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July, 2013

  1. Blessings of the Sacrament

    July 21, 2013 by Ben Tanner

    The Lord's Supperhttp://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/blessings-of-the-sacrament?lang=eng

    Jessica and I were asked to speak in sacrament meeting today.  Here is my talk.

     

    Good afternoon Brothers and Sisters.  It’s a privilege to have the opportunity to speak to you today.  It’s also very humbling.  Since we’ve moved in, we’ve  watched and have been so impressed with this ward.  We are so grateful to be a part of it.  It’s humbling to speak to people like you who are all so talented and accomplished.

    Thank you for the warm welcome we have received.  My talk today is based on a talk given in the October 2012 General Conference from Elder Don R. Clarke of the Seventy, in it he gives us 5 principles to help us gain the blessings of the Sacrament.

    The first principle is..

     

    I. Have a Feeling of Gratitude for the Atonement of Jesus Christ

     

    The sacrament is all about the atonement of Jesus Christ.  Many of you have come here today seeking healing in your hearts and minds.  Not just for things you may have done wrong, but for things others have done to you.  For questions unanswered, for worries and for stress.  The good news of the Gospel is the profound reality that no matter why you came, there are answers, there is healing, there is forgiveness.

    You really can leave the past behind and start new.  You can change bad habits.  You can change the very way you think.  But you cannot do any of this alone.  So our loving Father in Heaven has given you the gift and miracle you are seeking.  He has sent His son to pay the FULL price for all of your sins.  To give you the power to forgive others, to heal your hearts and minds, and to give truthful answers to all of your questions.  He has all power, and all knowledge.  He loves you deeply.  When we approach the sacrament with gratitude, we open up ourselves to the healing balm we so desperately need.

    II. Remember That We Are Renewing Baptismal Covenants

     

    What if you took another approach to the sacrament?  We are often told that when we take the sacrament worthily, it renews the covenants we made at baptism.  Do you remember the day you were baptized?  Do you remember how it felt?  If not, have you seen one of your own children or another adult baptized recently?  I remember how clean I felt.  You can feel that clean every week.  What if you approached sacrament meeting with the same excitement you did your own baptism?

    It shouldn’t be any different.  In fact, the older we get, the more we realize just how much we need the Savior in our lives, so when our covenants  are renewed, it can become an even deeper and fulfilling experience each time we partake.

    I recently had the privilege of baptising my son Eli.  My testimony of the sacred priesthood has grown as I’ve watched the change in Him since his baptism.  He is more careful now at what he say’s.  In fact we recently found out that baby #1 is going to be another boy and Eli’s first reaction to this was something to the effect of  “Oh no,  he’ll see Abe and I fight and that won’t be a good example!”  I suggested to him that maybe they could avoid the problem by not fighting at all.

    III. During the Sacrament We Can Feel Forgiven of Our Sins

     

    We are taught that we came to earth to gain bodies and to be tested to see if we would keep God’s commandments.

    However, the bodies we’ve gained are not perfect.  They are mortal and fallen because of the fall of Adam and Eve.  They come with sickness, weakness, urges, and appetites.  The eating of the bread helps us remember the body of Jesus Christ.  When I take the bread, I like to remember that because of Jesus’ death and resurrection, someday, I will have a perfect renewed body just like Him.  I will have full control over my body and mind.  It is this part of the sacrament that reminds me that we are punished for our own sins and not Adam’s transgression.  We might have to suffer in the flesh in this life, but eventually, God through His son has given us a victory over death and the fall.

    When I take the water, I remember the blood of Jesus that was spilled for us.  It is this blood that cleanses us from our own sins.  We are washed and made clean.  If we have repented and tried to keep the commandments we are promised forgiveness.  This forgiveness is not something we have to wait for.  We can claim it every time we take the sacrament.  We can know that we are worthy and if we were to die we would inherit eternal life.  So the sacrament helps us remember that the Atonement covers both our fallen mortal bodies, but also our sins.  We can know we are forgiven.

    IV. We Can Receive Inspiration for Solutions to Our Problems

     

    As I mentioned before, many come here worried about problems in our lives.  It could be a question we have about our faith.  It could be a problem with our employment.  It could be a problem in our marriage or with another family member or friend.  Whatever the problem or set of problems you’ve come here today with, know this.  You can find answers, inspiration, and even solutions through the administration of the sacrament.  I’d like to quote Elder Cooke’s talk directly:

    …we can receive inspiration for solutions to our problems during sacrament meeting. When I was a mission president in Bolivia, my wife, Mary Anne, and I had the blessing of attending a mission presidents’ seminar with President Henry B. Eyring. In that meeting he taught that there are three important ways to prepare to benefit from a meeting. We should come with our problems, humble as children ready to learn, and with the desire to help God’s children.

    As we humbly come to sacrament meeting, we can be blessed to feel impressions for solutions to our daily problems. We must come prepared, be willing to listen, and not be distracted. In the scriptures we read, “But, behold, I say unto you, that you must study it out in your mind; then you must ask me if it be right, and if it is right I will cause that your bosom shall burn within you; therefore, you shall feel that it is right.”10 We can know what we should do to solve our problems.

    V. Partaking of the Sacrament Worthily Will Help Us Be Filled with the Holy Ghost

     

    The sacrament prayer says: “that they may always have his Spirit to be with them.”  The Spirit spoken of here is none other than the Holy Ghost.  We often teach that the Holy Ghost will teach us what to do, and that He will also testify of truth to us.  But we should remember that the Holy Ghost is also involved in our own sanctification.  Each time we take the Sacrament worthily, we can be filled with the Holy Ghost who purifies us and even changes us.

    • Helaman 3:35
      Nevertheless they did fast and pray oft, and did wax stronger and stronger in their humility, and firmer and firmer in the faith of Christ, unto the filling their souls with joy and consolation, yea, even to the purifying and the sanctification of their hearts, which sanctification cometh because of their yielding their hearts unto God.

    • 1st John 3:24
      And he that keepeth his commandments dwelleth in him, and he in him. And hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the Spirit which he hath given us.

    Brothers and sisters, the Lord has given us the Sacrament as a great blessing.  It is administered by His authorized servants.  It is our great opportunity to prepare for it each week by breaking grateful, repentant contrite hearts, and offering up our questions, pleadings and faith to the Lord.  If we do, we will change over time.  We will become more like God.  We will be forgiven, cleansed and sanctified.  And when the time comes, we’ll be able to face our Heavenly Father with clean hands and a pure heart.

    In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.


  2. Are You A “Saved” Mormon?

    July 14, 2013 by Ben Tanner

    photo-full

    I served an LDS mission in Alabama. I was often asked the question by evangelical Christians if I had been “Saved”.  At first, this question can puzzle many Mormons. We typically don’t view Salvation as a single, one moment in time event. You have to admit, the idea is appealing when our evangelical friends say you can “know for sure right now that you’re going to heaven.”

    So can Mormons know right now if they are going to heaven? The answer is an unequivocal yes. How can a Mormon know? Mormon’s believe that it is through the grace of Jesus Christ that we are saved.   We also believe that we have personal agency, and the power to make choices, both good and bad. We believe that in order to realize the blessings of the grace of Jesus, we have to be faithful to the end of our lives. Put another way, we have to repent when we sin in order to be reinstated to the grace of Jesus Christ.

    We believe that there is the possibility that people can fall from the grace of Christ. Just like the apostle Paul said “Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace.” Paul in this instance is talking about people who believe they can be saved by the law, but none-the-less he mentioned that they are actually fallen from grace – which shows that one can fall from grace.

    Latter-day Saints would also say that when we willfully disobey God’s commandments we break the covenant of grace we made at baptism. When you are baptized, you promise to take upon yourself the name of Christ, and promise to keep His commandments. But when you break these commandments, you have broken your promise, and your covenants. This covenant can be restored and renewed through repentance and partaking of the sacrament, otherwise known as the Lord’s supper, or Eucharist.

    So when this covenant is restored each week, a Mormon knows she or he is saved.   They are what the apostle John calls “dwelling in Him.” (1st John 3:24)

    An often quoted scripture in the Book of Mormon is 2 Nephi 25:23:

    …for we know that it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do.

    Later in the book of Mormon we read of the people of Ammon who say in Alma 24:11:

    11 And now behold, my brethren, since it has been all that we  could do (as we were the most lost of all mankind) to repent of all our sins and the many murders which we have committed, and to get God to take them away from our hearts, for it was all we could do to repent sufficiently before God that he would take away our stain—

    In the end all we can do is repent, renew our covenants and try again.

    Another way for a Mormon to know they are saved is even less complicated. It involves the Holy Ghost. When a person is baptized into the church, they are also given the Gift of the Holy Ghost. We are taught that the Holy Ghost doesn’t dwell in unclean tabernacles. So a great rule of thumb for any latter-day saint to know if they are saved is if they have the Spirit of The Lord with them. If you can truly say that the Spirit is with you, you can know for sure you’ve been forgiven of your sins, and you are clean. You are “dwelling in Him”. (1st John 3:24 –

    And he that keepeth his commandments dwelleth in him, and he in him. And hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the Spirit which he hath given us.

    Another important thing to understand is that there is a fundamental difference in what Mormons believe when it comes to the fall of Adam and Eve. Our article of faith says “We believe that man will be punished for his own sins and not for Adam’s transgression” I don’t think many Mormons even understand the significance of this statement.

    Creedal Christianity teaches that because of the fall of Adam, everyone is born depraved and more specifically in Calvinism, we are so depraved that we are incapable of making any good choices. I think the confusion lies in the fall. Mormons would say that the fall did bring death, sickness, deformation, and weakness into the world. It did put us in a state where we could be tempted by various things. But temptation is not sin. The Lord himself was tempted in “all things.” (Hebrews 4:15)  But He didn’t give into it. Mormons believe sin is WILLFUL disobedience to God. In other words we are not accountable for the urges, and temptations we experience in this life because we have no control over them. We are however accountable for what we do have control over, and that is giving in to those temptations. Having those urges and temptations doesn’t make us depraved, for we are eternal beings Sons and Daughters of the Living God, put into imperfect bodies that are imperfect because of the fall.

    Someday, because of Christ, those bodies will be made perfect. Our test is to play the game with the cards we are dealt, and play by the rules. When we break the rules, and give in to temptation, we have a Savior who is ready to forgive and who has paid the price if we repent and renew our covenant with Him.  The trick is to stay in the covenant.  If you stay in the covenant, you have grace, if you have grace, you have heaven.

    One last point. When a Mormon is talking salvation they are talking about the Celestial Kingdom. We would consider all three kingdoms of glory a sort of salvation or Heaven. But we are most interested in the highest where our Heavenly Father dwells.

    So are you saved? Yes if you “dwelleth in Him.”