November 20, 2022

"Something Unimaginable"

 My subject today (Nov. 20, 2022) is from Elder Uchtdorf’s conference talk:

“God Will Do Something Unimaginable”

Let’s look back at the early Saints, who endured many trials and heartaches:

Saints crossing the frozen Mississippi River. (1)
They built a city along the Mississippi River in a mosquito-infested swamp

They suffered the martyrdom of Joseph and Hyrum Smith

They sacrificed to build the Nauvoo temple and then had to leave it behind

They abandoned Nauvoo the Beautiful and fled across the frozen Mississippi

They trudged more than a thousand miles across the wilderness via wagon, handcart and by foot to reach an isolated valley next to a great salty lake.

Crossing Sweetwater River pulling handcarts. (2)
More than 4,000 of them died, including several of my ancestors, before the Intercontinental railroad was completed in 1868.

Then they had to struggle to survive in the desolate Salt Lake Valley, including an invasion of crickets, which resulted in the miracle of the seagulls.

Even still, they imagined a prosperous kingdom in the tops of the mountains.

 Workers cut slabs of granite in Little
Cottonwood Canyon south of Salt Lake. (3
)
When Brigham Young and the first group of Pioneers arrived in 1847, he picked a temple site, but construction didn’t start until six years later.

“Church craftsmen painstakingly chiseled out of the canyon walls huge granite blocks that weighed from 2,500 to 5,600 pounds each and carefully transported them to Temple Square, first by ox-drawn wagon and later by railroad. There, expert stone cutters carved the blocks to fit perfectly into place.”

In the spring of 1858, while the Saints were still laying the foundation of the Salt Lake Temple, the U.S. government was dispatching Johnston’s Army to put down the “Mormon rebellion.” In response, Pres. Young had the Saints evacuate their homes and covered over the temple foundation in anticipation of the arrival of the army.

Painting of Johnston's Army marching through
the deserted Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. (4)
However, a resolution to the crisis was found, and the Saints returned to their homes and uncovered the temple foundation. But to their dismay, many of the sandstone blocks were cracked and would need to be replaced.

Another obstacle in building the House of the Lord.

The temple construction took 40 years.

Why were the early Saints so tested in their efforts to build Zion?

Despite all the challenges, the Saints eventually began to flourish, building the crossroads of the west.

Back when the church was organized in 1830, who of the first members could imagine the growth of the church in later decades.

Berlin Wall dividing Communist East Berlin
from free West Berlin from 1961 to 1989. (5)
When I was a young teenager in the 1960s, the church was still pretty small – less than 2 million members. I wondered then how the church could possibly grow enough to reach into all parts of the world – especially in places like Eastern Europe, Russia, Africa and even China and India.

And now there’s a temple in India! Wow!

When I was a missionary in Costa Rica in 1970, there were two branches in the country. Now there are more than 78 congregations, 51,000 members, and even a temple in San Jose.

Hard to imagine!

When the Covid Pandemic slammed the world, the Lord through his church leadership had already given us a way to weather the storm – the Come Follow Me program.

Church President Russell M. Nelson
Who could have imagined such great timing!

The church has faced many challenges and obstacles, but through our Father in Heaven, we have come out stronger than ever.

What’s lies ahead for the church? Many trials and tribulations!

But Pres. Nelson said in the last conference: “In the coming days, we will see the greatest manifestations of the Savior’s power that the world has ever seen!”

Can you imagine that?!

In all this, the Lord’s work is to bring to pass the Immortality and Eternal Life of Man!

What about on a personal level?

Every one of us has or will face hardship, challenges and obstacles!

But the important thing is to see how we handle them! Will we give up and turn away from our Heavenly Father and our Savior?

It isn’t how many times we get knocked down, it’s how we respond, how quickly we get back up – and what we learn from them all – whether they be physical, mental or financial challenges?

How we handle these things and what we learn from them makes us more prepared for what comes next – and in the next life.

I asked a friend about his challenge in life – a financial one.

He said: “I realized that I needed to make a change in my life because I was growing further away from the lord. The more stuff you have and the more absolute your authority is, it seems the further away from God you get. I really needed to be humbled and by changing jobs, the Lord blessed me. First with humility, which gradually led to a greater focus on what is really important. It has been a journey of close to two decades and counting, but the rewards are amazing. I have learned to recognize his hand in all that we do. I have prayed to know more, and he has put me in callings and responsibilities that have made learning and understanding necessary. I have experienced that when I ask for blessings, I better be prepared to be challenged. I have learned that the plan of salvation is real and unbelievably wonderful. I have learned to love the scriptures and that we are all God's children and that the lessons given to one generation can and do apply to all. I have learned without a doubt that this gospel is true and the Lord really loves me and us.”

Another friend told me of his challenge: “When I was about 13 years old, life was pretty hard.  I was living in a new town and had very few friends...  Kids treated me like a freak because of my limp ...  and inability to run. My balance was so bad that I would trip and fall all the time. I remember feeling really sorry for myself for not being like all the other kids and not doing what they could do.  I was praying and complaining to Heavenly Father when a sweet peaceful feeling came over me, telling me that even though I was different, I was still his son and as such was special...  I was told not to worry about what others thought or how they acted towards me -- but to just be the best person I could and I would be okay. From that day on, life was much better.  Still hard – but way easier to be happy.”

My older brother, Merrill, playing
basketball at Granger High School.

Let me tell you my “short” story. And if you’ve heard this, it may be a good time for a nap!

My older brother was an athlete! I always wanted to be like him! But I suffered too many illnesses, back issues, cracked wrists, shoulder separations, and too many surgeries.

I was the runt of the litter.

However, in the 8th and 9th grade, I had a growth spurt – all the way up to 5’ 4”—and I loved playing basketball. In attrition I had good health during my high school years.

Elder Hunt on crutches and in
full leg cast on way home
from mission in Costa Rica.
I was even able to go on a mission to Nicaragua and Costa Rica. Good times!

However, over halfway through my mission, I started having problems with my left knee. After a couple of months hobbling around, I underwent surgery and had a broken cartilage removed in my knee. Then after a month or so of reading the scriptures in recovery, we found out I had bone cancer. I was quickly flown home and ended up in LDS Hospital.

That first night after finding out that I faced a leg amputation, I started praying out loud to my Father in Heaven, wondering if I was going to survive and pleading for His help. I prayed that I could be OK with a wooden leg, that I would live to find an eternal companion and have a family of my own.

Standing behind me is Mission President Milton E. Smith
and Apostle Delbert L. Stapley in Costa Rica.
After a long evening of praying, I felt a warm reassurance that all was going to be OK -- that Heavenly Father would help me through this ordeal and that I would be able to continue on with my dreams – despite the loss of my leg.

A few days after the surgery, Elder Delbert L. Stapley of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles visited me and gave me a blessing. I’ll never forget how he started his blessing by talking with Heavenly Father as if He were in the room, telling Him about my situation. Then he paused and proceeded to bless me. The two main parts I remember to this day is that he commanded that if any cancer remained in my body that it should depart and then commanding that it should never return.

I’ve never really worried about the cancer after that.

Here I am now, 72 years old and praising my Father In Heaven for keeping His promises to me.

It’s hard to imagine!

Nancy and I have been married now for 47 years, we have five children and 15 grandchildren.

Life has been amazing – but also hard!

Lehi’s Dream (and the Iron Rod),
by Jerry Thompson. Courtesy
of the LDS Church, © 2015
The truth is, I’ve had many things to repent of! Every day I give thanks for Christ’s Atoning Sacrifice.

From all my mistakes and ordeals, I have learned many things – including determination, faith, the truth of the gospel and Plan of Salvation, the Love that my Father in Heaven and my Savior have for me – despite all my past sins and weaknesses.

Now, I need to Hold Tight to the Rod – despite my brittle bones and arthritis in my shoulders and joints.

Elder Dallin H. Oaks of the first presidency said in the last conference that adversity is temporary. What is permanent is what we become by the way we react to them.”

So remember, God Will Help Us Do Something Unimaginable in our lives – in this life and in the next!




(1) https://www.legendsofamerica.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Handcart-Company-across-the-Sweetwater-River.jp

(2)  Christensen, C. C. A. (Carl Christian Anton), 1831-1912

(3)  (c. 1872)  Photographer: C.W. Carter

(4) Joseph  Smith Foundation

(5) the  Jakarta Post





November 2, 2022

Science coming closer to Heaven

   When I was attending the old Monroe Elementary School on the corner of 4000 West and 3500 South in Granger (now West Valley City), we of course studied science, including the "science fact" that space is empty and that we are alone in the universe. This was before spaceflight, before man had entered the "space age."
 
My fifth-grade class at Monroe Elementary.
So many of these classmates were friends all
the way through high school -- and beyond. 

 I remember in the fourth or fifth grade being in a debate on whether there was other life in the universe and if we've been visited by aliens from other worlds. I believed then that it's very possible we've been visited. As part of my argument in the affirmative on UFO visits, I read the scripture from The Pearl of Great Price, Moses 1:33: "And worlds without number have I created; and I also created them for mine own purpose; and by the Son I created them, which is mine Only Begotten." (I bet kids couldn’t do that today!)
  Anyway, the class took a vote, and our side won -- we aren't alone and we’ve been visited.
   Mankind has come a long way in "science fact" since the 1960s. It’s only been since the Hubble Space telescope was launched in 1990 that scientists have gradually come to the realization that there are anywhere from 300-million to upwards of 40-billion Earth-like worlds in the just the Milky Way.
11-foot replica of the Christus statute in
the North Visitors Center on Temple Square.
The “learned people” back in Joseph Smith’s day (1830s) laughed at the idea that there might be other worlds in the  universe like Earth. 

   Further, in the Doctrine and Covenants D&C 88: 12, 37, 95, 110 12, Joseph Smith received these revolutionary concepts: “Which light proceedeth forth from the presence of God to fill the immensity of space … And there are many kingdoms; for there is no space in the which there is no kingdom; and there is no kingdom in which there is no space, either a greater or a lesser kingdom.”
   Science is slowly seeing the grandeur of God's kingdom, thanks to Hubble telescope and other and even newer penetrating telescopes.