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Quick to Observe

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Title: Quick to Observe


1
Quick to Observe
  • www.kevinhinckley.com

2
With the financial crisis, even superheroes are
taking part time jobs
3
And, they discovered a long lost photo of two
Nephites
4
Joseph Smith and Mormon
Joseph
Mormon
Joseph
Mormon
Named after their father
Age 11
Age 12
Sober child
By Age 15
Age 14
Visited by the Lord
Age 24
Age 23
Responsible for Nephite Records
Preached the Gospel
To the peaceable
Yes
Called as Apostle
Yes
Yes
Saw attacks against the Church
Yes
Yes
Age 16
Became a General
Nauvoo
Killed defending his people
Cumorah
Carthage
5
Mormon
  • And about the time that Ammaron hid up the
    records unto the Lord, he came unto me, (I being
    about ten years of age, and I began to be learned
    somewhat after the manner of the learning of my
    people)
  • and Ammaron said unto me I perceive that thou
    art a sober child, and art quick to observe
  • Therefore, when ye are about twenty and four
    years old I would that ye should remember the
    things that ye have observed concerning this
    people

Question What do you think Ammaron was seeing?
6
Elder Bednar
  • Before attending her sacrament meetings,
    Sister Bednar frequently prays for the
    spiritual eyes to see those who have a need.
    Often as she observes the brothers and
    sisters and children in the congregation, she
    will feel a spiritual nudge to visit with or make
    a phone call to a particular person.
  • And when Sister Bednar receives such an
    impression, she promptly responds and obeys. It
    often is the case that as soon as the amen is
    spoken in the benediction, she will talk with a
    teenager or hug a sister or, upon returning home,
    immediately pick up the phone and make a call.
  • As long as I have known Sister Bednar, people
    have marveled at her capacity to discern and
    respond to their needs. Often they will ask her,
    How did you know? The spiritual gift of being
    quick to observe has enabled her to see and to
    act promptly and has been a great blessing in the
    lives of many people.
  • BYU Devotional, May 2005

7
President Packer
  • If all you know is what you see with your
    natural eyes and hear with your natural ears,
    then you will not know very much
  • Elder Bednar, BYU Devotional, 2005

8
Question
  • What kind of things would the Lord have us be
    quick to observe (or discern)

9
President Stephen L. Richards
  • First, I mention the gift of discernment
    quick to observe, embodying the power to
    discriminate . . . between right and wrong. I
    believe that this gift when highly developed
    arises largely out of an acute sensitivity to
    impressionsspiritual impressions, if you willto
    read under the surface as it were, to detect
    hidden evil, and more importantly to find the
    good that may be concealed.
  • The highest type of discernment is that which
    perceives in others and uncovers for them their
    better natures, the good inherent within them. .
  • . . . Every member in the restored Church of
    Christ could have this gift if he willed to do
    so. He could not be deceived with the sophistries
    of the world. He could not be led astray by
    pseudo-prophets and subversive cults. Even the
    inexperienced would recognize false teachings, in
    a measure at least. . .
  • . We ought to be grateful every day of our lives
    for this sense which keeps alive a conscience
    which constantly alerts us to the dangers
    inherent in wrongdoers and sin.
  • CR, April 1950, 16263 emphasis added

10
Finally,Election 2008
  • Observe- with your spiritual eyes
  • Why are so many people, on all sides of the
    politicial isle, feeling hopeless?

11
Sorrow?
  • 10 And it came to pass that the Nephites began to
    repent of their
    iniquity, and began to cry for behold no man
    could keep that which was
    his own, for the thieves, and
    the robbers, and the murderers, and the
    magic art, and the
    witchcraft which was in the land.
  • 11 Thus there began to be a mourning and a
    lamentation in all
    the land
  • 12 And it came to pass that when I, Mormon, saw
    their lamentation and their mourning and their
    sorrow before the Lord, my heart did begin to
    rejoice within me, knowing the mercies and the
    long-suffering of the Lord, therefore supposing
    that he would be merciful unto them that they
    would again become a righteous people.
  • 13 But behold this my joy was vain, for their
    sorrowing was not unto repentance, because of the
    goodness of God but it was rather the sorrowing
    of the damned, because the Lord would not always
    suffer them to take happiness in sin.
  • 14 And they did not come unto Jesus with broken
    hearts and contrite spirits, but they did curse
    God, and wish to die.

12
Elder Holland
  • Recently I was invited by President Bishop of the
    Missionary Training Center to address the nearly
    two thousand missionaries in residence there. I
    accepted because I always assume it is impossible
    to give a poor talk at the MTC. They will take
    notes and make scriptural cross-references if you
    read them the telephone directory. Plus I love to
    hear them sing. So I went.
  • I visited with many of them and the minutes
    stretched into many minutes and then finally into
    nearly an hour. During that time I noticed one
    young elder hanging around the outer rim of the
    circle as all the other missionaries came and
    went.
  • Finally the traffic thinned out, and he stepped
    forward. "Do you remember me?" he asked.
  • "No," I said, "I'm sorry I don't. Tell me your
    name."
  • He replied, "My name is Elder ___________." His
    eyes searched mine for recognition, but I just
    didn't know who this young man was.
  • Summoning his courage for the ultimate revelation
    he said, "Hinckley Hall--A Faithful Friend Is a
    Strong Defense." Then I knew who he was. That
    little coded phrase may not ring any bells for
    you, but it meant something to him and he knew it
    meant something to me.

13
Elder Holland
  • On September 7, 1982, I stood in this exact
    spot and gave the only angry public spanking I
    have ever given a group of BYU students. The
    title of my remarks for that back-to-school
    message was "A Faithful Friend Is a Strong
    Defense.
  • I spoke of an offense, a felony--falsifying
    government documents--which had been committed
    in Hinckley Hall the April before and which had
    been widely covered by the press. Five months
    had passed but I was still hurting. Time had
    not soothed me.
  • I spoke of that incident publicly--without
    mentioning the names of the participants--becau
    se I care about matters of morality and honor and
    personal virtue at BYU. I wanted it clear then
    (and now, if anyone is still wondering) that the
    behavior of every student at Brigham Young
    University matters very much to me and to what
    this school stands for. So I said my piece and,
    for all intents and purposes, forgot about it.
  • But, as you might guess, it was not easy for the
    students involved. Not only were there the
    burdens of university and Church actions, but the
    civil laws made an indelible stroke across the
    record of some of these young lives. There were
    tears and courts and sentences and probations.
    Legally it had been about as much of a nightmare
    as a college freshman could have foreseen.
    Obviously it was more of a nightmare than they
    could have foreseen because the sorrow and
    remorse over their "prank"--I put the word in
    quotation marks--was deep and rending.
  • I recall that very unsavory experience for you
    this morning simply to put a happy ending on one
    young man's very difficult experience. His father
    wrote me later and said how much courage it had
    taken for him to come up and talk with me at the
    MTC, but he said his son wanted me to know of his
    effort to make things right. It had not been easy
    for him to get a mission call. Not only were
    there all the court-imposed sanctions and Church
    restrictions, but there was the terrible personal
    burden of guilt.
  • But he wanted to serve a mission both because it
    was the right thing to do and because it was a
    way for him to say to the Church, the government,
    the university and all who cared about him, "I'm
    back. I made a serious mistake but I'm back. I am
    making up lost ground. I've still got a chance."
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