Yesterday, I volunteered at the mental hospital. This facility is for patients struggling with various mental disorders, and each Sunday, they ask a different YSA ward to take care of sacrament meeting. It's a beautiful experience. As a cherry on top, I was asked to give a talk on faith and hope.
I love Heavenly Father; sometimes, He gives me talks as a huge hint as to what I need to work on.
At the hospital as I looked out over the congregation, I felt connected to them; I could see the pain and struggle in their faces, and I felt like in many ways, I was among kindred spirits. So I started to share things more personal that I had originally planned, saying something like this...
"Have you ever been in so much emotional pain that your literal heart hurts constantly? To have no reprieve even when you sleep because you have nightmares every night? This was my life at about two years ago. It took tremendous effort to keep going, and I took on a study of Alma 5 in an attempt to find healing. I took particular interest in the difference between faith and hope.
Russel M. Nelson says, "Faith is rooted in Jesus Christ. Hope centers in the Atonement." This, combined with my personal experiences, tells me that the difference between faith and hope is the same as the difference between believing in Christ and believing Christ. Faith is a a belief in something true, whereas hope is the uplifting acceptance that something is true for me personally. Hope allows the Atonement to become effective in my life, because hope allows me to open my vulnerable heart to His healing power.
The Savior lived, suffered, and died so that He could succor all of us according to our very individual needs. Choose to believe Him as well as believe in Him. He loves us, and even when it feels like there is no end to suffering, things get better through the Atonement of Jesus Christ."
As I gave this talk, I knew that what I said was true. I had first hand experience. I had felt the intense, undeniable healing power of the Atonement.
But do I feel so now?
The details of my story are different. A couple years ago, I learned about how the Atonement can alleviate pain. But now I need to learn more about how the Atonement can change my deepest fears and struggles. I haven't trusted my Savior like I should, and I haven't trusted my connection to Him like I should, preferring to listen to other people that think that they know what is best for me...I'm a slow learner. I'm grateful that Heavenly Father has found different ways to beat this dead horse; this dead horse is quite appreciative that through the Atonement, it can live again.
I'm grateful for those who support me. I have people that love me so much, and they have tried their absolute hardest to help me. But in the end, it is only my Savior that can help me. Only He and I, working together, can heal and change me. And this day, I choose to allow Him to make that difference. I choose to trust my Savior with my heart.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Friday, February 20, 2015
Believing Christ versus Believing in Christ
This next excerpt is from a blog post that I never posted, but I think I should now:
"This week, I went to institute. I didn’t necessarily want to—I was having a hard day, and I wanted to be alone—but one of my good friends had already agreed to come with me. This was a big deal because she isn’t active in the church, and so going to institute could be a really good thing for her. So despite my reluctance, I went. And not only did my friend come, but my nonmember Thai roommate came as well. It was too good an opportunity to miss.
"This week, I went to institute. I didn’t necessarily want to—I was having a hard day, and I wanted to be alone—but one of my good friends had already agreed to come with me. This was a big deal because she isn’t active in the church, and so going to institute could be a really good thing for her. So despite my reluctance, I went. And not only did my friend come, but my nonmember Thai roommate came as well. It was too good an opportunity to miss.
I went to the Book of Mormon class, and I don’t know how
powerful it was for my friend and roommate, but the lesson was really powerful
for me. You see, I’ve been struggling with worth in a unique way. I don’t feel
useless, on the contrary, I feel like Heavenly Father can use me pretty well. I
feel like I benefit the human race. But I don't feel like I have any worth
beyond my ability to help people; I view myself as a tool. My happiness and
well-being aren’t important beyond the need for me to be of functional use to
someone else. These feelings stem from a
relationship that I had for the first part of college that was traumatic for me,
and the thought patterns are deeply engrained.
But during institute, I caught a glimpse of what Heavenly
Father wants me to see. It only lasted for a few moments, and it seemingly came
out of nowhere, but it gives me a goal to strive for.
In a feeling of peace, He told me that I was good. I wasn’t
irreparable, and I should trust His servants when they said I was good enough.
And then, in class, we read (1 Nephi 21:14-16);
But, behold, Zion hath said: The Lord hath forsaken me, and
my Lord hath forgotten me—but he will show that he hath not.
For can a woman
forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her
womb? Yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee, O house of Israel.
Behold, I have graven
thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are continually before me.
The Atonement is real. I have a Savior that suffered and
died for me, and His atonement covers me completely. I am not an exception to
His love, and He doesn’t want me to suffer. He wants a contrite heart and
spirit. He looks at the intents and desires of my heart. I am so imperfect and
inadequate, but my efforts are what He sees. And I love Him so much! I want to
spend my existence serving Him! My truest joy comes from drawing closer to Him
and seeing others do the same. I have “no more disposition to do evil, but to
do good continually” (Mosiah 5:2).
It’s an interesting experience to have the Lord tell your
spirit something that your mind and body can’t comprehend. I felt the peace in
the message from my Heavenly Father. I felt the hope that comes with it. But
once the message was over, I felt confused. I didn’t understand…my thought
patterns for the past few years had told me something very different. The
neural pathways of self-deprecation were thick and deep. But for a
moment, Heavenly Father showed me a truth that I needed to learn to accept. Healing takes time, but through the Savior, healing is always possible. Instead of merely believing in Christ, believing the He existed and did wonderful things, I choose to believe Him. I choose to believe Him when He says that he can heal me. "
The Savior is real, and the His gift of the Atonement is real. I need to act like the Atonement is as real as the law of Gravity. I need to rely on His gift as much as I rely on the air I breathe.
The Savior is real, and the His gift of the Atonement is real. I need to act like the Atonement is as real as the law of Gravity. I need to rely on His gift as much as I rely on the air I breathe.
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