said, I am cast out of thy sight yet I
will look again toward thy holy temple.
13Elder Eyring
- A family moved into a house near us. The
home was new, so I was part of the crew of
Latter-day Saints who spent a number of
nights putting in landscaping. I remember the
last night, standing next to the husband of
the family as we finished. He surveyed our
work and said to us standing nearby, This is the
third yard you Mormons have put in for us, and I
think this is the best. And then he quietly but
firmly told me of the great satisfaction he got
from membership in his own church, a conversation
we had often in the years he lived there. - In all that time, the acts of kindness extended
to him and his family never ceased because the
neighbors really came to love them. One evening,
I came home to see a truck in his driveway. I had
been told they were moving to another state. I
approached to see if I could help. I didnt
recognize the man I saw loading household things
into the truck. He said quietly as I drew near,
Hello, Brother Eyring. I hadnt recognized him
because he was the son, now grown older, who had
lived there, married, and moved away. And because
of the love of many for him, he was now a
baptized member of the Church. I dont know the
end of that story because it will have no end.
But I know that it begins with love.