With that wonderful music ringing in our ears, I direct my remarks today to the young people of the Church, meaning anyone President Nelson's age or younger.
I seldom use visuals, but I can't resist sharing this one.
This cree decor comes from my eight- year-old friend, Marin Arnold, written when she was seven.
I will translate for you her early reformed Egyptian:
“Dear Bishop, general conference was boring.
Why do we have to do it?
Tell me why.
Sincerely, Marin Arnold.” Well, Marin, the talk I’m about to give will undoubtedly disappoint you again.
But when you write your bishop to complain, it's important that you tell him my name is Kearon, Elder Patrick Kearon.
For nearly two years, a pandemic of biblical proportions has enveloped our planet.
And while that plague brought a halt to almost everything socially, obviously it did not bring a halt to brutality, violence, and cruel aggression politically, nationally, or internationally.
As if that were not enough, we're still facing long-standing social and cultural challenges ranging from economic deprivation to environmental
desecration to racial inequity and more.
Such winds and dark days can be discouraging to the youth among us, those to whom we look for optimism and enthusiasm regarding the tomorrows
of our lives.
It's been said that the power of youth is the commonwealth for the entire world.
The young are the faces of our future.
Furthermore, our children are the trustees into whose hands the destiny of this Church will one day be placed.
Given our current times, it's understandable if the idealism of
the young is waning a little.
Dr. Laurie Santos, a professor at Yale University, recently created a class titled “Psychology and the Good Life.” The first year the class was offered,
nearly one quarter of the entire undergraduate student body enrolled.
Over 64 million people then visited her podcast.
Writing about this phenomenon, one journalist noted how painful it is to see so many bright young students and adults desperately looking for something they’ve lost or, worse yet, longing for something they never had.
My plea today to our youth and to you parents and adults who advise them is to begin your search for happiness by embracing the bounty we've already received from the Giver of every good gift.
At precisely the moment many in the world are asking deep questions of the soul, we ought to be answering with the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which holds aloft the mission and message of the Savior of the world, offers the most eternally significant way to both find good and do good at such a needful time.
President Russell M. Nelson has said of this generation that they have more capacity to have more
impact for good on this world than any previous generation.
We of all people should be singing the song of redeeming love.
But that takes discipline, discipleship, if you will- essentially the same word- the kind that guards against negative attitudes
and destructive habits that would pull us off key as we try to sing that song of eternal salvation.
Even as we stay on the sunny side of the street, we do run into that fellow from time to time who’s determined to find something bleak and dismal about everything.
You know his motto "It's always darkest just before it goes pitch black." What a malignant vision and what a miserable existence.
Yes, we might sometimes want to run away from where we are, but we can never run away from who we are- children of the living God, who loves us, who is always ready to forgive us and will never, ever forsake us.
You are His most precious possession.
You are His child, to whom He has given prophets and promises, spiritual gifts and revelations, miracles and messages, and angels on both sides of the veil.
He's also given you a church that strengthens families for mortality and binds them together for eternity.
It provides more than 31,000 wards and branches, where people gather and sing and fast and pray for each other and give their means to the poor.
This is where every person is named, accounted for, and ministered to
and where lay friends and neighbors voluntarily serve each other in callings that range from clerical work to custodial duty.
Young adults serve missions by the thousands-senior couples as well-
at their own expense, with no say whatsoever as to where they'll labor.
And members, young and old, trundle off to temples to perform sacred ordinances necessary to bind the human family together- a bold activity
in such a divided world, but one which declares that such divisiveness is only temporary.
These are a few of the reasons we give for the hope that is in us.
Of course, in our present day, tremendously difficult issues face any disciple of Jesus Christ.
The leaders of this Church are giving their lives
to seeking the Lord's guidance in the resolution of these challenges.
If some are not resolved to the satisfaction of everyone, perhaps they constitute part of the cross that Jesus said we'd have to take up in order to follow Him.
It's precisely because there would be dark days and difficult issues that God
promised He would out of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night guide
prophets, give an iron rod, open a narrow gate leading to a straight path, and above all, grant us the power to finish the course.
So please, please stay for the whole feast, even if you're not sure about the broccoli.
Bask in His light, and lend your candle to the cause.
They have it right in Primary; Jesus really does want you for a sunbeam.
When the Jewish leader Jairus plead for Jesus to heal his 12-year-old
daughter, who lay dying at home, the surrounding crowd waylaid
the Savior so long that a servant soon came saying to this anxious father, "Thy daughter is dead; trouble not the Master.
But when Jesus heard it, he answered him, saying, Fear
not: believe only,
and she shall be made whole." And she was.
And so will you.
"Fear not: believe only."
Because each of you in this audience is precious to God and to this Church, I close with this special apostolic declaration.
Before you ever received the gift of the Holy Ghost, you had the light of Christ planted in your soul.
That light, which is in all things, giveth life to all things
and is the influence for good in the hearts of all people who have ever lived or ever will live.
That light was given to protect you and to teach you.
One of its central messages is that life is the most precious of all gifts, a gift which is obtained eternally only through the Atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And the Light and Life of the World, the Only Begotten Son of God
came to give us life by conquering death.
We must commit ourselves fully to that gift of life and run to the aid of those who are at risk of giving up this sacred gift.
Leaders, advisers, friends, family, watch for signs of depression, despair, or anything hinting of self-harm.
Offer your help.
Listen.
Make some kind of intervention as appropriate.
And to any of our youth out there struggling, whatever your concerns
or difficulties, death by suicide is manifestly not the answer.
It will not relieve the pain you are feeling or that you see yourself causing.
In a world that so desperately needs all the light it can get, please do not minimize the eternal light God put in your soul before this world was.
Talk to someone.
Ask for help.
Do not destroy a life that Christ gave His life to preserve.
You can bear the struggles of this mortal life because we’ll help you bear them.
You're stronger than you think.
Help is available from others and especially from God.
You are loved and valued and needed. We need you.
Fear not, and believe only.
Someone who faced circumstances far more desperate than you and I ever will
once cried, "Go forward," my beloved young friends.
“Courage... ; and on, on to the victory!
Let your hearts rejoice, and be exceedingly glad.”
We have so much to be glad about.
We have each other, and we have Him.
Do not deny us the chance to have you, I plead in the sacred and holy name of the Lord Jesus Christ, our Master, amen.